“Wipe out the paints, unmould the clay, Let nothing remain of that yesterday.”
Kamala Surayya book My Story
Kamala Suraiyya Das (My Story: The Compelling Autobiography of the Most Contreversial Indian Writer)
As quoted in The Story of World Progress (1922) by Willis Mason West, p. 437
Attributed
“Wipe out the paints, unmould the clay, Let nothing remain of that yesterday.”
Kamala Surayya book My Story
Kamala Suraiyya Das (My Story: The Compelling Autobiography of the Most Contreversial Indian Writer)
Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) logician, one of the first analytic philosophers and political activist
Television interview on March 24, 1958, as quoted in The United States in World Affairs (1959), p. 12
1950s
Wendelin Van Draanen (1965) American writer
Source: The Running Dream
Rutherford B. Hayes (1822–1893) American politician, 19th President of the United States (in office from 1877 to 1881)
Inaugural Address (5 March 1877)
Penn Jillette (1955) American magician
p. 129 http://books.google.com/books?id=KsI3sswEg14C&pg=PA129&dq=%22if+every+trace+of+any+single+religion%22 <br class="br">2010s, God, No!: Signs You May Already Be an Atheist and Other Magical Tales (2011)
Daniel Kahneman (1934) Israeli-American psychologist
Bias, Blindness and How We Truly Think (Part 4): Daniel Kahneman, bloomberg.com, 24 October 2011, 15 May 2014 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-27/bias-blindness-and-how-we-truly-think-part-4-daniel-kahneman.html, <br class="br">"Bias, Blindness and How We Truly Think" (2011)
“Nostalgia, as always, had wiped away bad memories and magnified the good ones.”
Gabriel García Márquez book Living to Tell the Tale
Living to Tell the Tale (2002)
Quentin Tarantino (1963) American film director, screenwriter, producer, and actor
Source: Interview, circa 1994; as quoted in Halliwell's Who's Who in the Movies (2003) by Leslie Halliwell, p. 450
Gabriel García Márquez book One Hundred Years of Solitude
Last Paragraph
One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967)