WORDS QUOTES XII

quotations about words

Life is like that, full of words that are not worth saying or that were worth saying once but not any more, each word that we utter will take up the space of another more deserving word not deserving in its own right, but because of the possible consequences of saying it.

JOSÉ SARAMAGO

The Cave


Words are very unnecessary
They can only do harm

DEPECHE MODE

"Enjoy the Silence"

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If words suffice not, blows must follow.

AESOP

"The Farmer and the Cranes", Aesop's Fables

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If the lost word is lost, if the spent word is spent
If the unheard, unspoken
Word is unspoken, unheard;
Still is the unspoken word, the Word unheard,
The Word without a word, the Word within
The world and for the world;
And the light shone in darkness and
Against the Word the unstilled world still whirled
About the centre of the silent Word.

T. S. ELIOT

Ash-Wednesday

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A powerful agent is the right word. Whenever we come upon one of those intensely right words in a book or a newspaper the resulting effect is physical as well as spiritual, and electrically prompt.

MARK TWAIN

"Essay on William Dean Howells"

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I like good strong words that mean something.

LOUISA MAY ALCOTT

Little Women

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As a free people, we must respect those who speak honestly and forthrightly and be suspect of those who would torture the language, and otherwise misrepresent facts. Words are thoughts; protect them.

JONATHAN HOFFMAN

"Words are thoughts; protect them", Arizona Daily Star, March 11, 2017


Words are not the end of thought, they are where it begins.

JANE HIRSHFIELD

"After Long Silence"

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The proof of words are sometimes the effect of them on others; words are not proofs without effect.

EDWARD COUNSEL

Maxims


You will hear words
old and spent and useless
like costumes left over
from yesterday's parties.

CESARE PAVESE

"The Cats Will Know"


Too many words cheapened the value of a man's speech.

PATRICIA BRIGGS

Raven's Shadow

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Abuse of words has been the great instrument of sophistry and chicanery, of party, faction, and division of society.

JOHN ADAMS

letter to J. H. Tiffany, March 31, 1819

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Of course, not everything is unsayable in words, only the living truth.

EUGENE IONESCO

Fragments of a Journal

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Certain individual words do possess more pitch, more radiance, more shazam! than others, but it's the way words are juxtaposed with other words in a phrase or sentence that can create magic. Perhaps literally. The word "grammar," like its sister word "glamour," is actually derived from an old Scottish word that meant "sorcery." When we were made to diagram sentences in high school, we were unwittingly being instructed in syntax sorcery, in wizardry. We were all enrolled at Hogwarts. Who knew?

TOM ROBBINS

interview, Reality Sandwich

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The word was -- civilization!

THOMAS MANN

The Magic Mountain

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Into the cities my people had gathered. They had become dizzy with words. Words had choked them. They could not breathe.

SHERWOOD ANDERSON

"The Cornfields", Mid-American Chants

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Such simple words! But words are mighty things;
They cast us down, or lift us up to rest;
They charm and strengthen, till our angel sings
The last of all the life-songs, and the best.

SARAH DOUDNEY

Some Words

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Never use a big word when a little filthy one will do.

JOHNNY CARSON

The Tonight Show

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Word and picture are correlatives which are continually in quest of each other, as is sufficiently evident in the case of metaphors and similes. So from all time what was said or sung inwardly to the ear had to be presented equally to the eye. And so in childish days we see word and picture in continual balance; in the book of the law and in the way of salvation, in the Bible and in the spelling-book. When something was spoken which could not be pictured, and something pictured which could not be spoken, all went well; but mistakes were often made, and a word was used instead of a picture; and thence arose those monsters of symbolical mysticism, which are doubly an evil.

JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE

The Maxims and Reflections of Goethe


How truly language must be regarded as a hindrance to thought, though the necessary instrument of it, we shall clearly perceive on remembering the comparative force with which simple ideas are communicated by signs. To say, "Leave the room," is less expressive than to point to the door. Place a finger on the lips is more forcible than whispering, "Do not speak." A beck of the hand is better than, "Come here." No phrase can convey the idea of surprise so vividly as opening the eyes and raising the eyebrows. A shrug of the shoulders would lose much by translation into words.

HERBERT SPENCER

The Philosophy of Style

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