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No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.
George Jean Nathan
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George Jean Nathan
Age: 76 †
Born: 1882
Born: February 14
Died: 1958
Died: April 8
Critic
Film Critic
Journalist
Writer
Fort Wayne
Indiana
Thinking
Clearly
Life
Anger
Angry
Hero
Crazy
Clenched
Wisdom
Fists
Men
Frustration
Think
Diversity
More quotes by George Jean Nathan
It is only the cynicism that is born of success that is penetrating and valid.
George Jean Nathan
Beauty makes idiots sad and wise men merry.
George Jean Nathan
An actor without a playwright is like a hole without a doughnut.
George Jean Nathan
Drama - what literature does at night.
George Jean Nathan
A man reserves his true and deepest love not for the species of woman in whose company he finds himself electrified and enkindled, but for that one in whose company he may feel tenderly drowsy.
George Jean Nathan
The most loyal and faithful woman indulges her imagination in a hypothetical liaison whenever she dons a new street frock for the first time.
George Jean Nathan
An optimist is a fellow who believes a housefly is looking for a way to get out.
George Jean Nathan
I drink so the others become interesting.
George Jean Nathan
A ready way to lose your friend is to lend him money. Another equally ready way to lose him is to refuse to lend him money. It is six of one and a half dozen of the other.
George Jean Nathan
There is something distinguished about even his failures they sink not trivially, but with a certain air of majesty, like a great ship, its flags flying, full of holes.
George Jean Nathan
It is also said of me that I now and then contradict myself. Yes, I improve wonderfully as time goes on.
George Jean Nathan
One does not go to the theater to see life and nature one goes to see the particular way in which life and nature happen to look to a cultivated, imaginative and entertaining man who happens, in turn, to be a playwright.
George Jean Nathan
A poet, any real poet, is simply an alchemist who transmutes his cynicism regarding human beings into an optimism regarding the moon, the stars, the heavens, and the flowers, to say nothing of Spring, love, and dogs.
George Jean Nathan
The notion that as a man grows older his illusions leave him is not quite true. What is true is that his early illusions are supplanted by new, and to him, equally convincing illusions.
George Jean Nathan
Love is an emotion experienced by the many and enjoyed by the few.
George Jean Nathan
Men go to the theatre to forget women, to remember.
George Jean Nathan
Love demands infinitely less than friendship.
George Jean Nathan
A man's wife is his compromise with the illusion of his first sweetheart.
George Jean Nathan
The bachelors admired freedom is often a yoke, for the freer a man is to himself the greater slave he often is to the whims of others.
George Jean Nathan
An abstainer is the sort of man you wouldn't want to drink with even if he did.
George Jean Nathan