Christopher Morley was an American journalist and writer, born on May 5, 1890, in Pennsylvania, and died on March 28, 1957. Known for his humorous and witty writing style, Morley is considered an important figure in American literature of the 20th century.
Related Quotes
“No man is lonely while eating spaghetti: it requires so much attention.”
“There's no mistaking a real book when one meets it. It is like falling in love.”
“Wars are won in the mind before they can be won on the field.”
“La notte ha una mistica affinità con la letteratura.”
“There is only one success-to be able to spend life in your own way.”
“April prepares her green traffic light and the world thinks Go.”
“God made man merely to hear some praise of what he'd done on those Five Days.”
“Truth is the ricochet of a prejudice bouncing off a fact.”
“The censure of a dog is something no man can stand.”
“What is the virtue and service of a book? Only to help me live less gingerly and shabbily.”
“How womanly it is to ask the unanswerable at the moment impossible.”
“Fifty percent of the world are women, yet they always seem a novelty.”
“Be prepared for truth at all hours and in the most fantastic disguises. This is the only safety.”
“Blessed is he who has never been tempted; for he knows not the frailty of his rectitude.”
