Archive

Quotes

Our allotted time is the passing of a shadow.

—Book of Wisdom, c. 100 BC

Scars have the strange power to remind us that our past is real.

—Cormac McCarthy, 1992

Years are nothing to me—they should be nothing to you. Who asked you to count them or to consider them? In the world of wild nature, time is measured by seasons only—the bird does not know how old it is—the rose tree does not count its birthdays!

—Marie Corelli, 1911

In time history must become a fairy tale—it will become again what it was in the beginning.

—Novalis, c. 1798

The best way to fill time is to waste it.

—Marguerite Duras, 1987

If both what is before and what is after are in this same “now,” things which happened ten thousand years ago would be simultaneous with what has happened today, and nothing would be before or after anything else.

—Aristotle, c. 330 BC

Thou art not to learn the humors and tricks of that old bald cheater, time.

—Ben Jonson, 1601

We should not say that one man’s hour is worth another man’s hour, but rather that one man during an hour is worth just as much as another man during an hour. Time is everything, man is nothing; he is, at most, time’s carcass.

—Karl Marx, 1847

The celestial machine is to be likened not to a divine organism but rather to a clockwork.

—Johannes Kepler, 1605

Time’s violence rends the soul; by the rent eternity enters.

—Simone Weil, 1947

The past is always tense and the future, perfect.

—Zadie Smith, 2000

Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid.

—Frank Zappa, 1989

My stern chase after time is, to borrow a simile from Tom Paine, like the race of a man with a wooden leg after a horse.

—John Quincy Adams, 1844