Archive

Quotes

For what do we live but to make sport for our neighbors and laugh at them in our turn?

—Jane Austen, 1813

’Tis not a ridiculous devotion to say a prayer before a game at tables?

—Thomas Browne, 1642

Rain is grace; rain is the sky condescending to the earth; without rain there would be no life.

—John Updike, 1989

The one thing the world will never have enough of is the outrageous.

—Salvador Dalí, 1953

Every man is surrounded by a neighborhood of voluntary spies.

—Jane Austen, 1818

There is only one antidote to mental suffering and that is physical pain.

—Karl Marx, 1860

A Jewish man with parents alive is a fifteen-year-old boy, and will remain a fifteen-year-old boy till they die!

—Philip Roth, 1969

Even diseases have lost their prestige, there aren’t so many of them left.

—Louis-Ferdinand Céline, 1960

Those things are better which are perfected by nature than those which are finished by art.

—Cicero, c. 45 BC

The older one grows, the more one likes indecency.

—Virginia Woolf, 1921

You should never have your best trousers on when you go out to fight for freedom and truth.

—Henrik Ibsen, 1882

I am a friend of the workingman, and I would rather be his friend than be one.

—Clarence Darrow, 1932

Survivors look back and see omens, messages they missed.

—Joan Didion, 2005