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Edmund Wilson Quotes

American critic, Birth: 8-5-1895, Death: 12-6-1972 Edmund Wilson Quotes
1.
Marxism is the opium of the intellectuals.
Edmund Wilson

2.
Real genius of moral insight is a motor which will start any engine.
Edmund Wilson

3.
No two persons ever read the same book.
Edmund Wilson

4.
If you ain't the lead dog, the scenery never changes.
Edmund Wilson

5.
There is nothing more demoralizing than a small but adequate income.
Edmund Wilson

Similar Authors: C. S. Lewis George Bernard Shaw Charles Dickens H. L. Mencken William Hazlitt John Ruskin Ursula K. Le Guin James Russell Lowell Marcel Proust Camille Paglia Vladimir Nabokov Charles Baudelaire Fernando Pessoa Matthew Arnold Gary Vaynerchuk
6.
In a sense, one can never read the book that the author originally wrote, and one can never read the same book twice.
Edmund Wilson

7.
In times of disorder and stress, the fanatics play a prominent role; in times of peace, the critics. Both are shot after the revolution.
Edmund Wilson

8.
The most immoral and disgraceful and dangerous thing that anybody can do in the arts is knowingly to feed back to the public its own ignorance and cheap tastes.
Edmund Wilson

Quote Topics by Edmund Wilson: Hands Art Inspirational Europe Country Real Imagination Book Ideas Life Poet Money Giving Up Marxism Next Day Cities Insult Vision Truth Periods Poodles Humans Reading Drink Dog Sex Thinking Advice Closing Fool
9.
I have learned to read the papers calmly and not to hate the fools I read about.
Edmund Wilson

10.
Keep going; never stop; sit tight; Read something luminous at night.
Edmund Wilson

11.
Only the curious will learn and only the resolute will overcome the obstacles to learning. The quest quotient has always excited me more than the intelligence quotient.
Edmund Wilson

12.
The Jew lends himself easily to Communism because it enables him to devote himself to a high cause, involving all of humanity, characteristics which are natural to him as a Jew.
Edmund Wilson

13.
One didn't really believe till one saw it demonstrated that giving oneself up completely to art, to emotion, to enjoyment, without planning for the future or counting the cost, produced dreadful disabilities and bankruptcies later.
Edmund Wilson

14.
From the moment a New Yorker is confronted with almost any large city of Europe, it is impossible for him to pretend to himself that his own city is anything other than an unscrupulous real-estate speculation
Edmund Wilson

15.
The cruelest thing that has happened to Lincoln since he was shot by Booth was to fall into the hands of Carl Sandburg.
Edmund Wilson

16.
A young poet in America should not be advised at the outset to give up all for the Muse-to seclude himself in the country, to live hand from mouth in Greenwich Village or to escape to the Riviera. I should not advise him even to become a magazine editor or work in a publisher's office. The poet would do better to study a profession, to become a banker or a public official or even to go in for the movies.
Edmund Wilson

17.
If I could only remember that the days were not bricks to be laid row on row, to be built into a solid house, where one might dwell in safety and peace, but only food for the fires of the heart.
Edmund Wilson

18.
It is certainly very hard to write about sex in English without making it unattractive.
Edmund Wilson

19.
Every work of art is a trick by which the artist manipulates appearances.
Edmund Wilson

20.
The great mistake about Europe is taking the countries seriously and letting them quarrel and drop bombs on one another.
Edmund Wilson

21.
On the one hand, I have wanted to supply documentation on myself by including material relevant to my emotions and ideas in my youth; and, on the other, not to let myself down by publishing inferior material. My poetry comes under the latter head. My only advice to the reader is to skip any verse that he sees coming.
Edmund Wilson

22.
His style has the desperate jauntiness of an orchestra fiddling away for dear life on a sinking ship.
Edmund Wilson

23.
Education, the last hope of the liberal in all periods.
Edmund Wilson

24.
I think with my right hand.
Edmund Wilson

25.
I find more and more that I am a man of the 1920s. I still expect something exciting. Drinks, animated conversation, gaiety: the uninhibited exchange of ideas.
Edmund Wilson

26.
At 60 the sexual preoccupation, when it hits you, seems sometimes sharper, as if it were an elderly malady, like gout.
Edmund Wilson

27.
The human imagination has already come to conceive the possibility of recreating human society.
Edmund Wilson

28.
The product of the scientific imagination is a new vision of relations - like that of artistic imagination.
Edmund Wilson

29.
Old-fogyism is comfortably closing in.
Edmund Wilson

30.
The only thing that we can really make is our work, and deliberate work of the mind, imagination and hand, done, as Nietzsche said, ‘notwithstanding,’ in the long run remakes the world.
Edmund Wilson

31.
They [the English] have a special word, "civil," for what is elsewhere merely ordinary politeness.
Edmund Wilson

32.
I really can't stand any more to pay for a burst of animation when someone comes in for drinks with a depressed and low-keyed next day, in which I have to go around on my hands and knees.
Edmund Wilson

33.
I am not quite a poet but I am something of the kind.
Edmund Wilson

34.
All Hollywood corrupts; and absolute Hollywood corrupts absolutely.
Edmund Wilson