Top 48 Quotes & Sayings by Norman Douglas

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British writer Norman Douglas.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Norman Douglas

George Norman Douglas was a British writer, now best known for his 1917 novel South Wind. His travel books, such as Old Calabria (1915), were also appreciated for the quality of their writing.

Shall I give you my recipe for happiness? I find everything useful and nothing indispensable. I find everything wonderful and nothing miraculous. I reverence the body. I avoid first causes like the plague.
A man can believe a considerable deal of rubbish, and yet go about his daily work in a rational and cheerful manner.
It takes a wise man to handle a lie, a fool had better remain honest. — © Norman Douglas
It takes a wise man to handle a lie, a fool had better remain honest.
The sublimity of wisdom is to do those things living, which are to be desired when dying.
Never take a solemn oath. People think you mean it.
There is in us a lyric germ or nucleus which deserves respect; it bids a man to ponder or create; and in this dim corner of himself he can take refuge and find consolations which the society of his fellow creatures does not provide.
The longer one lives, the more one realizes that nothing is a dish for every day.
To find a friend one must close one eye - to keep him, two.
Distrust of authority should be the first civic duty.
The pine stays green in winter... wisdom in hardship.
What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes?
They who are all things to their neighbors cease to be anything to themselves.
Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely opened a tavern for his friends. — © Norman Douglas
Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely opened a tavern for his friends.
Education is a state-controlled manufactory of echoes.
You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertising.
You can construct the character of a man and his age not only from what he does and says, but from what he fails to say and do.
Bouillabaisse is only good because cooked by the French, who, if they cared to try, could produce an excellent and nutritious substitute out of cigar stumps and empty matchboxes.
The families of our friends are always a disappointment.
The business of life is to enjoy oneself; everything else is a mockery.
I can find no room in my cosmos for a deity save as a waste product of human weakness, the excrement of the imagination.
Justice is too good for some people and not good enough for the rest.
How often could things be remedied by a word. How often is it left unspoken.
Has any man ever obtained inner harmony by simply reading about the experiences of others? Not since the world began has it ever happened. Each man must go through the fire himself.
What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? But the man who orders his life according to their teachings cannot go far wrong.
Wine is a precarious aphrodisiac, and its fumes have blighted many a mating.
You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.
Nobody can misunderstand a boy like his own mother. Mothers at present can bring children into the world, but this performance is apt to mark the end of their capacities. They can't even attend to the elementary animal requirements of their offspring. It is quite surprising how many children survive in spite of their mothers.
I wish the English still possessed a shred of the old sense of humour which Puritanism, and dyspepsia, and newspaper reading, and tea-drinking have nearly extinguished.
People who have reformed themselves has contributed their full share towards the reformation of their neighbor.
No one can expect a majority to be stirred by motives other than ignoble.
He talks about the Scylla of Atheism and the Charybdis of Christianity - a state of mind which, by the way, is not conducive to bold navigation.
It seldom pays to be rude. It never pays to be only half-rude. — © Norman Douglas
It seldom pays to be rude. It never pays to be only half-rude.
There is so much goodness in real life- do let us keep it out of our books.
The present age, for all its cosmopolitan hustle, is curiously suburban in spirit.
There is a kinship, a kind of freemasonry, between all persons of intelligence, however antagonistic their moral outlook.
Learn to foster an ardent imagination; so shall you descry beauty which others passed unheeded.
What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? Take fifty of our current proverbial sayings—they are so trite, so threadbare, that we can hardly bring our lips to utter them. None the less they embody the concentrated experience of the race, and the man who orders his life according to their teaching cannot go far wrong. How easy that seems! Has any one ever done so? Never. Has any man ever attained to inner harmony by pondering the experience of others? Not since the world began! He must pass through the fire.
The true cook is the perfect blend, the only perfect blend, of artist and philosopher. He knows his worth: he holds in his palm the happiness of mankind, the welfare of generations yet unborn.
The secret of happiness is curiosity
If you want to see what children can do, you must stop giving them things.
No great man is ever born too soon or too late.
One can always trust to time. Insert a wedge of time and nearly everything straightens itself out. — © Norman Douglas
One can always trust to time. Insert a wedge of time and nearly everything straightens itself out.
You can cram a truth into an epigram - the truth, never.
To find a friend one must close one eye. To keep him...two.
How hard it is, sometimes, to trust the evidence of one's senses! How reluctantly the mind consents to reality.
A man who is stingy with saffron is capable of seducing his own grandmother.
It is one of the maladies of our age to profess a frenzied allegiance to truth in unimportant matters, to refuse consistently to face her where graver issues are at stake.
Why always "not yet"? Do flowers in spring say "not yet"?
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