- Love is a gross exaggeration of the difference between one person and everybody else.
- Life isn't about finding yourself. Life is about creating you.
- When I was young, I observed that nine out of ten things I did were failures. So I did ten times more work.
- Independence? That's middle class blasphemy. We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth.
- A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing.
- A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.
- Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance.
- I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Just do what must be done. This may not be happiness, but it is greatness.
- The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.
- We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.
- Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything.
- I dislike feeling at home when I am abroad.
- We are made wise not by the recollection of our past, but by the responsibility for our future.
- People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.
- First love is only a little foolishness and a lot of curiosity.
- A happy family is but an earlier heaven.
- If you cannot get rid of the family skeleton, you may as well make it dance.
- If you can't get rid of the skeleton in your closet, you'd best teach it to dance.
- The liar's punishment is not in the least that he is not believed, but that he cannot believe anyone else.
- Youth is wasted on the young.
- If history repeats itself, and the unexpected always happens, how incapable must Man be of learning from experience?
- Alcohol is the anaesthesia by which we endure the operation of life.
- Democracy is a device that insures we shall be governed no better than we deserve.
- A fool's brain digests philosophy into folly, science into superstition, and art into pedantry. Hence University education.
- No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says: He is always convinced that it says what he means.
- Clever and attractive women do not want to vote; they are willing to let men govern as long as they govern men.
- Success does not consist in never making mistakes but in never making the same one a second time.
- Do not waste your time on Social Questions. What is the matter with the poor is Poverty; what is the matter with the rich is Uselessness.
- Without art, the crudeness of reality would make the world unbearable.
- Use your health, even to the point of wearing it out. That is what it is for. Spend all you have before you die; do not outlive yourself.
- There is no sincerer love than the love of food.
- He knows nothing and thinks he knows everything. That points clearly to a political career.
- The golden rule is that there are no golden rules.
- Marriage is an alliance entered into by a man who can't sleep with the window shut, and a woman who can't sleep with the window open.
- If women were particular about men's characters, they would never get married at all.
- Choose silence of all virtues, for by it you hear other men's imperfections, and conceal your own.
- The only service a friend can really render is to keep up your courage by holding up to you a mirror in which you can see a noble image of yourself.
- Animals are my friends... and I don't eat my friends.
- Science never solves a problem without creating ten more.
- A gentleman is one who puts more into the world than he takes out.
- Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh.
- Take care to get what you like or you will be forced to like what you get.
- Do not do unto others as you expect they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
- There are two tragedies in life. One is to lose your heart's desire. The other is to gain it.
- The moment we want to believe something, we suddenly see all the arguments for it, and become blind to the arguments against it.
- Some look at things that are, and ask why. I dream of things that never were and ask why not?
- I am afraid we must make the world honest before we can honestly say to our children that honesty is the best policy.
- The worst sin toward our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them: that's the essence of inhumanity.
- Better keep yourself clean and bright; you are the window through which you must see the world.
- Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all others because you were born in it.
- It is a curious sensation: the sort of pain that goes mercifully beyond our powers of feeling. When your heart is broken, your boats are burned: nothing matters any more. It is the end of happiness and the beginning of peace.
- You see things; and you say 'Why?' But I dream things that never were; and I say 'Why not?'
- Beauty is all very well at first sight; but whoever looks at it when it has been in the house three days?
- Everything happens to everybody sooner or later if there is time enough.
- Why should we take advice on sex from the pope? If he knows anything about it, he shouldn't!
- Never fret for an only son, the idea of failure will never occur to him.
- Silence is the most perfect expression of scorn.
- All great truths begin as blasphemies.
- In a battle all you need to make you fight is a little hot blood and the knowledge that it's more dangerous to lose than to win.
- Dancing is a perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.
- The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it.
- Democracy is a form of government that substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.
- The best place to find God is in a garden. You can dig for him there.
- The test of a man or woman's breeding is how they behave in a quarrel.
- The people who get on in this world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want and if they can't find them, make them.
- An election is a moral horror, as bad as a battle except for the blood; a mud bath for every soul concerned in it.
- The secret to success is to offend the greatest number of people.
- A broken heart is a very pleasant complaint for a man in London if he has a comfortable income.
- When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of, he always declares that it is his duty.
- I never resist temptation, because I have found that things that are bad for me do not tempt me.
- The perfect love affair is one which is conducted entirely by post.
- Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you desire, you will what you imagine and at last you create what you will.
- If you must hold yourself up to your children as an object lesson, hold yourself up as a warning and not as an example.
- Socialism is the same as Communism, only better English.
- The secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother about whether you are happy or not. The cure for it is occupation.
- Power does not corrupt men; fools, however, if they get into a position of power, corrupt power.
- Hell is full of musical amateurs.
- Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it.
- Capitalism has destroyed our belief in any effective power but that of self-interest backed by force.
- The only way to avoid being miserable is not to have enough leisure to wonder whether you are happy or not.
- Beware of the man who does not return your blow: he neither forgives you nor allows you to forgive yourself.
- I'm an atheist and I thank God for it.
- You use a glass mirror to see your face; you use works of art to see your soul.
- Perhaps the greatest social service that can be rendered by anybody to the country and to mankind is to bring up a family.
- Give a man health and a course to steer, and he'll never stop to trouble about whether he's happy or not.
- An asylum for the sane would be empty in America.
- If all the economists were laid end to end, they'd never reach a conclusion.
- Parentage is a very important profession, but no test of fitness for it is ever imposed in the interest of the children.
- Statistics show that of those who contract the habit of eating, very few survive.
- Find enough clever things to say, and you're a Prime Minister; write them down and you're a Shakespeare.
- Few people think more than two or three times a year; I have made an international reputation for myself by thinking once or twice a week.
- When a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport; when a tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity.
- A man of great common sense and good taste - meaning thereby a man without originality or moral courage.
- Every man over forty is a scoundrel.
- It is the mark of a truly intelligent person to be moved by statistics.
- If you leave the smallest corner of your head vacant for a moment, other people's opinions will rush in from all quarters.
- No man who is occupied in doing a very difficult thing, and doing it very well, ever loses his self-respect.
- There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it.
- The first condition of progress is the removal of censorship.
- Only on paper has humanity yet achieved glory, beauty, truth, knowledge, virtue, and abiding love.
- Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.
- The trouble with her is that she lacks the power of conversation but not the power of speech.
- Cruelty would be delicious if one could only find some sort of cruelty that didn't really hurt.
- I am a Christian. That obliges me to be a Communist.
- He who can, does. He, who cannot, teaches.
- Miracles, in the sense of phenomena we cannot explain, surround us on every hand: life itself is the miracle of miracles.
- England and America are two countries separated by the same language.
- I never thought much of the courage of a lion tamer. Inside the cage he is at least safe from people.
- Oh, the tiger will love you. There is no sincerer love than the love of food.
- A fashion is nothing but an induced epidemic.
- Life contains but two tragedies. One is not to get your heart's desire; the other is to get it.
- The man with a toothache thinks everyone happy whose teeth are sound. The poverty-stricken man makes the same mistake about the rich man.
- A little learning is a dangerous thing, but we must take that risk because a little is as much as our biggest heads can hold.
- Censorship ends in logical completeness when nobody is allowed to read any books except the books that nobody reads.
- I would like to take you seriously, but to do so would be an affront to your intelligence.
- We should all be obliged to appear before a board every five years and justify our existence... on pain of liquidation.
- Kings are not born: they are made by artificial hallucination.
- Nothing is worth doing unless the consequences may be serious.
- The only secrets are the secrets that keep themselves.
- We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it.
- Youth is a wonderful thing. What a crime to waste it on children.
- I want to be thoroughly used up when I die, for the harder I work the more I live. I rejoice in life for its own sake.
- Except during the nine months before he draws his first breath, no man manages his affairs as well as a tree does.
- In heaven an angel is nobody in particular.
- It's so hard to know what to do when one wishes earnestly to do right.
- Old men are dangerous: it doesn't matter to them what is going to happen to the world.
- A perpetual holiday is a good working definition of hell.
- All my life affection has been showered upon me, and every forward step I have made has been taken in spite of it.
- Human beings are the only animals of which I am thoroughly and cravenly afraid.
- The minority is sometimes right; the majority always wrong.
- Do not try to live forever. You will not succeed.
- I have to live for others and not for myself: that's middle-class morality.
- You'll never have a quiet world till you knock the patriotism out of the human race.
- Home life is no more natural to us than a cage is natural to a cockatoo.
- While we ourselves are the living graves of murdered animals, how can we expect any ideal living conditions on this earth?
- The fickleness of the women I love is only equalled by the infernal constancy of the women who love me.
- I often quote myself. It adds spice to my conversation.
- It is most unwise for people in love to marry.
- Martyrdom: The only way a man can become famous without ability.
- Peace is not only better than war, but infinitely more arduous.
- She had lost the art of conversation but not, unfortunately, the power of speech.
- What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.
- There is nothing more dangerous than the conscience of a bigot.
- The great advantage of a hotel is that it is a refuge from home life.
- Political necessities sometime turn out to be political mistakes.
- The possibilities are numerous once we decide to act and not react.
- Baseball has the great advantage over cricket of being sooner ended.
- Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity.
- Reading made Don Quixote a gentleman, but believing what he read made him mad.
- The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact that a drunken man is happier than a sober one.
- One man that has a mind and knows it can always beat ten men who haven't and don't.
- The things most people want to know about are usually none of their business.
- Which painting in the National Gallery would I save if there was a fire? The one nearest the door of course.
- Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.
- He's a man of great common sense and good taste - meaning thereby a man without originality or moral courage.
- In this world there is always danger for those who are afraid of it.
- No question is so difficult to answer as that to which the answer is obvious.
- You have learnt something. That always feels at first as if you had lost something.
- Better never than late.
- I want to be all used up when I die.
- Virtue consists, not in abstaining from vice, but in not desiring it.
- I enjoy convalescence. It is the part that makes the illness worth while.
- Men are wise in proportion, not to their experience, but to their capacity for experience.
- Nothing is ever done in this world until men are prepared to kill one another if it is not done.
- The frontier between hell and heaven is only the difference between two ways of looking at things.
- What we want is to see the child in pursuit of knowledge, and not knowledge in pursuit of the child.
- We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth.
- When a man says money can do anything that settles it: he hasn't got any.
- If there was nothing wrong in the world there wouldn't be anything for us to do.
- The truth is, hardly any of us have ethical energy enough for more than one really inflexible point of honor.
- Until the men of action clear out the talkers we who have social consciences are at the mercy of those who have none.
- Very few people can afford to be poor.
- A veteran journalist has never had time to think twice before he writes.
- Those who do not know how to live must make a merit of dying.
- You are going to let the fear of poverty govern your life and your reward will be that you will eat, but you will not live.
- Americans adore me and will go on adoring me until I say something nice about them.
- An Englishman thinks he is moral when he is only uncomfortable.
- There is no subject on which more dangerous nonsense is talked and thought than marriage.
- We learn from experience that men never learn anything from experience.
- What Englishman will give his mind to politics as long as he can afford to keep a motor car?
- Why, except as a means of livelihood, a man should desire to act on the stage when he has the whole world to act in, is not clear to me.
- It's easier to replace a dead man than a good picture.
- Life levels all men. Death reveals the eminent.
- Man can climb to the highest summits, but he cannot dwell there long.
- Marriage is good enough for the lower classes: they have facilities for desertion that are denied to us.
- Self-sacrifice enables us to sacrifice other people without blushing.
- The faults of the burglar are the qualities of the financier.
- The natural term of the affection of the human animal for its offspring is six years.
- What is virtue but the Trade Unionism of the married?
- Few of us have vitality enough to make any of our instincts imperious.
- Hegel was right when he said that we learn from history that man can never learn anything from history.
- The art of government is the organisation of idolatry.
- The love of economy is the root of all virtue.
- The British soldier can stand up to anything except the British War Office.
- We must always think about things, and we must think about things as they are, not as they are said to be.
- Life would be tolerable but for its amusements.
- Syllables govern the world.
- If you injure your neighbour, better not do it by halves.
- You can always tell an old soldier by the inside of his holsters and cartridge boxes. The young ones carry pistols and cartridges; the old ones, grub.
- A man who has no office to go, to I don't care who he is, is a trial of which you can have no conception.
- Men have to do some awfully mean things to keep up their respectability.
- Virtue is insufficient temptation.
- Every person who has mastered a profession is a skeptic concerning it.
- People become attached to their burdens sometimes more than the burdens are attached to them.
- The heretic is always better dead. And mortal eyes cannot distinguish the saint from the heretic.
- There is no satisfaction in hanging a man who does not object to it.
- We are the only real aristocracy in the world: the aristocracy of money.
- Fashions, after all, are only induced epidemics.
- The man who writes about himself and his own time is the only man who writes about all people and about all time.
- General consultant to mankind.
George Bernard Shaw
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment