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It is very seldom that the same man knows much of science, and about the things that were known before science came.
Lord Dunsany
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Lord Dunsany
Age: 79 †
Born: 1878
Born: July 24
Died: 1957
Died: October 25
Chess Player
Novelist
Playwright
Poet
Politician
Science Fiction Writer
Writer
London
England
Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett
Lord Dunsany
Edward J Moreton Drax Plunkett Dunsany
Seldom
Technology
Came
Known
Science
Much
Things
Men
More quotes by Lord Dunsany
It has always struck me that one of the readiest ways of estimating a country's regard for law is to notice what arms the officers of the law are carrying: in England it is little batons, in France swords, in many countries revolvers, and in Russia the police used to have artillery.
Lord Dunsany
Come with me, ladies and gentlemen who are in any wise weary of London: come with me: and those that tire at all of the world we know: for we have new worlds here.
Lord Dunsany
Bricks without straw are more easily made than imagination without memories.
Lord Dunsany
I have lived to see that being seventeen is no protection against becoming seventy, but to know this needs the experience of a lifetime, for no imagination copes with it.
Lord Dunsany
Contrast is the dramatist's method.
Lord Dunsany
And she would not hold back his limbs when his heart was gone to the woods, for it is ever the way of witches with any two things to care for the more mysterious of the two.
Lord Dunsany
Modern poets are bells of lead. They should tinkle melodiously but usually they just klunk.
Lord Dunsany
And you who sought for magic in your youth but desire it not in your age, know that there is a blindness of spirit which comes from age, more black than the blindness of eye, making a darkness about you across which nothing may be seen, or felt, or known, or in any way apprehended.
Lord Dunsany
Of pure poetry there are two kinds, that which mirrors the beauty of the world in which our bodies are, and that which builds the more mysterious kingdoms where geography ends and fairyland begins, with gods and heroes at war, and the sirens singing still, and Alph going down to the darkness from Xanadu.
Lord Dunsany
It was the hour when gauze-winged insects are born that only live for a day.
Lord Dunsany
How beautiful are dreams! In dreams the dead may live, even the long dead and the very silent.
Lord Dunsany