1.
What’s any artist, but the dregs of his work?
William Gaddis
2.
Stupidity is the deliberate cultivation of ignorance.
William Gaddis
3.
What's any artist, but the dregs of his work? the human shambles that follows it around. What's left of the man when the work's done but a shambles of apology.
William Gaddis
4.
Justice? You get justice in the next world, in this world you have the law.
William Gaddis
5.
I see the player piano as the grandfather of the computer, the ancestor of the entire nightmare we live in, the birth of the binary world where there is no option other than yes or no and where there is no refuge.
William Gaddis
6.
Power doesn't corrupt people; people corrupt power.
William Gaddis
7.
If you want to make a million you don't have to understand money, what you have to understand is people's fears about money
William Gaddis
8.
Tragedy was foresworn, in ritual denial of the ripe knowledge that we are drawing away from one another, that we share only one thing, share the fear of belonging to another, or to others, or to God; love or money, tender equated in advertising and the world, where only money is currency, and under dead trees and brittle ornaments prehensile hands exchange forgeries of what the heart dare not surrender.
William Gaddis
9.
Everybody has that feeling when they look at a work of art and it's right, that sudden familiarity, a sort of...recognition, as though they were creating it themselves, as though it were being created through them while they look at it or listen to it.
William Gaddis
10.
How some of the writers I come across get through their books without dying of boredom is beyond me.
William Gaddis
11.
...mementos of this world, in which the things worth being were so easily exchanged for the things worth having.
William Gaddis
12.
It is the bliss of childhood that we are being warped most when we know it the least.
William Gaddis
13.
He was doing missionary work. But from the outset he had little success in convincing his charges of their responsibility for a sin committed at the beginning of creation, one which, as they understood it, they were ready and capable (indeed, they carried charms to assure it) of duplicating themselves. He did no better convincing them that a man had died on a tree to save them all: an act which one old Indian, if Gwyon had translated correctly, regarded as "rank presumption".
William Gaddis
14.
We're comic. We're all comics. We live in a comic time. And the worse it gets the more comic we are.
William Gaddis
15.
How real is any of the past, being every moment revalued to make the present possible.
William Gaddis
16.
If it is not beautiful for someone, it does not exist.
William Gaddis
17.
He walked out into the cold morning asking himself this heretical question: Can you start measuring a minute at any instant you wish?
William Gaddis
18.
There is nothing more distressing or tiresome than a writer standing in front of an audience and reading his work.
William Gaddis
19.
Say a word, say a thousand to me on the telephone and I shall choose the wrong one to cling to as though you had said it after long deliberation when only I provoked it from you, I will cling to it from among a thousand, to be provoked and hurl it back with something I mean no more than you meant that, something for you to cling to and retreat clinging to.
William Gaddis
20.
We want someone to bring us the news.
William Gaddis
21.
That was Youth with its reckless exuberance when all things were possible pursued by Age where we are now, looking back at what we destroyed, what we tore away from that self who could do more, and its work that's become my enemy because that's what I can tell you about, that Youth who could do anything.
William Gaddis
22.
I mean why should somebody go steal and break the law to get all they can when there's always some law where you can be legal and get it all anyway!
William Gaddis
23.
Why do you treat me as they do, as though I were exactly what I want to be. Why do we treat people that way?
William Gaddis
24.
That's what I can't stand. I know I'll bounce back, and that's what I can't stand.
William Gaddis