You must provide yourself with a good deal of extraneous matter, which you are to produce occasionally, so as to fill up the time; for you must consider, that they do not listen much. If you begin with the strength of your cause, it may be lost before they begin to listen. When you catch a moment of attention, press the merits of the question upon them."
Samuel Johnson to James Boswell, in his The Life of Samuel Johnson, upon being asked for advice on how to speak to the House of Commons.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Friday, December 28, 2007
Friday, October 26, 2007
Outsiders find themselves hard pressed to explain the political passions of the Serbs. Having reduced complex political relations to vulgar, petty squabbles, the Serb is not inclined to weigh the contradictions between individual and common interests in the most efficient and just manner. Lust for power, a Byzantine brand of power, in a form limited by no constraints whatsoever, informs the vision of each and every political hack and local government agent as much as it moves the prime minister and leader of the opposition. Politics in Yugoslavia are not conducted for the purpose of achieving some tangible goal...[but] so that the parties can harangue one another to the point of exhaustion, or lunacy.
Slobodan Selenic, Fathers and Forefathers
Slobodan Selenic, Fathers and Forefathers
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Human thinking develops in leaps. Such a leap may germinate for a while in our subconscious, but then it happens in a flash, like an epiphany....Duration is in fact a state of constant flux. There is no spiritual state identical to itself from minute to minute. With each new moment, something has been added to the one before. As he endures, a man is constantly shaping a new self. A person can stop changing only when he stops existing. Though my memory is constantly nudging thoughts, feelings, wishes, from the just abandoned past into the emerging present, I am not aware of this. The changes are too minuscule for my crude perceptive apparatus, and the weight of personal dogma too great to acquiesce without resistance. So it is only when the outcome of the change is noticeable, and when the contradictions inherent to my thinking and behavior have reshaped and reconciled themselves to a new sequence, at last, with some semblance of harmony, that I register the change as a shift from one state of mind to another.
Slobodan Selenic, Fathers and Forefathers
Slobodan Selenic, Fathers and Forefathers
Friday, October 19, 2007
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Fear always runs the State Department. They always follow what they are most afraid of.
Averell Harriman, as quoted by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr, New York Review of Books of October 11, 2007.
Averell Harriman, as quoted by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr, New York Review of Books of October 11, 2007.
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
[T]he main purpose of human association was to share enjoyment of the world's absurdity.
Auberon Waugh on his father Evelyn as quoted by John Banville in "The Family Pinfold," New York Review of Books of June 28, 2007
Auberon Waugh on his father Evelyn as quoted by John Banville in "The Family Pinfold," New York Review of Books of June 28, 2007
Sunday, September 30, 2007
I always fare the best with my innocuousness, which is up to 20 percent conscious. This is easily attained when you're indifferent to the feelings of your dear fellow humans—but you are never as indifferent to them as they deserve.
Albert Einstein as quoted by Lee Smolin in "The Other Einstein" on how he keeps his cool, in the New York Review of Books, June 14, 2007.
Albert Einstein as quoted by Lee Smolin in "The Other Einstein" on how he keeps his cool, in the New York Review of Books, June 14, 2007.
Friday, September 07, 2007
Monday, September 03, 2007
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Wednesday, August 01, 2007
By doing what was necessary to keep the settlers alive, John Smith became the person most feared by investors and bureaucrats through the ages: the man on the scene who does not hesitate to exceed his instructions.
Edmund S. and Marie Morgan, “Our Shaky Beginning’s,” NYRB of April 26, 2007
Edmund S. and Marie Morgan, “Our Shaky Beginning’s,” NYRB of April 26, 2007
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Our thoughts are just the building material with which we construct a house around ourselves to protect us and separate us from the world. It is unfortunate that they cannot do so, for they are soft and flexible and not intended for this. What the purpose of thought is we have not yet determined.
Milorad Pavic, Unique Item
Milorad Pavic, Unique Item
Monday, June 04, 2007
E-mail isn’t the most self-conscious medium; haste and volume encourage many correspondents to forget themselves. Still, everyone settles on a style. The lower-case non-punctuators, the serial capitalizers, the rhetorical questioners, the subpoena-anticipators, the posterity-watchers: they all have their reasons, and their conceits.
Nick Paumgarten, “Elements of E-Style,” The New Yorker of April 16, 2007
Nick Paumgarten, “Elements of E-Style,” The New Yorker of April 16, 2007
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Governance, as Shakespeare imagines it, is an immense weight whose great emblem is the insomnia that afflicts the competent [and] tough-minded.
Stephen Greenblatt, "Shakespeare & the Uses of Power," New York Review of Books (April 12, 2007)
Stephen Greenblatt, "Shakespeare & the Uses of Power," New York Review of Books (April 12, 2007)
Friday, May 11, 2007
Thursday, May 10, 2007
We often spin like weathervanes, unsure of our positions, mad with insecurity. We vacillate between despair and the wish for peace and don’t know what is ours. It’s difficult to stop at either end, to embrace only one side, but that’s what we need to do. Any decision, except the one that will disturb our conscience, is better than the sense of disorientation with which indecision bestows us. But the decision shouldn’t be hurried; it should just be helped to develop. When the time comes. Friends can ease the pain of making a decision, but no more.
Mesa Selimovic, Death and the Dervish
Mesa Selimovic, Death and the Dervish
Wednesday, May 09, 2007
Life always sinks downward. It takes effort to avoid that. The idea drags it down because it begins to contradict itself. And then a new idea is developed, an opposing one, and it is good until it begins to be turned into reality. What is, is not good; what is good is what is desired. When people come across a pretty thought they should keep it under glass, so it won’t get dirty.
Mesa Selimovic, Death and the Dervish
Mesa Selimovic, Death and the Dervish
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