Quotes about irony

A collection of quotes on the topic of irony, use, doing, life.

Quotes about irony

Charles Lamb photo
Helena Bonham Carter photo

“He had zero experience but he was really good. The irony is, given the fact that the character can't play very well, is that he's actually a brilliant footballer.”

Helena Bonham Carter (1966) British actress

Of co-star Greg Sulkin in film "66"; Evening Times (Glasgow); Nov 2, 2006; Andy Dougan; p. 3

H.P. Lovecraft photo

“From even the greatest of horrors irony is seldom absent.”

H.P. Lovecraft (1890–1937) American author

Fiction, The Shunned House (1924)
Source: Tales of H.P. Lovecraft

John Galt (novelist) photo

“This work is not for the many; but in the unconscious, perfectly natural, irony of self-delusion, in all parts intelligible to the intelligent reader, without the slightest suspicion on the part of the autobiographer, I know of no equal in our literature…This and The Entail would alone suffice to place Galt in the first rank of contemporary novelists.”

John Galt (novelist) (1779–1839) British writer

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, manuscript note written in his copy of The Provost; cited from Thomas Middleton Raysor (ed.) Coleridge's Miscellaneous Criticism (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1936), p. 344.
Criticism

Orhan Pamuk photo
Oscar Wilde photo
Markus Zusak photo
Chris Hedges photo
Friedrich Nietzsche photo

“There is some irony in the fact that children imagine that parents can do what they want, and parents imagine that children do.”

http://books.google.com/books?id=YnY10fNqqp4C&q=%22There+is+some+irony+in+the+fact+that+children+imagine+that+parents+can+do+what+they+want+and+parents+imagine+that+children+do+When+I+grow+up+parallels+Oh+to+be+a+child+again%22&pg=PA102#v=onepage
The Dialectic of Sex (1970)

Michael Moorcock photo
Rainer Maria Rilke photo
Mark Twain photo
Fernando Pessoa photo

“Irony is the first hint that consciousness became conscious.”

Ibid., p. 151
The Book of Disquiet
Original: A ironia é o primeiro indício de que a consciência se tornou consciente.

Thomas Mann photo
Kurt Vonnegut photo
Arthur Miller photo

“A play is made by sensing how the forces in life simulate ignorance — you set free the concealed irony, the deadly joke.”

Arthur Miller (1915–2005) playwright from the United States

"The State of the Theatre" an interview by Henry Brandon in Harpers 221 (November 1960)

Mikhail Lermontov photo
Barack Obama photo

“And the biggest irony of course was -- is that those who betrayed these values were themselves the children of immigrants. How quickly we forget. One generation passes, two generation passes, and suddenly we don’t remember where we came from. And we suggest that somehow there is “us” and there is “them,” not remembering we used to be “them.””

Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America

2015, Naturalization Ceremony speech (December 2015)
Context: We celebrate this history, this heritage, as an immigrant nation. And we are strong enough to acknowledge, as painful as it may be, that we haven’t always lived up to our own ideals. We haven’t always lived up to these documents. [... ] We succumbed to fear. We betrayed not only our fellow Americans, but our deepest values. We betrayed these documents. It’s happened before. And the biggest irony of course was -- is that those who betrayed these values were themselves the children of immigrants. How quickly we forget. One generation passes, two generation passes, and suddenly we don’t remember where we came from. And we suggest that somehow there is “us” and there is “them,” not remembering we used to be “them.”

Thomas Mann photo

“Irony, forsooth! Guard yourself, Engineer, from the sort of irony that thrives up here”

Source: The Magic Mountain (1924), Ch. 5
Context: Irony, forsooth! Guard yourself, Engineer, from the sort of irony that thrives up here; guard yourself altogether from taking on their mental attitude! Where irony is not a direct and classic device of oratory, not for a moment equivocal to a healthy mind, it makes for depravity, it becomes a drawback to civilization, an unclean traffic with the forces of reaction, vice and materialism.

Periyar E. V. Ramasamy photo

“There is some irony in the fact that children imagine that parents can do what they want, and parents imagine that children do. "When I grow up..." parallels "Oh to be a child again..."”

http://books.google.com/books?id=YnY10fNqqp4C&q=%22There+is+some+irony+in+the+fact+that+children+imagine+that+parents+can+do+what+they+want+and+parents+imagine+that+children+do+When+I+grow+up+parallels+Oh+to+be+a+child+again%22&pg=PA102#v=onepage
The Dialectic of Sex (1970)

Christopher Moore photo
Karen Marie Moning photo
Nassim Nicholas Taleb photo
Laurell K. Hamilton photo
Anne Rice photo
Christopher Moore photo
Edith Wharton photo
Czeslaw Milosz photo

“Irony is the glory of slaves.”

Czeslaw Milosz (1911–2004) Polish, poet, diplomat, prosaist, writer, and translator
Christopher Hitchens photo

“Irony is Fate's most common figure of speech.”

Source: Shibumi

Julian Barnes photo
James Patterson photo

“Does anything on you work properly?" Asked ter Borcht.
"Well, I do have a highly developed sense of irony." Replied Iggy.”

James Patterson (1947) American author

Source: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports

Charlie Chaplin photo
Joyce Carol Oates photo
Don DeLillo photo

“I am a connoisseur of fine irony. 'Tis a bit like fine wine, but it has a better bite.”

Lynn Kurland (2000) American writer

Source: Princess of the Sword

Patti Smith photo
Christopher Hitchens photo

“An appreciation for irony.”

Christopher Hitchens (1949–2011) British American author and journalist

Source: Hitch-22: A Memoir

Lewis Hyde photo

“Irony has only emergency use. Carried over time it is the voice of the trapped who have come to enjoy their cage.”

Lewis Hyde (1945) American writer

Source: Alcohol and Poetry: John Berryman and the Booze Talking

Alan Moore photo
Nicholas Sparks photo
Douglas Coupland photo
Jim Butcher photo

“Hell's bells, irony blows.”

Source: Blood Rites

Paul Fussell photo
James Patterson photo

“guess they forgot to program us with any respect for authority."

"well, I have a highly developed sense of irony.”

James Patterson (1947) American author

Source: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports

Elizabeth Gilbert photo
Jonathan Stroud photo
Germaine Greer photo
Don DeLillo photo
Christopher Hitchens photo
Charles Stross photo

“Truly the jaws of irony are agape!”

Source: Rule 34 (2011), Chapter 13, “Kemal: Spamcop” (p. 157)

Jefferson Davis photo
Richard Rodríguez photo
Harry V. Jaffa photo
Tallulah Bankhead photo

“It's one of the tragic ironies of the theatre that only one man in it can count on steady work — the night watchman.”

Tallulah Bankhead (1902–1968) American actress

Tallulah: My Autobiography (1952)

Slavoj Žižek photo
Enoch Powell photo

“In the end, the Labour party could cease to represent labour. Stranger historic ironies have happened than that.”

Enoch Powell (1912–1998) British politician

Article for The Sunday Telegraph, citing the swing to the Conservatives in his constituency and others with large working-class electorates (18 October 1964), from Simon Heffer, Like the Roman. The Life of Enoch Powell (Phoenix, 1999), p. 364
1960s

Peter Kropotkin photo
Robert Kagan photo
James Branch Cabell photo
Richard Rodríguez photo
Edward St. Aubyn photo
Warren Farrell photo
Derren Brown photo
Winston S. Churchill photo
Jacques Attali photo
Jacob Bronowski photo

“The Principle of Uncertainty is a bad name. In science, or outside of it, we are not uncertain; our knowledge is merely confined, within a certain tolerance. We should call it the Principle of Tolerance. And I propose that name in two senses. First, in the engineering sense: Science has progressed, step by step, the most successful enterprise in the ascent of man, because it has understood that the exchange of information between man and nature, and man and man, can only take place with a certain tolerance. But second, I also use the word, passionately, about the real world. All knowledge – all information between human beings – can only be exchanged within a play of tolerance. And that is true whether the exchange is in science, or in literature, or in religion, or in politics, or in any form of thought that aspires to dogma. It's a major tragedy of my lifetime and yours that scientists were refining, to the most exquisite precision, the Principle of Tolerance – and turning their backs on the fact that all around them, tolerance was crashing to the ground beyond repair. The Principle of Uncertainty or, in my phrase, the Principle of Tolerance, fixed once for all the realization that all knowledge is limited. It is an irony of history that at the very time when this was being worked out, there should rise, under Hitler in Germany and other tyrants elsewhere, a counter-conception: a principle of monstrous certainty. When the future looks back on the 1930's, it will think of them as a crucial confrontation of culture as I have been expounding it – the ascent of man against the throwback to the despots' belief that they have absolute certainty.”

Episode 11: "Knowledge or Certainty"
The Ascent of Man (1973)

Miss Shangay Lily photo
Yasser Harrak photo

“It is an irony to see in some Muslim societies someone who curses God, in his daily slang when angry, go out and protest against the Danish cartoons about the Prophet.”

Yasser Harrak Canadian liberal writer, columnist and human rights activist

Yasser Harrak. 2010. "Origins of Insluting Islam in the Sunna and in Muslim societies". Annabaa Information Network. Accessed January 20, 2010. http://annabaa.org/nbanews/2010/05/243.htm

Caitlín R. Kiernan photo
John Gray photo
Neal Stephenson photo
Tanith Lee photo
Tony Blair photo
Camille Paglia photo
Peter Greenaway photo
Douglas Coupland photo
Sören Kierkegaard photo

“The similarity between Christ and Socrates consists essentially in their dissimilarity. Just as philosophy begins with doubt, so also a life that may be called human begins with irony.”

Sören Kierkegaard (1813–1855) Danish philosopher and theologian, founder of Existentialism

1840s, On the Concept of Irony with Continual Reference to Socrates (1841)

Jane Roberts photo
Antonin Scalia photo

“The main business of a lawyer is to take the romance, the mystery, the irony, the ambiguity out of everything he touches.”

Antonin Scalia (1936–2016) former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States

Speech at the Juilliard School http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/23/nyregion/23juilliard.html (22 September 2005).
2000s

Margaret Atwood photo
Ray Bradbury photo
Ian McDonald photo
Roger Ebert photo
David Cross photo

“The South has more of a disproportionate amount of irony on T-shirts than any other region in the country.”

David Cross (1964) American comedian, writer and actor

Shut Up, You Fucking Baby

Will Eisner photo
Chris Hedges photo
Alan Bennett photo

“The Channel is a slipper-bath of irony through which we pass these serious Continentals in order not to be infected by their gloom.”

Alan Bennett (1934) English actor, author

"Kafka in Las Vegas", p. 335 (1987).
Writing Home (1994)