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Quotation of the day
Monday, 8 February 2010
Daily Quote:
"If we are intended for great ends, we are called to great hazards."
(
Newman, Henry Cardinal
-
Risk)
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All that glitters is not gold.
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Davies, Robertson
A truly great book should be read in youth, again in maturity and once more in old age, as a fine building should be seen by morning light, at noon and by moonlight.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Books - Classics
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If I had my way books would not be written in English, but in an exceedingly difficult secret language that only skilled professional readers and story-tellers could interpret. Then people like you would have to go to public halls and pay good prices to hear the professionals decode and read the books aloud for you. This plan would have the advantage of scaring off all amateur authors, retired politicians, country doctors and I-Married-a-Midget writers who would not have the patience to learn the secret language.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Books - Reading
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Authors like cats because they are such quiet, lovable, wise creatures, and cats like authors for the same reasons.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Cats
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The greatest gift that Oxford gives her sons is, I truly believe, a genial irreverence toward learning, and from that irreverence love may spring.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Colleges and Universities
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The world is burdened with young fogies. Old men with ossified minds are easily dealt with. But men who look young, act young and everlastingly harp on the fact that they are young, but who nevertheless think and act with a degree of caution that would be excessive in their grandfathers, are the curse of the world. Their very conservatism is secondhand, and they don't know what they are conserving.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Conservatives
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The eyes see only what the mind is prepared to comprehend.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Eyes
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Few people can see genius in someone who has offended them.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Genius
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Happiness is always a by-product. It is probably a matter of temperament, and for anything I know it may be glandular. But it is not something that can be demanded from life, and if you are not happy you had better stop worrying about it and see what treasures you can pluck from your own brand of unhappiness.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Happiness
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He types his labored column -- weary drudge! Senile fudge and solemn: spare, editor, to condemn these dry leaves of his autumn.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Journalism and Journalists
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Journalism and Journalists
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If we seek the pleasures of love, passion should be occasional, and common sense continual.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Love
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What we call luck is the inner man externalized. We make things happen to us.
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Davies, Robertson
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Luck
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Comparatively few people know what a million dollars actually is. To the majority it is a gaseous concept, swelling or decreasing as the occasion suggests. In the minds of politicians, perhaps more than anywhere, the notion of a million dollars has this accordion-like ability to expand or contract; if they are disposing of it, the million is a pleasing sum, reflecting warmly upon themselves; if somebody else wants it, it becomes a figure of inordinate size, not to be compassed by the rational mind.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Money
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A Librettist is a mere drudge in the world of opera.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Opera
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Pornography is rather like trying to find out about a Beethoven symphony by having somebody tell you about it and perhaps hum a few bars.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Pornography
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Too much traffic with a quotation book begets a conviction of ignorance in a sensitive reader. Not only is there a mass of quotable stuff he never quotes, but an even vaster realm of which he has never heard.
--
Davies, Robertson
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Quotations
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