Top 13 Quotes & Sayings by Hesketh Pearson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English actor Hesketh Pearson.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Hesketh Pearson

Edward Hesketh Gibbons Pearson was a British actor, theatre director and writer. He is known mainly for his popular biographies; they made him the leading British biographer of his time, in terms of commercial success.

There is no stronger craving in the world than that of the rich for titles, except that of the titled for riches.
Misquotation is, in fact, the pride and privilege of the learned. A widely- read man never quotes accurately, for the rather obvious reason that he has read too widely.
When people are old enough to know better they are old enough to do worse. — © Hesketh Pearson
When people are old enough to know better they are old enough to do worse.
A man's character never changes radically from youth to old age. What happens is that circumstances bring out characteristics which have not been obvious to the superficial observer.
Misquotations are the only quotations that are never misquoted.
Never neglect an opportunity to play leap-frog; it is the best of all games, and, unlike the terribly serious and conscientious pastimes of modern youth, will never become professionalized.
An author should be delighted, not annoyed when he hears himself persistently misquoted. He could receive no higher compliment. It proves that the world has frequent and urgent need of his thoughts and will rather change the manner in which he expresses them than do without the things expressed.
Do you believe in God? Perhaps you aren't old enough. The reason old people believe in God is because they've given up believing in anything else, and one can't exist without faith in something.... God is a sort of burglar. As a young man you knock him down; as an old man, you try to conciliate him because he may knock you down. Moral: don't grow old.
[D]on't grow old. With age comes caution, which is another name for cowardice.... Whatever else you do in life, don't cultivate a conscience. Without a conscience a man may never be said to grow old. This is an age of very old young men.
The English public doesn't really like Shakespeare; it prefers football.
Misquotation is the pride and privilege of the learned.
Fate stalks us with depressing monotony from womb to tomb, and, when we are least expecting it, deals us a series of crushing blows from behind.
I am inclined to think that one's education has been in vain if one fails to learn that most schoolmasters are idiots.
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