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[On World War II:] The war, which destroyed so much of everything, was also constructive, in a way. It established clearly the cold, and finally unhypocritical fact that the most important thing on earth to men today is money.
Janet Flanner
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Janet Flanner
Age: 86 †
Born: 1892
Born: March 13
Died: 1978
Died: November 7
Film Critic
Journalist
Novelist
Translator
Writer
Indianapolis
Indiana
World
Earth
Clearly
Today
Finally
Everything
Cold
Important
Fact
Thing
War
Much
Facts
Constructive
Way
Money
Established
Men
Also
Destroyed
More quotes by Janet Flanner
Never have nights been more beautiful than these nights of anxiety. In the sky have been shining in trinity the moon, Venus and Mars. Nature has been more splendid than man.
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I'm fond of anything that comes from the sea, and that includes sailors.
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I am invariably and have been since adolescence inimical to the Republican mind which shows at the most inflated size the bad qualities of the bourgeoisie rather than the good qualities of the middle class which the Democrats call forth.
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When I hear a writer say that they ‘put in a call,’ I want to pull my hair out.
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... people who don't want something are less likely to get it than people who do want something.
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The German passion for bureaucracy -- for written and signal forms . . . to move about, to work, to exist -- is like a steel pin pinning each French individual to a sheet of paper, the way an entomologist pins each specimen insect . . .
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I keep going over a sentence. I nag it, gnaw it, pat and flatter it.
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When you look at the startling ruins of Nuremberg, you are looking at a result of the war. When you look at the prisoners on view in the courthouse, you are looking at 22 of the causes.
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The older women were Sunbeams and I guess we were Cherubs or Lambs, but our mothers were Nightingales.
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In the history of art there are periods when bread seems so beautiful that it nearly gets into museums.
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Genius is a talent only for living, those who possess it have little gift for dying.
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[Charles de Gaulle] has been abysmally careless, like a man running a bus over mountains, who forgot to equip it with good brakes.
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Proust has been dead since 1922, yet the annual appearance of his posthumous works has left him, to the reader, alive. Now there is nothing left to publish. Five years after his interment, Proust seems dead for the first time.
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Women have invented nothing in all that, except the men who were born as male babies and grew up to be men big enough to be killed fighting.
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