
“I learned to play (baseball) on the streets in the Dominican Republic when I was 8 yrs old.”
When asked about how he learned to play baseball. http://sports.ign.com/articles/709/709384p1.html
A Continent of Islands" (1992).
“I learned to play (baseball) on the streets in the Dominican Republic when I was 8 yrs old.”
When asked about how he learned to play baseball. http://sports.ign.com/articles/709/709384p1.html
Quoted in Classic Essays on Twentieth-Century Music, ISBN 0028645812.
“If a composer could say what he had to say in words he would not bother trying to say it in music.”
“I will say, finally, that I despair of the republic while slavery exists therein.”
Address to the Colonization Society http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=562 (4 July 1829).
Context: I will say, finally, that I despair of the republic while slavery exists therein. If I look up to God for success, no smile of mercy or forgiveness dispels the gloom of futurity; if to our own resources, they are daily diminishing; if to all history, our destruction is not only possible, but almost certain. Why should we slumber at this momentous crisis? If our hearts were dead to every throb of humanity; if it were lawful to oppress, where power is ample; still, if we had any regard for our safety and happiness, we should strive to crush the Vampire which is feeding upon our life-blood. All the selfishness of our nature cries aloud for a better security. Our own vices are too strong for us, and keep us in perpetual alarm; how, in addition to these, shall we be able to contend successfully with millions of armed and desperate men, as we must eventually, if slavery do not cease?
“I just can’t sit while people are saying nonsense in a meeting without saying it’s nonsense.”
Scientific American Vol. 288, Issue 4 (2003), p. 54
“You marry to be worthy of a gift, and want to say so out loud, but without shouting.”
"Next" (p. 5)
Private Lives in the Imperial City (1979)
Context: You marry to be worthy of a gift, and want to say so out loud, but without shouting. One doesn't shout a prayer. Marriage is one of the few ceremonies left to us about which it is impossible — or at least self-demeaning — to be cynical.