W. Somerset Maugham Quotations

1.All important persons have about them someone in a subordinate position who has their ear. These dependents are very susceptible to slights, and, when they are not treated as they think they should be, will by well-directed shafts, constantly repeated, poison the minds of their patrons against those who have provoked their animosity. It is well to keep in with them.

2.American women expect to find in their husbands a perfection that English women only hope to find in their butlers.

3.An author spends months writing a book, and maybe puts his heart's blood into it, and then it lies about unread till the reader has nothing else in the world to do.

4.I like manual labor. Whenever I've got waterlogged with study, I've taken a spell of it and found it spiritually invigorating.

5.I never spend more than one hour in a gallery. That is as long as one's power of appreciation persists.

6.I'm not only my spirit buy my body, and who can decide how much I, my individual self, am conditioned by the accident of my body? Would Byron have been Byron but for his club foot, or Dostoyevsky Dostoyevsky without his epilepsy?

7.It is very difficult to know people and I don't think one can ever really know any but one's own countrymen. For men and women are not only themselves; they are also the region in which they are born, the city apartment or the farm in which they learnt to walk, the games they played as children, the old wives' tales they overheard, the food they ate, the schools they attended, the sports they followed, the poets they read, and the God they believed in. It is all these things that have made them what they are, and these are the things that you can't come to know by hearsay, you can only know them if you have lived them.

8.It's a toss-up when you decide to leave the beaten track. Many are called, but few are chosen.

9.It's always difficult to make conversation with a drunk, and there's no denying it, the sober are at a disadvantage with him.

10.Nothing in the world is permanent, and we're foolish when we ask anything to last, but surely we're still more foolish not to take delight in it while we have it. If change is of the essence of existence one would have thought it only sensible to make it the premise of our philosophy.

11.Often the best way to overcome desire is to satisfy it.

12.People do tell a writer things that they don't tell others. I don't know why, unless it is that having read one or two of his books they feel on peculiarly intimate terms with him; or it may be that they dramatize themselves and, seeing themselves as it were as characters in a novel, are ready to be as open with him as they imagine the characters of his invention are.

13.When things are at their worst I find something always happens.

14.A woman can forgive a man for the harm he does her...but she can never forgive him for the sacrifices he makes on her account.

15.I don't think of the past. The only thing that matters is the everlasting present.

16.Life isn't long enough for love and art.

17.Sometimes people carry to such perfection the mask they have assumed that in due course they actually become the person they seem.

18.As if a woman ever loved a man for his virtue.

19.Charm and nothing but charm at last grows a little tiresome. It's a relief then to deal with a man who isn't quite so delightful but a little more sincere.

20.I always find it more difficult to say the things I mean than the things I don't.

21.If nobody spoke unless he had something to say, the human race would very soon lose the use of speech.

22.One can be very much in love with a woman without wishing to spend the rest of one's life with her.

23.One cannot find peace in work or in pleasure, in the world or in a convent, but only in one's soul.

24.Remember that it is nothing to do your duty, that is demanded of you and is no more meritorious than to wash your hands when they are dirty; the only thing that counts is the love of duty; when love and duty are one, then grace is in you and you will enjoy a happiness which passes all understanding.

25.Perhaps the most important use of money - It saves time. Life is so short, and there's so much to do, one can't afford to waste a minute; and just think how much you waste, for instance, in walking from place to place instead of going by bus and in going by bus instead of by taxi.

26.The average American can get into the kingdom of heaven much more easily than he can get into the Boulevard St. Germain.

27.The dead look so terribly dead when they're dead.

28.The fact that a great many people believe something is no guarantee of its truth.

29.There are few things so pleasant as a picnic eaten in perfect comfort.

30.Unfortunately sometimes one can't do what one thinks is right without making someone else unhappy.

31.We didn't think much in the air corps of a fellow who wangled a cushy job out of his C.O. by buttering him up. It was hard for me to believe that God thought much of a man who tried to wangle salvation by fulsome flattery. I should have thought the worship most pleasing to him was to do your best according to your lights.

32.We who are of mature age seldom suspect how unmercifully and yet with what insight the very young judge us.

33.When you're eighteen your emotions are violent, but they're not durable.

34.You Europeans know nothing about America. Because we amass large fortunes you think we care for nothing but money. We are nothing for it; the moment we have it we spend it, sometimes well, sometimes ill, but we spend it. Money is nothing to us; it's merely the symbol of success. We are the greatest idealists in the world; I happen to think that we've set our ideal on the wrong objects; I happen to think that the greatest ideal man can set before himself is self-perfection.

35.You learn more quickly under the guidance of experienced teachers. You waste a lot of time going down blind alleys if you have no one to lead you.

36.Follow your inclinations with due regard to the policeman round the corner.

37.He had heard people speak contemptuously of money: he wondered if they had ever tried to do without it.

38.I daresay one profits more by the mistakes one makes off one's own bat than by doing the right thing on somebody's else advice.

39.I do not confer praise or blame: I accept. I am the measure of all things. I am the centre of the world.

40.It is an illusion that youth is happy, an illusion of those who have lost it; but the young know they are wretched for they are full of the truthless ideal which have been instilled into them, and each time they come in contact with the real, they are bruised and wounded.

41.It is cruel to discover one's mediocrity only when it is too late.

42.It is not wealth one asks for, but just enough to preserve one's dignity, to work unhampered, to be generous, frank and independent.


43.It's asking a great deal that things should appeal to your reason as well as your sense of the aesthetic.

44.Life wouldn't be worth living if I worried over the future as well as the present.

45.Men seek but one thing in life - their pleasure.

46.Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five.

47.The important thing was to love rather than to be loved.

48.The rain fell alike upon the just and upon the unjust, and for nothing was there a why and a wherefore.

49.There was an immeasurable distance between the quick and the dead: they did not seem to belong to the same species; and it was strange to think that but a little while before they had spoken and moved and eaten and laughed.

50.There's always one who loves and one who lets himself be loved.

51.When I read a book I seem to read it with my eyes only, but now and then I come across a passage, perhaps only a phrase, which has a meaning for me, and it becomes part of me.