“History Talks Too Little About Animals”

“Jottings” from the notebooks of Bulgarian novelist Elias Canetti, published as The Human Province (1978):

  • The days are distinct, but the night has only one name.
  • A war always proceeds as if humanity had never hit upon the notion of justice.
  • The lowest man: he whose wishes have all come true.
  • The dead are nourished by judgments, the living by love.
  • If you have seen a person sleeping, you can never hate him again.
  • I really only know what a tiger is since Blake’s poem.
  • A nice trick: throwing something into the world without being pulled in by it.
  • The future, which changes every instant.
  • I’m fed up with seeing through people; it’s so easy, and it gets you nowhere.
  • In love, assurances are practically an announcement of their opposite.
  • In eternity, everything is at the beginning, a fragrant morning.
  • Praying as a rehearsal of wishes.
  • Why aren’t more people good out of spite?
  • The best person ought not to have a name.
  • To keep thoughts apart by force. They all too easily become matted, like hair.
  • Each war contains all earlier wars.
  • One may have known three or four thousand people, one speaks about only six or seven.
  • You notice some things only because they’re not connected to anything.
  • Everyone ought to watch himself eating.
  • Nothing is more boring than to be worshiped. How can God stand it?

“Square tables: the self-assurance they give you, as though one were alone in an alliance of four.”

Misc

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  • Émile Zola described a work of art as “a corner of nature seen through a temperament.”
  • Early printings of Webster’s New International Dictionary defined RAFTMAN as “a raftman.”
  • Horace’s motto was Nihil admirari, “Be surprised at nothing.”
  • In the 1960s the Bureau of Land Management renamed Whorehouse Meadow, Oregon, to Naughty Girl Meadow on its maps. In 1981, after a public outcry, it changed it back.
  • “Never read a pop-up book about giraffes.” — Sean Lock

Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury, cooperated as Humphrey Carpenter prepared his biography, believing that the book wouldn’t be published until after his passing. Eventually he was forced to write,

My dear Humphrey

I have done my best to die before this book is published. It now seems possible that I may not succeed. Since you know that I am not enthusiastic about it you are generous to give me space for a postscript.

Briefly

Asked whether he could summarize the lessons of history in a short book, Columbia historian Charles Beard said he could do it in four sentences:

  1. Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad with power.
  2. The mills of God grind slowly, but they grind exceeding small.
  3. The bee fertilizes the flower it robs.
  4. When it is dark enough, you can see the stars.

Misc

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  • Lady Godiva’s horse was named Aethenoth.
  • UGHA in BROUGHAM is silent.
  • 7 × 58 × 73 × 28 = 7587328
  • APHELIOTROPISMS is an anagram of OMPHALOTRIPSIES.
  • “The French for London is Paris.” — Ionesco

“No general proposition is worth a damn.” — Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (a general proposition)

“Jealousy Is as Blind as Love”

Aphorisms from Austin O’Malley’s Keystones of Thought, 1914:

  • Revenge is often like biting a dog because the dog bit you.
  • Education is only a ladder to gather fruit from the tree of knowledge, not the fruit itself.
  • Humility is the sister of humor.
  • Think what you have to say, and then don’t say it.
  • Men that believe only what they understand can write their creed on a postage-stamp.
  • A fallen lighthouse is more dangerous than a reef.
  • The best blood will at some time get into a fool or a mosquito.
  • Comedy smiles from a neutral intellect; humor laughs from a favoring intellect.
  • An essential quality of beauty is aloofness.
  • The picturesque is the romantic seen.
  • The worst miser is the learned man that will not write.
  • To laugh at yourself is real life, never acting.
  • Put your purse in your head and you will not be robbed.
  • A critic at best is only a football coach.
  • A gentleman seldom meets rude persons.
  • It is yesterday that makes to-morrow so sad.

“A little learning striving to explain a great subject is like an attempt to light up a cathedral with a single taper, which does no more than to show for an instant one foolish face.”

Unquote

“Nothing, to my way of thinking, is better proof of a well-ordered mind than a man’s ability to stop just where he is and pass some time in his own company.” — Seneca, Letters From a Stoic

Reflections

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Aphorisms of German physicist Georg Lichtenberg (1742-1799):

  • “Passionate ambition and suspicion I have invariably found to go together.”
  • “It is in most cases more difficult to make intelligent people believe that you are what you are not, than really to become what you would appear to be.”
  • “True, unaffected distrust of human power in general is the surest sign of mental ability.”
  • “I am convinced that we not only love ourselves in others, but hate ourselves in others too.”
  • “Where moderation is a fault indifference is a crime.”
  • “I suppose there never was a man of any great mark who was not slandered; or hardly any blackguard who never directed a slander against some man of merit.”
  • “Mankind loves company, even if it is no more than that of a burning candle.”
  • “It is a fact that there are numbers of people who read merely that they need not think.”
  • “With most people unbelief in one thing is founded upon blind belief in another.”
  • “What is very rare seldom remains long unexplained. What is inexplicable is usually no longer rare, and has perhaps never been so.”
  • “The commonest opinions and the things that everybody takes for granted often the most deserve examination.”
  • “That in advancing years we should grow incapable of learning has some connection with age’s intolerance of being ordered about, and a very close connection, too.”
  • “I have looked through the list of illnesses, and did not find cares or sad thoughts mentioned among them. That is a mistake, surely.”
  • “Saints in stone have done more in the world than living ones.”

“Has anyone, I wonder, ever dreamt of odours, without an external cause to give rise to the impression? — dreamt, for instance, of the smell of roses, when there was no rose or rosewater in the vicinity. With music this is certainly the case, and with light too; but feelings of pain in a dream usually have some external cause. As regards odours I am uncertain.”