Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Nigel Rees

« All quotes from this author
 

An analogous process I shall call Churchillian Drift...Whereas quotations with an apothegmatic feel are normally ascribed to Shaw, those with a more grandiose or belligerent tone are, as if by osmosis, credited to Churchill. All humorous remarks obviously made by a female originated, of course, with Dorothy Parker. All quotations in translation, on the other hand, should be attributed to Goethe (with 'I think' obligatory).
--
Brewer's Quotations (London: Cassell, 1994), p. x.
--
Adaptation of the original: "The Vagueness Is All" from Volume 2, Number 2, April 1993 issue of The “Quote... Unquote” Newsletter

 
Nigel Rees

» Nigel Rees - all quotes »



Tags: Nigel Rees Quotes, Authors starting by R


Similar quotes

 

My toils in the quotation field have led me to formulate two or three laws about the way people use and abuse quotations. My first law is: When in doubt, ascribe all quotations to Bernard Shaw – which I don't mean to be taken literally, but as a general observation of the habit people have of attaching remarks to the nearest obvious speaker. Churchill, Wilde, Orson Welles and Alexander Woollcott are other useful figures upon whom to father remarks when you don't know who really said them.

 
Nigel Rees
 

Everything I've ever said will be credited to Dorothy Parker.

 
Dorothy Parker
 

It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations. Bartlett's Familiar Quotations is an admirable work, and I studied it intently. The quotations when engraved upon the memory give you good thoughts. They also make you anxious to read the authors and look for more.

 
Winston Churchill
 

“My destiny is accomplished and I die content.” How often she made such quotations as these, said or felt or was them! For just as many Americans want art to be Life, so this American novelist wanted life to be Art, not seeing that many of the values—though not, perhaps, the final ones—of life and art are irreconcilable; so that her life looked coldly into the mirror that it held up to itself, and saw that it was full of quotations, of data and analysis and epigrams, of naked and shameful truths, of facts: it saw that it was a novel by Gertrude Johnson.

 
Randall Jarrell
 

“Martini Madness: Dorothy Parker didn’t write the famous quatrain about martinis that’s always attributed to her.”, Troy Patterson, Slate, April 8, 2013

 
Dorothy Parker
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact