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We are always talking about being together, and yet whatever we invent destroys the family, and makes us wild, touchless beasts feeding on technicolor prairies and rivers.
Edward Dahlberg
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Edward Dahlberg
Age: 76 †
Born: 1900
Born: July 22
Died: 1977
Died: February 27
Novelist
Writer
Boston
Massachusetts
Rivers
Prairies
Technology
Prairie
Talking
Beasts
Whatever
Destroys
Family
Invent
Makes
Feeding
Together
Beast
Always
Wild
Technicolor
More quotes by Edward Dahlberg
We are uneasy with an affectionate man, for we are positive he wants something of us, particularly our love.
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A strong foe is better than a weak friend.
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Intellectual sodomy, which comes from the refusal to be simple about plain matters, is as gross and abundant today as sexual perversion and they are nowise different from one another.
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I know sage, wormwood, and hyssop, but I can't smell character unless it stinks.
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A man who can be entertaining for a full day will be in his grave by night-fall.
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A painter can hang his pictures, but a writer can only hang himself.
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I have no confidence in a man whose faults you cannot see.
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What has a writer to be bombastic about? Whatever good a man may write is the consequence of accident, luck, or surprise, and nobody is more surprised than an honest writer when he makes a good phrase or says something truthful.
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Every decision you make is a mistake.
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We are ruled by chance but never have enough patience to accept its despotism.
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Though man is the only beast that can write, he has small reason to be proud of it. When he utters something that is wise it is nothing that the river horse does not know, and most of his creations are the result of accident.
Edward Dahlberg
We are a most solitary people, and we live, repelled by one another, in the gray, outcast cities of Cain.
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Genius, like truth, has a shabby and neglected mien.
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The newspaper has debauched the American until he is a slavish, simpering, and angerless citizen it has taught him to be a lump mass-man toward fraud, simony, murder, and lunacies more vile than those of Commodus or Caracalla.
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The bad poet is a toady mimicking nature.
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There are men that are birds, and their raiment is trembling feathers, for they show their souls to everyone and everything that is ungentle or untutored or evil or mockery is as a rude stone cast at them, and they suffer all day long, or as Paul remarks they are slain every moment.
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Perhaps Samuel Johnson was a great man he was certainly a drumbling one.
Edward Dahlberg
Recognize the cunning man not by the corpses he pays homage to but by the living writers he conspires against with the most shameful weapon, Silence, or the briefest review.
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Look at this poet William Carlos Williams: he is primitive and native, and his roots are in raw forest and violent places he is word-sick and place-crazy. He admires strength, but for what? Violence! This is the cult of the frontier mind.
Edward Dahlberg
Of all the animals on earth, none is so brutish as man when he seeks the delirium of coition.
Edward Dahlberg