Frasi di Samuel Butler
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Samuel Butler è stato uno scrittore inglese.

Samuel Butler è considerato dai critici un autore vittoriano iconoclasta. Tra le sue opere più famose troviamo l'opera satirica Erewhon e il romanzo postumo The Way of All Flesh . È anche noto per le sue analisi sulla ortodossia cristiana, per i suoi studi sulla teoria dell'evoluzione e dell'arte italiana e per i suoi scritti di storia e critica letteraria. Butler fu anche traduttore dell'Iliade e dell'Odissea di Omero. Wikipedia  

✵ 4. Dicembre 1835 – 18. Giugno 1902
Samuel Butler photo
Samuel Butler: 239   frasi 3   Mi piace

Samuel Butler frasi celebri

“Se la vita non deve essere presa troppo seriamente, la morte neppure.”

"Death"
Taccuini
Origine: Citato in Dizionario delle citazioni, a cura di Italo Sordi, BUR, 1992. ISBN 14603-X

“È meglio aver amato e perduto che non aver mai amato.”

Taccuini
Origine: Citato in Dammi mille baci, e ancora cento. Le più belle citazioni sull'amore, a cura delle Redazioni Garzanti, Garzanti, 2013.

“I libri più vecchi, per chi non li ha letti, sono appena usciti.”

Origine: Citato in Dizionario delle citazioni, a cura di Italo Sordi, BUR, 1992. ISBN 14603-X

“Una cosa è certa, ed è il fatto che non possiamo dare niente per certo; perciò non è certo che non possiamo dare niente per certo.”

"First Principles"
Taccuini
Origine: Citato in Dizionario delle citazioni, a cura di Italo Sordi, BUR, 1992. ISBN 14603-X

Samuel Butler: Frasi in inglese

“After having spent years striving to be accurate, we must spend as many more in discovering when and how to be inaccurate.”

Accuracy
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part IX - A Painter's Views on Painting

“[Ideas] are like shadows — substantial enough until we try to grasp them.”

Ideas
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part VII - On the Making of Music, Pictures, and Books

“Thought pure and simple is as near to God as we can get; it is through this that we are linked with God.”

Thought and Word, i
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part VII - On the Making of Music, Pictures, and Books

“Think of and look at your work as though it were done by your enemy. If you look at it to admire it you are lost.”

Improvement in Art
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part IX - A Painter's Views on Painting

“Art has no end in view save the emphasising and recording in the most effective way some strongly felt interest or affection.”

Great Art and Sham Art
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part IX - A Painter's Views on Painting

“He is greatest who is most often in men’s good thoughts.”

Greatness
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part XIV - Higgledy-Piggledy

“Always eat grapes downwards — that is, always eat the best grape first; in this way there will be none better left on the bunch, and each grape will seem good down to the last.”

Eating Grapes Downwards
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part VII - On the Making of Music, Pictures, and Books

“The dons are too busy educating the young men to be able to teach them anything.”

Oxford and Cambridge
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part XIV - Higgledy-Piggledy

“How is it, I wonder, that all religious officials, from God the Father to the parish beadle, should be so arbitrary and exacting.”

Samuel Butler libro The Way of All Flesh

Origine: The Way of All Flesh (1903), Ch. 23; this is one of the passages excised from <cite>The Way of All Flesh</cite> when it was first published in 1903, after Butler's death, by his literary executor, R. Streatfeild. This first edition of <cite>The Way of All Flesh</cite> is widely available in plain text on the internet, but readers of facsimiles of the first edition should be aware that Streatfeild significantly altered and edited Butler's text, "regularizing" the punctuation and removing most of Butler's most trenchant criticism of Victorian society and conventional pieties. Butler's full manuscript, entitled <cite>Ernest Pontifex, or The Way of All Flesh</cite>, was edited and issued by Daniel F. Howard in 1965. It is from this edition that this quote is derived; it was excised by Streatfeild in the first edition.

“An empty house is like a stray dog or a body from which life has departed.”

Samuel Butler libro The Way of All Flesh

Origine: The Way of All Flesh (1903), Ch. 72

“Man is the only animal that laughs and has a state legislature.”

As quoted in 1,911 Best Things Anybody Ever Said (1988) by Robert Byrne

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