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

Thomas Edward Lawrence (T. E.)

« All quotes from this author
 

The literature of disease is more interesting to me than all the healthy books.

 
Thomas Edward Lawrence (T. E.)

» Thomas Edward Lawrence (T. E.) - all quotes »



Tags: Thomas Edward Lawrence (T. E.) Quotes, Health Quotes, Authors starting by L


Similar quotes

 

Once a disease has entered the body, all parts which are healthy must fight it: not one alone, but all. Because a disease might mean their common death. Nature knows this; and Nature attacks the disease with whatever help she can muster.

 
Paracelsus
 

You may divide literature into two great classes of books. The smaller class of the two consists of the books written by people who had something to say. They had in life learned something, or seen something, or done something, which they really wanted and needed to tell to other people. They told it. And their writings make, perhaps, a twentieth part of the printed literature of the world. It is the part which contains all that is worth reading. The other nineteen-twentieths make up the other class.

 
Edward Everett Hale
 

It does not follow because many books are written by persons born in America that there exists an American literature. Books which imitate or represent the thoughts and life of Europe do not constitute an American literature. Before such can exist, an original idea must animate this nation and fresh currents of life must call into life fresh thoughts along its shores.

 
Margaret Fuller
 

Books should confuse. Literature abhors the typical. Literature flows to the particular, the mundane, the greasiness of paper, the taste of warm beer, the smell of onion or quince. Auden has a line: "Ports have names they call the sea." Just so will literature describe life familiarly, regionally, in terms life is accustomed to use — high or low matters not. Literature cannot by this impulse betray the grandeur of its subject — there is only one subject: What it feels like to be alive. Nothing is irrelevant. Nothing is typical.

 
Richard Rodriguez
 

We are human, and nothing is more interesting to us than humanity. The appeal of literature is that it is so thoroughly a human thing — by, for and about human beings. If you lose that focus, you obviate the source of the power and permanence of literature.

 
M. H. Abrams
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact