Monday, April 29, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Mark Twain

« All quotes from this author
 

Definition of a classic — something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read.
--
Quoting or paraphrasing a Professor Winchester in "Disappearance Of Literature", speech at the Nineteenth Century Club, New York, 20 November 1900, in Mark Twain's Speeches (1910), ed. William Dean Howells, p. 194

 
Mark Twain

» Mark Twain - all quotes »



Tags: Mark Twain Quotes, Authors starting by T


Similar quotes

 

He read at wine, he read in bed, He read aloud, had he the breath, His every thought was with the dead, And so he read himself to death.

 
F. Scott Fitzgerald
 

I read a book twice as fast as anybody else. First, I read the beginning, and then I read the ending, and then I start in the middle and read toward whatever end I like best.

 
Gracie Allen
 

To understand oneself requires patience, tolerant awareness; the self is a book of many volumes which you cannot read in a day, but when once you begin to read, you must read every word, every sentence, every paragraph for in them are the intimations of the whole. The beginning of it is the ending of it. If you know how to read, supreme wisdom is to be found.

 
Jiddu Krishnamurti
 

It is reasonable to assume that, by and large, what is not read now will not be read, ever. It is also reasonable to assume that practically nothing that is read now will be read later. Finally, it is not too farfetched to imagine a future in which novels are not read at all.

 
Gore Vidal
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact