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Nothing is so soothing to our self-esteem as to find our bad traits in our forebears. It seems to absolve us.
Van Wyck Brooks
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Van Wyck Brooks
Age: 77 †
Born: 1886
Born: February 16
Died: 1963
Died: May 2
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
Plainfield
New Jersey
Esteem
Family
Seems
Forebears
Find
Absolve
Nothing
Heredity
Self
Ancestry
Soothing
Traits
More quotes by Van Wyck Brooks
How delightful is the company of generous people, who overlook trifles and keep their minds instinctively fixed on whatever is good and positive in the world around them.
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Once you have a point of view all history will back you up.
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Never forget that it is we New Yorkers and New Englanders who have the monopoly of whatever oxygen there is in the American continent.
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No one is fit to judge a book until he has rounded Cape Horn in a sailing vessel, until he has bumped into two or three icebergs, until he has been lost in the sands of the desert, until he has spent a few years in the House of the Dead.
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No man should ever publish a book until he has first read it to a woman.
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Earnest people are often people who habitually look on the serious side of things that have no serious side.
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The American mind, unlike the English, is not formed by books, but, as Carl Sandburg once said to me, by newspapers and the Bible.
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Those of our writers who have possessed a vivid personal talent have been paralyzed by a want of social background.
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No one in this country has any root anywhere we don't live in America, we board here, we are like spiders that run over the surface of the water.
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The man who has the courage of his platitudes is always a successful man.
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It is not that the French are not profound, but they all express themselves so well that we are led to take their geese for swans.
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People of small calibre are always carping. How affected so-and-so is! Don't you think he is silly? He was certainly quite mistaken about this or that. They are bent on showing their own superiority, their knowledge or their prowess or good breeding.
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Genius and virtue are to be more often found clothed in gray than in peacock bright.
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Better the fragrant herb of wit and a little cream of affability than all the pretty cups in the world.
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As against having beautiful workshops, studies, etc., one writes best in a cellar on a rainy day.
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The writer is important only by dint of the territory he colonizes.
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If men were basically evil, who would bother to improve the world instead of giving it up as a bad job at the outset?
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Nothing is sadder than the consequences of having worldly standards without worldly means.
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The creative impulses of man are always at war with the possessive impulses.
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Longfellow is to poetry what the barrel-organ is to music.
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