1326 Quotations with Book.
- 621. Marguerite Duras: No other human being, no woman, no poem or music, book or painting can replace a ...

- 622. Jonathan Swift: Nor do they trust their tongue alone, but speak a language of their own; can rea ...

- 623. Quentin Crisp: Nothing more rapidly inclines a person to go into a monastery than reading a boo ...

- 624. Marie-Henri Beyle Stendhal: Nothing seems to me so inane as bookish language in conversation.

- 625. Ernest Hemingway: Now a writer can make himself a nice career while he is alive by espousing a pol ...

- 626. William Shakespeare: O, let my books be then the eloquence and dumb presages of my speaking breast.

- 627. Amos Bronson Alcott: Observation more than books and experience more than persons, are the prime educ ...

- 628. Walter Benjamin: Of all the ways of acquiring books, writing them oneself is regarded as the most ...

- 629. Walter Benjamin: Of all the ways of acquiring books, writing them oneself is regarded as the most ...

- 630. Pablo Picasso: Often while reading a book one feels that the author would have preferred to pai ...

- 631. Pablo Picasso: Often while reading a book one feels that the author would have preferred to pai ...

- 632. Sir Peregrine Worsthorne: Old books that have ceased to be of service should no more be abandoned than sho ...

- 633. Sir Peregrine Worsthorne: Old books that have ceased to be of service should no more be abandoned than sho ...

- 634. Oliver Wendell Holmes: Old books, you know well, are books of the world's youth, and new books are the ...

- 635. Gilbert K. Chesterton: Once I planned to write a book of poems entirely about the things in my pocket. ...

- 636. Edward M. Forster: One always tends to over-praise a long book, because one has got through it.

- 637. Herbert True: One half who graduate from college never read another book.

- 638. Herbert True: One half who graduate from college never read another book.

- 639. Benjamin Jowett: One man is as good as another until he has written a book.

- 640. Friedrich Nietzsche: One receives as reward for much ennui, despondency, boredom -- such as a solitud ...

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