“At my age one's got to be sincere. Lying's too much effort.”
The Plague (1947)
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Albert Camus 209
French author and journalist 1913–1960Related quotes

“One of the great besetting problems of the modern age is what to do with too much information.”
Source: The Laundry Files, The Rhesus Chart (2014), Chapter 2, “Meet the Scrum” (p. 35)

“We live in an age that reads too much to be wise, and that thinks too much to be beautiful.”
Source: The Picture of Dorian Gray

undated quotes
Source: Machine in the Studio, Caroline A. Jones, University of Chicago Press, 1996 pp. 197-198

60 Minutes interview (2006)

Autograph profile (2010)
Context: I go to bed angry every night, I wake up angry every morning. There are certain injustices in this life you’ve got to do something about. You can’t just say that you can’t fight it, or it’s too much trouble, or that you don’t have the time or the effort, or that you can’t win. Forget all that. Fight them all! I fight them all because you never know which one is the big one. You never know which you give up and then it will come back and bite you in the ass. You never look away from a mountain lion, you lock eyes and you don’t let him get behind you.

Upon the Sovereign Sun (362)
Context: From my earliest infancy I was possessed with a strange longing for the solar rays, so that when, as a boy, I cast my eyes upon the ethereal splendour, my soul felt seized and carried up out of itself. And not merely was it my delight to gaze upon the solar brightness, but at night also whenever I walked out in clear weather, disregarding all else, I used to fix my eyes upon the beauty of the heavens; so that I neither paid attention to what was said to me, nor took any notice of what was going on. On this account, people used to think me too much given to such pursuits, and far too inquisitive for my age: and they even suspected me, long before my beard was grown, of practising divination by means of the heavenly bodies. And. yet at that time no book on the subject had fallen into my hands, and I was utterly ignorant of what that science meant. But what use is it to quote these matters, when I have still stranger things to mention; if I should mention what I at that time thought about the gods? But let oblivion rest upon that epoch of darkness! How the radiance of heaven, diffused all round me, used to lift up my soul to its own contemplation! to such a degree that I discovered for myself that the moon's motion was in the opposite direction to that of the rest of the system, long before I met with any works giving the philosophy of such matters.

The Spirit of Liberty: Papers and Addresses (1952), p. 9.
Extra-judicial writings
“Be a sincere effort never so misguided, to laugh at it is a breach of faith with decency.”
Source: Meditations in Wall Street (1940), p. 82