Futility Closet

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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on June 28th, 2009

"I have often wondered how it is that every man loves himself more than all the rest of men, but yet sets less value on his own opinion of himself than on the opinion of others." — Marcus Aurelius


Comp Lit

Posted in Literature, Quotations by Greg Ross on June 24th, 2009

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Emerson's rules for reading:

  1. Never read any book that is not a year old.
  2. Never read any but famed books.
  3. Never read any but what you like.

"Or, in Shakespeare's phrase, 'No profit goes where is no pleasure ta'en; / In brief, Sir, study what you most affect.'"


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Posted in Entertainment, Quotations by Greg Ross on June 16th, 2009

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"Look. I have two kinds of acting. One on a horse and one off a horse. That's it." — Robert Mitchum


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on June 10th, 2009

"Along with success comes a reputation for wisdom." — Euripides


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on June 4th, 2009

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Panfilonuvolone_-_naturezamorta01.jpg

Always eat grapes downwards–that is, always eat the best grape first; in this way there will be none better left on the bunch, and each grape will seem good down to the last. If you eat the other way, you will not have a good grape in the lot. Besides, you will be tempting Providence to kill you before you come to the best.

This is why autumn seems better than spring: in the autumn we are eating our days downwards, in the spring each day still seems 'very bad.' People should live on this principle more than they do, but they do live on it a good deal; from the age of, say, fifty we eat our days downwards.

– Samuel Butler, Notebooks, 1912


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on May 30th, 2009

"The more original a discovery, the more obvious it seems afterward." — Arthur Koestler


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on May 22nd, 2009

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"Ravel's Bolero I submit as the most insolent monstrosity ever perpetrated in the history of music. From the beginning to the end of its 339 measures it is simply the incredible repetition of the same rhythm … and above it the blatant recurrence of an overwhelmingly vulgar cabaret tune that is little removed, in every essential of character, from the wail of an obstreperous back-alley cat."

American Mercury, 1932


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on May 13th, 2009

"Time makes more converts than reason." — Thomas Paine


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Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on May 5th, 2009

"That man is richest whose pleasures are cheapest." — Thoreau


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Posted in Literature, Quotations by Greg Ross on April 30th, 2009

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Walt_Whitman_-_Brady-Handy.jpg

"Walt Whitman is as unacquainted with art as a hog is with mathematics." — London Critic, 1855