Top 11 Quotes & Sayings by Stephen Potter

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British author Stephen Potter.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Stephen Potter

Stephen Meredith Potter was a British writer best known for his parodies of self-help books, and their film and television derivatives.

Cogg would suddenly stand stock still. "Listen," he would say. Some feeble quack would be heard from the willow beyond the pond. "That's an easy one to tell. The frog-pippit." Then he would add, As a safety measure, "As I believe they call it in these parts."
Talk of the imperial decay of your invalid port. Its gracious withdrawal from perfection, keeping a hint of former majesty withal, as it hovers between oblivion and the divine Untergang of infinite recession.
In lawn tennis mixed, the basic chivalry move is to pretend to serve less fiercely to the woman than to the man. This is particularly useful if your first service tends to be out in any case.
Make friends with your caddie and the game will make friends with you. — © Stephen Potter
Make friends with your caddie and the game will make friends with you.
Remember the basic rule. Make friends with your caddie and the game will make friends with you. How true this is. It is easy to arrange that your guest opponent shall be deceived in to undertipping his caddie at the end of the morning round, so that the news gets round among the club employees that your opponent is a no good, and the boys will gang up against him.
In our small chess community in Marylebone it would be mock modesty on my part to deny that I have built up for myself a considerable name without ever actually having won a single game. Even the best players are sometimes beaten, and that is precisely what happens to me.
Never say the number because it suggest that you are unable to pronounce the name of the wine you are ordering.
Women are quite unlike men. Women have higher voices, longer hair, smaller waistlines, daintier feet and prettier hands. They also invariably have the upper hand.
Your function as a critic is to show that it is really you yourself who should have written the book, if you had had the time, and since you hadn't you are glad that someone else had, although obviously it might have been done better.
Each of us can, by ploy or gambit, most naturally gain the advantage.
Just as there are O.K.-words in conversationship so there are O.K.-people to mention in Newstatesmanship.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!