William Gaddis Quotes

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Most people are clever because they don't know how to be honest." William Gaddis, The Recognitions.

William Gaddis
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Most people are clever because they don't know how to be honest." William Gaddis, The Recognitions.

William Gaddis, The Recognitions
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December 29, 1946: Snowing this morning. The year seems to be dying in a light white blanket. Only three more days of this year, then comes a new one. Then, what? No one knows. -- Diary of Bertha Kate Gaddis who passed away 6 months later, age 78, West Lafayette, IN.

Angie Klink, Divided Paths, Common Ground: The Story of Mary Matthews and Lella Gaddis, Pioneering Purdue Women Who Introduced Science into the Home
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It is worth starting with visions, though, because they establish hopes and fears. History then determines which prevail.

John Lewis Gaddis
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Justice? You get justice in the next world, in this world you have the law.

William Gaddis
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Power doesn't corrupt people, people corrupt power.

William Gaddis
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What's an artist but the dregs of his work - the human shambles that follows it around?

William Gaddis
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All we’ve got left to protect here is a system that’s set up to promote the meanest possibilities in human nature and make them look good.

William Gaddis
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Then, what is sacrelige [sic]? If it is nothing more than a rebellion against dogma, it is eventually as meaningless as the dogma it defies, and they are both become hounds ranting in the high grass, never see the boar in the thicket. Only a religious person can perpetrate sacrelige: and if its blasphemy reaches the heart of the question; if it investigates deeply enough to unfold, not the pattern, but the materials of the pattern, and the necessity of a pattern; if it questions so deeply that the doubt it arouses is frightening and cannot be dismissed; then it has done its true sacreligious [sic] work, in the service of its adversary: the only service that nihilism can ever perform.(unused 1949 prefatory note to The Recognitions)

William Gaddis
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Someday is now.

Gaddy Bergmann
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Has it ever occurred to any of you that all this is simply one grand misunderstanding? Since you're not here to learn anything, but to be taught so you can pass these tests, knowledge has to be organized so it can be taught, and it has to be reduced to information so it can be organized do you follow that? In other words this leads you to assume that organization is an inherent property of the knowledge itself, and that disorder and chaos are simply irrelevant forces that threaten it from the outside. In fact it's exactly the opposite. Order is simply a thin, perilous condition we try to impose on the basic reality of chaos...

William Gaddis, JR
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