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John Steinbeck quotes - page 13
I have known many people to ask for advice but very few who wanted it and none who followed it.
John Steinbeck
It is a matter of disillusion to young male Americans otherwise informed, to discover that the French are a moral people - judged, that is, by American country-club standards.
John Steinbeck
The things everyone knows are most likely to be wrong.
John Steinbeck
Most people live in a half-dream all their lives and call it reality.
John Steinbeck
An artist should be open on all sides to every kind of light and darkness.
John Steinbeck
One of the greatest errors in the reconstruction of another era lies in our tendency to think of them as being like ourselves in feeling and attitudes. Actually, without considerable study on the part of a present-day man - if he were confronted by a fifteenth-century man - there would be no possible communication. I think it is possible through knowledge and discipline for a modern man to understand, and, to a certain extent, live into a fifteenth-century mind, but the reverse would be completely impossible.
John Steinbeck
In the combat between wisdom and feeling, wisdom never wins.
John Steinbeck
Some people there are who, being grown, forget the horrible task of learning to read. It is perhaps the greatest single effort that the human undertakes, and he must do it as a child. An adult is rarely successful in the undertaking - the reduction of experience to a set of symbols. For a thousand thousand years these humans have existed and they have only learned this trick - this magic - in the final ten thousand of the thousand thousand.
John Steinbeck
A crime is something someone else commits.
John Steinbeck
In the dusk I saw her smile, that incredible female smile. It is called wisdom but it isn't that but rather an understanding that makes wisdom unnecessary.
John Steinbeck
I like a chapter to have design of tone, as well as of form. A chapter should be a perfect cell in the whole book and should be almost able to stand alone. If this is done then the breaks we call chapters are not arbitrary but rather articulations which allow the free movement of the story.
John Steinbeck
So in our pride we ordered for breakfast an omelet, toast and coffee and what has just arrived is a tomato salad with onions, a dish of pickles, a big slice of watermelon and two bottles of cream soda.
John Steinbeck
It has always been my private conviction that any man who puts his intelligence up against a fish and loses had it coming.
John Steinbeck
We spend our time searching for security and hate it when we get it.
John Steinbeck
I have never smuggled anything in my life. Why, then, do I feel an uneasy sense of guilt on approaching a customs barrier?
John Steinbeck
These words dropped into my childish mind as if you should accidentally drop a ring into a deep well. I did not think of them much at the time, but there came a day in my life when the ring was fished up out of the well, good as new.
John Steinbeck
Ain't many guys travel around together. I don't know why. Maybe ever'body in the whole damn world is scared of each other.
John Steinbeck
He didn't believe in psychiatrists, he said. But actually he did believe in them, so much that he was afraid of them.
John Steinbeck
What a wonderful thing a woman is. I can admire what they do even if I don't understand why.
John Steinbeck
There's nobody as lonely as an all-married man.
John Steinbeck
We all have that heritage, no matter what old land our fathers left. All colors and blends of Americans have somewhat the same tendencies. It's a breed - selected out by accident. And so we're overbrave and overfearful - we're kind and cruel as children. We're overfriendly and at the same time frightened of strangers. We boast and are impressed. We're oversentimental and realistic. We are mundane and materialistic - and do you know of any other nation that acts for ideals? We eat too much. We have no taste, no sense of proportion. We throw our energy about like waste. In the old lands they say of us that we go from barbarism to decadence without an intervening culture. Can it be that our critics have not the key or the language of our culture? That's what we are, Cal - all of us. You aren't very different.
John Steinbeck
The techniques of opening conversation are universal. I knew long ago and rediscovered that the best way to attract attention, help, and conversation is to be lost. A man who seeing his mother starving to death on a path kicks her in the stomach to clear the way, will cheerfully devote several hours of his time giving wrong directions to a total stranger who claims to be lost.
John Steinbeck
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