Futility Closet

Unquote

Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on March 12th, 2010

“I have noticed that nothing I never said ever did me any harm.” — Calvin Coolidge


Unquote

Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on March 4th, 2010

“It is a great nuisance that knowledge can be acquired only by hard work.” — W. Somerset Maugham


Unquote

Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on February 24th, 2010

“I can’t understand why people are afraid of new ideas. I’m frightened of the old ones.” — John Cage


Misc

Posted in Language, Literature, Quotations, Science & Math, Trivia by Greg Ross on February 17th, 2010
  • Jimmy Carter was the first U.S. president born in a hospital.
  • Hamlet has 1506 lines, fully 39 percent of the play.
  • 736 = 7 + 36
  • NOOK combines two antonyms.
  • “Everything that deceives may be said to enchant.” — Plato

Unquote

Posted in Literature, Quotations by Greg Ross on February 16th, 2010

“I always find it more difficult to say the things I mean than the things I don’t.” — Somerset Maugham


The Brightest Heaven of Invention

Posted in Literature, Quotations by Greg Ross on February 5th, 2010

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Shakespeare_Budapest.jpg

Shakespeare said everything. Brain to belly; every mood and minute of a man’s season. His language is starlight and fireflies and the sun and moon. He wrote it with tears and blood and beer, and his words march like heartbeats. He speaks to everyone and we all claim him but it’s wise to remember, if we would really appreciate him, that he doesn’t properly belong to us but to another world; a florid and entirely remarkable world that smelled assertively of columbine and gun powder and printer’s ink, and was vigorously dominated by Elisabeth.

– Orson Welles, Everybody’s Shakespeare, 1934

Thornton Wilder called this “the greatest thumbnail summation of Shakespeare’s genius ever written.”


Unquote

Posted in Quotations, Society by Greg Ross on February 4th, 2010

“If women didn’t exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning.” — Aristotle Onassis


With and Without

Posted in Quotations, Society by Greg Ross on January 28th, 2010

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_146-2003-002-22,_Berlin,_Not_in_den_1920er_Jahren.jpg

“All the arguments which are brought to represent poverty as no evil, shew it to be evidently a great evil. You never find people labouring to convince you that you may live very happily upon a plentiful fortune.” — Samuel Johnson


Unquote

Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on January 22nd, 2010

“An idea isn’t responsible for the people who believe in it.” — Don Marquis


Unquote

Posted in Quotations by Greg Ross on January 16th, 2010

“Prosperity doth best discover vice, but Adversity doth best discover virtue.” — Francis Bacon