James Branch Cabell cytaty
strona 5

James Branch Cabell – amerykański pisarz.

✵ 14. Kwiecień 1879 – 5. Maj 1958
James Branch Cabell Fotografia
James Branch Cabell: 131   Cytatów 1   Polubienie

James Branch Cabell cytaty

„Optymista twierdzi, że żyjemy w najlepszym z możliwych światów, a pesymista obawia się, że jest to prawda.”

The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds; and the pessimist fears this is true. (ang.)
Źródło: The Silver Stallion, 1926, rozdz. XXVI

James Branch Cabell: Cytaty po angielsku

“In Philistia to make literature and to make trouble for yourself are synonyms,… the tumblebug explained.”

I know, for already we of Philistia have been pestered by three of these makers of literature. Yes, there was Edgar, whom I starved and hunted until I was tired of it: then I chased him up a back alley one night, and knocked out those annoying brains of his. And there was Walt, whom I chivvied and battered from place to place, and made a paralytic of him: and him, too, I labelled offensive and lewd and lascivious and indecent. Then later there was Mark, whom I frightened into disguising himself in a clown's suit, so that nobody might suspect him to be a maker of literature: indeed, I frightened him so that he hid away the greater part of what he had made until after he was dead, and I could not get at him. That was a disgusting trick to play on me, I consider. Still, these are the only three detected makers of literature that have ever infested Philistia, thanks be to goodness and my vigilance, but for both of which we might have been no more free from makers of literature than are the other countries.…
The Judging of Jurgen (1920)

“Thus he labors, and loudly they jeer at him; — That is, when they remember he still exists. Who. you ask, is this fellow?”

What matter names?
He is only a scribbler who is content.
"Auctorial Induction"
The Certain Hour (1916)

“The man was not merely very human; he was humanity. And I reflected that it is only by preserving faith in human dreams that we may, after all, perhaps some day make them come true.”

James Branch Cabell książka The Cream of the Jest

Źródło: The Cream of the Jest (1917), Ch. 40 : Which Mr. Flaherty Does Not Quite Explain

“Nothing ... nothing in the universe, is of any importance, or is authentic to any serious sense, except the illusions of romance. For man alone of animals plays the ape to his dreams. These axioms — poor, deaf and blinded spendthrift!”

are none the less valuable for being quoted.
The Gander, in Book Seven : What Saraïde Wanted, Ch. XLV : The Gander Also Generalizes
The Silver Stallion (1926)