LITERATURE QUOTES IV

quotations about literature

Life itself today has lost its plane reality: it is projected, not along the old fixed points, but along the dynamic coordinates of Einstein, of revolution. In this new projection, the best-known formulas and objects become displaced, fantastic, familiar-unfamiliar. This is why it is so logical for literature today to be drawn to the fantastic plot, or to an amalgam of reality and fantasy.

YEVGENY ZAMYATIN

The New Russian Prose


Literature is the most noble of professions. In fact, it is about the only one fit for a man. For my own part, there is no seducing me from the path.

EDGAR ALLAN POE

letter to Frederick W. Thomas, Feb. 14, 1849


If I might control the literature of the household, I would guarantee the well-being of Church and State.

FRANCIS BACON

attributed, Forty Thousand Quotations, Prose and Poetical

Tags: Francis Bacon


You can tell a man's taste in literature by his judgment in knowing what not to read.

EVAN ESAR

20,000 Quips & Quotes


There never was a literary age whose dominant taste was not sickly; the success of excellent authors consists in making wholesome works agreeable to morbid tastes.

JOUBERT

attributed, Day's Collacon


Every few seconds a new book sees the light of day. Most of them will just be a part of the hum that makes us hard of hearing. Even the book is becoming an instrument of forgetting. A truly literary work comes into being as its creator's cry of protest against the forgetting that looms over him, over his predecessors and his contemporaries alike, and over his time, and the language he speaks. A literary work is something that defies death.

IVAN KLIMA

speech at conference in Lahti, Finland, 1990


In the nineteenth century one had to give all sorts of guarantees and lead an exemplary life in order to cleanse oneself in the eyes of the bourgeois of the sin of writing, for literature is, in essence, heresy. The situation has not changed except that it is now the Communists, that is, the qualified representatives of the proletariat, who as a matter of principle regard the writer as suspect.

JEAN-PAUL SARTRE

What Is Literature?: And Other Essays

Tags: Jean-Paul Sartre


Literature is the voice of the age and the state; the character, energy, and resources of the country are reflected and imaged forth in the conceptions of its great minds; they are organs of the time; they speak not their own language, they scarce think their own thoughts; but under an impulse like the prophetic enthusiasm of old, they must feel and utter the sentiments which society inspires.

EDWARD EVERETT

oration at Cambridge before the society of Phi Beta Kappa, Aug. 26, 1824


It is the glorious doom of literature that the evil perishes and the good remains. Even when the original author of some healthy and useful truth is forgotten, the truth survives, transplanted to works more calculated to purify it from error, and perpetuate it to our benefit.

EDWARD BULWER LYTTON

The Student: A Series of Papers

Tags: Edward Bulwer Lytton


Truth is the first thing that present-day literature lacks. The writer has drowned himself in lies, he is too accustomed to speak prudently, with a careful look over his shoulder.

YEVGENY ZAMYATIN

The Day and the Age

Tags: Yevgeny Zamyatin


I don't think literature will be purged until its philosophic pretentiousness is extruded, and I shant live to see that purge, nor perhaps when it has happened will anything survive.

E. M. FORSTER

Commonplace Book


Literature is as old as speech. It grew out of human need for it, and it has not changed except to become more needed.

JOHN STEINBECK

Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Dec. 10, 1962

Tags: John Steinbeck


If the purpose of literature is to illuminate human nature, the purpose of fantastic literature is to do that from a wider perspective. You can say different things about what it means to be human if you can contrast that to what it means to be a robot, or an alien, or an elf.

JO WALTON

interview, Literatura Fantastico, Nov. 22, 2012

Tags: Jo Walton


Such a superiority do the pursuits of literature possess above every other occupation, that even he who attains but a mediocrity in them, merits the pre-eminence above those that excel the most in the common and vulgar professions.

DAVID HUME

The History of England

Tags: David Hume


Originality in literature is only a new coat of paint on an old house.

AUSTIN O'MALLEY

Keystones of Thought

Tags: Austin O'Malley


There rise authors now and then, who seem proof against the mutability of language, because they have rooted themselves in the unchanging principles of human nature. They are like gigantic trees that we sometimes see on the banks of a stream; which, by their vast and deep roots, penetrating through the mere surface, and laying hold on the very foundations of the earth, preserve the soil around them from being swept away by the ever-flowing current, and hold up many a neighboring plant, and perhaps worthless weed, to perpetuity.

WASHINGTON IRVING

"The Mutabilities of Literature", The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon

Tags: Washington Irving


The advantage of literature over life is that its characters are clearly defined, and act consistently.

JEROME K. JEROME

"Reginald Blake, Financier and Cad"

Tags: Jerome K. Jerome


Literature, at least good literature, is science tempered with the blood of art. Like architecture or music.

CARLOS RUIZ ZAFON

The Angel's Game

Tags: Carlos Ruiz Zafon


We must wash literature off ourselves. We want to be men above all, to be human.

ANTONIN ARTAUD

Les Oeuvres et les Hommes

Tags: Antonin Artaud


I don't wish to be a slave any longer to the stringent exigencies of literature.

PHILIP ROTH

Le Monde, special issue, Jan. 2013

Tags: Philip Roth