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While it is well enough to leave footprints on the sands of time, it is even more important to make sure they point in a commendable direction.
James Branch Cabell
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James Branch Cabell
Age: 79 †
Born: 1879
Born: April 14
Died: 1958
Died: May 5
Author
Autobiographer
Novelist
Science Fiction Writer
Writer
Richmond
Virginia
Well
Footprints
Enough
Footprint
Important
Sand
Even
Direction
Make
Leave
Time
Sure
Point
Commendable
Wells
Sands
More quotes by James Branch Cabell
But with man the case is otherwise, in that when logic leads to any humiliating conclusion, the sole effect is to discredit logic.
James Branch Cabell
No person of quality ever remembers social restrictions save when considering how most piquantly to break them.
James Branch Cabell
The optimist sees a light at the end of the tunnel, the realist sees a train entering the tunnel, the pessimist sees a train speeding at him, hell for leather, and the machinist sees three idiots sitting on the rail track. The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds the pessimist fears this is true.
James Branch Cabell
I do that which I do in every place. Here also, at the gateway of that garden into which time has not entered, I fight with time my ever-losing battle, because to do that diverts me.
James Branch Cabell
Why is the King of Hearts the only one that hasn't a moustache?
James Branch Cabell
There is no gift more great than love.
James Branch Cabell
In religious matters a traveller loses nothing by civility.
James Branch Cabell
Men have begun to observe and classify, they turn from creation to Criticism... It is the Fashion to be a wit... one must be able to conceal indecency with elegant diction manners are everything, morals nothing.
James Branch Cabell
I was born, I think, with the desire to make beautiful books — brave books that would preserve the glories of the Dream untarnished, and would re-create them for battered people, and re-awaken joy and magnanimity.
James Branch Cabell
A book , once it is printed and published, becomes individual. It is by its publication as decisively severed from its author as in parturition a child is cut off from its parent. The book means thereafter, perforce, both grammatically and actually, whatever meaning this or that reader gets out of it.
James Branch Cabell
American literature was enriched with Men Who Loved Allison .... Of the actual and eventual worth of this romance I cannot pretend to be an unprejudiced judge. The tale seems to me one of those many books which have profited, very dubiously indeed, by having obtained, in one way of another, the repute of being indecent.
James Branch Cabell
Creeds matter very little... The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds and the pessimist fears this is true. So I elect for neither label.
James Branch Cabell
Some few there must be in every age and every land of whom life claims nothing very insistently save that they write perfectly of beautiful happenings.
James Branch Cabell
Every notion that any man, dead, living, or unborn, might form as to the universe will necessarily prove wrong
James Branch Cabell
What really matters is that there is so much faith and love and kindliness which we can share with and provoke in others, and that by cleanly, simple, generous living we approach perfection in the highest and most lovely of all arts. . . . But you, I think, have always comprehended this.
James Branch Cabell
Whatever there is to know, That shall we know one day.
James Branch Cabell
A manpossessesnothing certainlysavea brief loanof his own body.
James Branch Cabell
Life is very marvelous... and to the wonders of the earth there is no end appointed.
James Branch Cabell
At all events, I do not mean to leave it unaltered.
James Branch Cabell
People never want to be told anything they do not believe already.
James Branch Cabell