“Hope is paltry food for living.”
John McAfee (1945) American computer programmer and businessman
Into the Heart of Truth (2001)
Source: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968), Chapter 22 (p. 241)
“Hope is paltry food for living.”
John McAfee (1945) American computer programmer and businessman
Into the Heart of Truth (2001)
Tim Hawkins (1968) Christian comedian, songwriter, and singer
imitates use of electric deodorant <br class="br">Available on YouTube as " Tim Hawkins on Products https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MdVx6UYpHg" (uploaded 27 August 2007). <br class="br">Full Range of Motion (2006)
Jawaharlal Nehru (1889–1964) Indian lawyer, statesman, and writer, first Prime Minister of India
The Light Has Gone Out (1948)
Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America
2012, Yangon University Speech (November 2012)
Stephen Fry book Moab Is My Washpot
Referencing Oscar Wilde from the preface of "The Picture of Dorian Gray"; "All art is quite useless".
1990s, Moab is My Washpot (autobiography, 1997)
Source: Moab Is My Washpot
Context: … but love, like all art, as Oscar said, it's quite useless. It is the useless things that make life worth living and that make life dangerous too: wine, love, art, beauty. Without them life is safe but not worth bothering with.
“Those who seem overladen with electricity frighten those around them.”
Margaret Fuller book Woman in the Nineteenth Century
Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845)
Context: The electrical, the magnetic element in Woman has not been fairly brought out at any period. Everything might be expected from it; she has far more of it than Man. This is commonly expressed by saying that her intuitions are more rapid and more correct. You will often see men of high intellect absolutely stupid in regard to the atmospheric changes, the fine invisible links which connect the forms of life around them, while common women, if pure and modest, so that a vulgar self do not overshadow the mental eye, will seize and delineate these with unerring discrimination.
Women who combine this organization with creative genius are very commonly unhappy at present. They see too much to act in conformity with those around them, and their quick impulses seem folly to those who do not discern the motives. This is an usual effect of the apparition of genius, whether in Man or Woman, but is more frequent with regard to the latter, because a harmony, an obvious order and self-restraining decorum, is most expected from her.
Then women of genius, even more than men, are likely to be enslaved by an impassioned sensibility. The world repels them more rudely, and they are of weaker bodily frame.
Those who seem overladen with electricity frighten those around them.
Alexander McCall Smith (1948) British writer
Love Over Scotland, chapter 96.
The 44 Scotland Street series