
“I put things down on sheets of paper and stuff them in my pockets. When I have enough, I have a book.”
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John Lennon 228
English singer and songwriter 1940–1980Related quotes


On the fate of his friend Lion Nordheim, who was executed ten days before the end of the war, and his own release at around the same time, p. 52
To Save a Life: Stories of Holocaust Rescue (2000)
Context: On the day we were caught, Lion and I had been talking about writing a memorandum on the fate of the Jewish war children living in hiding or among Dutch families … we were the representatives of the Zionist youth organization. … Lion who had been taking notes of the discussion, put these papers in his jacket pocket when he took a break from lunch. When the Germans caught us they discovered his notes. If those papers had been in my pocket I would have never lived to be seventy. I have led a strange life, a set of complete coincidences.
"An innovator who brings order to an infinitude of equations" Quanta Magazine (2018)

Source: 1905 - 1910, Notes d'un Peintre' (Notes of a Painter) (1908), p. 410

“My aim is to put down on paper what I see and what I feel in the best and simplest way.”
Source: Water Street (2006), Chapters 1-10, p. 15
People's Education interview (2007)
Context: I think the hardest thing to teach a student is that what he or she puts down on paper is changeable. It’s not the final thing, it’s the first thing, which may just be the suggestive, vague identification of something that you have to come back to and rewrite. At first, students tend to freeze at the first effort. The breakthrough comes when they realize that they can make it better — can identify what their purposes were and realize better ways to achieve those purposes. That is the important thing in teaching students to write: not to be frozen in their first effort.
The Complete Neurotic's Notebook (1981), Unclassified

1836
Quoted in Leslie Parris and Ian Fleming-Williams, Constable, (Tate Gallery Publications, London, 1993), p. 37
1830s