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What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? But the man who orders his life according to their teachings cannot go far wrong.
Norman Douglas
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Norman Douglas
Age: 83 †
Born: 1868
Born: December 8
Died: 1952
Died: February 9
Autobiographer
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Normyx
Pilaff Bey
George Norman Douglas
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More quotes by Norman Douglas
The secret of happiness is curiosity
Norman Douglas
The pine stays green in winter... wisdom in hardship.
Norman Douglas
The sublimity of wisdom is to do those things living, which are to be desired when dying.
Norman Douglas
If you want to see what children can do, you must stop giving them things.
Norman Douglas
Never take a solemn oath. People think you mean it.
Norman Douglas
Bouillabaisse is only good because cooked by the French, who, if they cared to try, could produce an excellent and nutritious substitute out of cigar stumps and empty matchboxes.
Norman Douglas
I can find no room in my cosmos for a deity save as a waste product of human weakness, the excrement of the imagination.
Norman Douglas
Justice is too good for some people and not good enough for the rest.
Norman Douglas
Nobody can misunderstand a boy like his own mother. Mothers at present can bring children into the world, but this performance is apt to mark the end of their capacities. They can't even attend to the elementary animal requirements of their offspring. It is quite surprising how many children survive in spite of their mothers.
Norman Douglas
A man can believe a considerable deal of rubbish, and yet go about his daily work in a rational and cheerful manner.
Norman Douglas
It is one of the maladies of our age to profess a frenzied allegiance to truth in unimportant matters, to refuse consistently to face her where graver issues are at stake.
Norman Douglas
There is in us a lyric germ or nucleus which deserves respect it bids a man to ponder or create and in this dim corner of himself he can take refuge and find consolations which the society of his fellow creatures does not provide.
Norman Douglas
Shall I give you my recipe for happiness? I find everything useful and nothing indispensable. I find everything wonderful and nothing miraculous. I reverence the body. I avoid first causes like the plague.
Norman Douglas
You can cram a truth into an epigram - the truth, never.
Norman Douglas
He talks about the Scylla of Atheism and the Charybdis of Christianity - a state of mind which, by the way, is not conducive to bold navigation.
Norman Douglas
You can construct the character of a man and his age not only from what he does and says, but from what he fails to say and do.
Norman Douglas
I wish the English still possessed a shred of the old sense of humour which Puritanism, and dyspepsia, and newspaper reading, and tea-drinking have nearly extinguished.
Norman Douglas
Learn to foster an ardent imagination so shall you descry beauty which others passed unheeded.
Norman Douglas
The families of our friends are always a disappointment.
Norman Douglas
To find a friend one must close one eye. To keep him...two.
Norman Douglas