
“Mistrust is the most necessary characteristic of the Chess player.”
The Game of Chess (1931), Pt. 2 : The End Game, p. 79
As quoted in Testimonials to Paul Morphy: Presented at University Hall, New York, May 25, 1859
“Mistrust is the most necessary characteristic of the Chess player.”
The Game of Chess (1931), Pt. 2 : The End Game, p. 79
On the title of her book Chess Bitch : Women in the Ultimate Intellectual Sport
Gothamist interview (2006)
Cemetery World (1973)
Context: I find it a most intriguing and amusing thing that it might be possible to package the experiences, not only of one's self, but of other people. Think of the hoard we might then lay up against our later, lonely years when all old friends are gone and the opportunity for new experiences have withered. All we need to do then is to reach up to a shelf and take down a package that we have bottled or preserved or whatever the phrase might be, say from a hundred years ago, and uncorking it, enjoy the same experience again, as sharp and fresh as the first time it had happened... I have tried to imagine... the various ingredients one might wish to compound in such a package. Beside the bare experience itself, the context of it, one might say, he should want to capture and hold all the subsidiary factors which might serve as a background for it — the sound, the feel of wind and sun, the cloud floating in the sky, the color and the scent. For such a packaging, to give the desired results, must be as perfect as one can make it. It must have all those elements which would be valuable in invoking the total recall of some event that had taken place many years before...
Source: Practical Pictorial Photography, 1898, Methods - The practical application of means to end, p. 27
“Of pleasures, those which occur most rarely give the most delight.”
Fragment xi.
Golden Sayings of Epictetus, Fragments
“Exceed due measure, and the most delightful things become the least delightful.”
Fragment xii.
Golden Sayings of Epictetus, Fragments
“Song for Prince Charles, performed with Robin Williams on We Are Most Amused”
2008
Lyrics
“The most delightful of all music, that of your own praises.”
Hiero, ch. 3, as translated by Richard Graves in The Whole Works of Xenophon (1832) p. 626).
Edward Lasker (in The Adventure of Chess, 2nd Edition, New York, 1959)
About