Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Brander Matthews.
Last updated on November 26, 2024.
James Brander Matthews was an American academic, writer and literary critic. He was the first full-time professor of dramatic literature at Columbia University in New York and played a significant role in establishing theater as a subject worthy of formal study by academics. His interests ranged from Shakespeare, Molière, and Ibsen to French boulevard comedies, folk theater, and the new realism of his own time.
To be clear is the first duty of a writer; to charm and to please are graces to be acquired later.
The art of the dramatist is very like the art of the architect. A plot has to be built up just as a house is built-story after story; and no edifice has any chance of standing unless it has a broad foundation and a solid frame.
A gentleman need not know Latin, but he should at least have forgotten it.
In every artist we can perceive a man with both a message and a method. His message may be innate in him, but his method he has to acquire from others.
There is a homely directness about these rustic apothegms which makes them far more palatable than the strained and sophisticated epigrams of the characters of Oscar Wilde's plays, who are ever striving strenuously to dazzle us with verbal pyrotechnics.
When I have no idea, I gnaw my nails and invoke the aid of Providence.
Be brief, be buoyant, and be brilliant.
A highbrow is a person educated beyond his intelligence.
Give a good deed the credit of a good motive; and give an evil deed the benefit of the doubt.