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It is sometimes said that toleration should be refused to the intolerant. In practice this would destroy it... The only remedy for dogmatism and lies is toleration and the greatest possible liberty of expression.
Joyce Cary
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Joyce Cary
Age: 68 †
Born: 1888
Born: December 7
Died: 1957
Died: March 29
Novelist
Writer
Derry
Northern Ireland
Joyce Lunel Cary
Arthur Joyce Lunel Cary
Greatest
Dogmatism
Liberty
Intolerant
Possible
Toleration
Practice
Refused
Lying
Remedy
Sometimes
Destroy
Would
Lies
Expression
More quotes by Joyce Cary
Sara could commit adultery at one end and weep for her sins at the other, and enjoy both operations at once.
Joyce Cary
Where can one find a profounder desolation than in the poor child who has lost its mother?
Joyce Cary
Remember I'm an artist. And you know what that means in a court of law. Next worst to an actress
Joyce Cary
Old men when they begin to hear the last trumpet, on the morning breeze, often have a kind of absent-minded smile like people listening. And their smiles are just politeness.
Joyce Cary
A foul-mouthed oaf, a drunken laborer lying in a drain, a beaten wife with blackened eyes and torn clothes, cannot be made romantic to a child who sees how other children suffer from bad-tempered parents, from drunken fathers to termagant mothers.
Joyce Cary
No honest hardworking official likes to see good money disappearing into the hands of the Treasury at the end of the financial year.
Joyce Cary
To forgive is wisdom, to forget is genius.
Joyce Cary
Nothing like poetry when you lie awake at night. It keeps the old brain limber. It washes away the mud and sand that keeps on blocking up the bends. Like waves to make the pebbles dance on my old floors. And turn them into rubies and jacinths or at any rate, good imitations.
Joyce Cary
A friend of mine tells me that a Beethoven symphony can solve for him a problem of conduct. I've no doubt that it does so simply by giving him a sense of the tragedy and the greatness of human destiny, which makes his personal anxieties seem small, which throws them into a new proportion.
Joyce Cary
A novel should be an experience and convey an emotional truth rather than arguments.
Joyce Cary
Love doesn't grow on trees like apples in Eden - it's something you have to make. And you must use your imagination too.
Joyce Cary
What is it in the actor, the stage, that casts so powerful a spell on the young imagination?
Joyce Cary
A perfect God is the creation of a conceited man
Joyce Cary
No one can estimate the power of authority among poor and uneducated people in a world whose problems confuse even the wisest.
Joyce Cary
A world in everlasting conflict between the new idea and the old allegiances, new arts and new inventions against the old establishment.
Joyce Cary
Plantie is a very strong Protestant, that is to say, he's against all churches, especially the Protestant: and he thinks a lot of Buddha, Karma and Confucius. He is also a bit of an anarchist and three or four years ago he took up Einstein and vitamins.
Joyce Cary
Reality is a narrow little house which becomes a prison to those who can't get out of it.
Joyce Cary
The will is never free - it is always attached to an object, a purpose. It is simply the engine in the car - it can't steer
Joyce Cary
People don't use their eyes. They never see a bird, they see a sparrow. They never see a tree, they see a birch. They see concepts.
Joyce Cary
Of all things I find most unbearable is the injustice of one generation to another.
Joyce Cary