Tomorrow is the day when idlers work, and fools reform, and mortal men lay hold on heaven.
—Edward Young (English Poet)
To me, acting is the most logical way for people’s neuroses to manifest themselves. To my way of thinking, an actor’s course is set even before he’s out of the cradle.
—James Dean (American Film Actor)
Life begins before a soul is born and commences once again with the act of dying, and as in the Afro-Asian symbol of the snake of eternity swallowing its tail, all is in flux, all comes full circle, with no beginning and no end.
—Peter Matthiessen (American Naturalist, Novelist)
We are made to persist. That’s how we find out who we are.
—Tobias Wolff (American Author)
There are a few times in life when you leap up and the past that you’d been standing on falls away behind you, and the future you mean to land on is not yet in place, and for a moment you’re suspended knowing nothing and no one, not even yourself.
—Ann Patchett (American Novelist)
The man who is fond of books is usually a man of lofty thought, and of elevated opinions.
—George Dawson (English Preacher, Activist)
The road to the future leads us smack into the wall. We simply ricochet off the alternatives that destiny offers. Our survival is no more than a question of 25, 50 or perhaps 100 years.
—Jacques Cousteau (French Underwater Explorer)
The hard-core intentionalist expresses only the most remote concern for consequences—usually, some vague, distant utopia. But this is, in most cases, a rationalization. His real satisfaction comes from a sense of doing the right thing—even when right has, in his mind, no clear connection with reality.
—Robert Bidinotto (American Novelist, Journalist)
In the maxim of the past you cannot go anywhere.
—Maxim Gorky (Russian Writer)
No man can read with profit that which he cannot learn to read with pleasure. If I do not find in a book something which I am looking for, or am ready to receive, then the book is no book for me however much it may be for another man.
—Noah Porter (American Clergyman)
Morality binds and blinds. It binds us into ideological teams that fight each other as though the fate of the world depended on our side winning each battle. It blinds us to the fact that each team is composed of good people who have something important to say.
—Jonathan Haidt (American Social Psychologist)