A regular feature here at Paper Notes In A Digital World will be, "Friday On The Commons." We'll take some of the best thoughts, quotes and ponderings from various commonplace books and share them each Friday. What's a commonplace book? Here are some good descriptions. A sampling:
Commonplace books have their origin in the Renaissance as one
means of coping with the information overload of that era. They helped students
select, organize, classify, and remember key moral precepts. Commonplace books sanction the selection of passages made
significant by personal experience and conscience. Many commonplace passages
urge contentment and console the reader on the imminence of death, while also
containing traces that indicate the particular character of the possessor. One
book dated ca. 1670, for example, lists under "Precepts of liveing" thirty-seven
short, numbered verses in couplets, seldom exceeding six lines, that turn the
commandments into memorizable verse.
-- Benedict, Barbara M. Making the Modern Reader
Cultural Mediation in Early Modern Literary Anthologies (1996)
http://pup.princeton.edu/books/benedict/chapter_1.html
I keep a commonplace book (and have for years without knowing up until a couple of years ago that's what it was called), and it is one of my most prized possessions. Between the covers, I keep all of my favorite quotes, paragraphs from books that especially spoke to me, lines from movies or television, or sometimes simply observations overheard. This week I selected a few that I thought could be appropriate thoughts going into the new year. Without further introduction....
Writer Emile Zola kept this phrase displayed on the wall of his study as a reminder to write every single day:
"Nulla Dies Sine Linea" (No days without lines.)
Writing is a form of therapy. Sometimes I wonder how all those who do not write, compose or paint can manage to escape the madness, the melancholia, the panic and fear which is inherent in the human condition. - Graham Greene
Nothing contributes so much to tranquilizing the mind as a steady purpose - a point on which the soul may fix its intellectual eye. - Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The clock of life is wound but once. - unknown
Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known known and discovered. - Carl Sagan
In keeping a diary, I have discovered that nothing never happens. - Thomas Mallon
In time of trouble, I had been trained since childhood, read, look it up, go to the literature. Information was control.
- Joan Didion from The Year of Magical Thinking
Good judgment comes from experience, and experience? Well, that comes from poor judgment. - unknown
In writing a novel, there is in the beginning what I call a theme. It's not an idea, but a feeling. Then this feeling goes on developing and unraveling itself like a rope. This is why I say a novel writes itself. One writes a novel in order to know why one writes it. It is the same with life - you live not for some end, but in order to know why you live.
- Alberto Moravia
Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be
experienced.
- Soren Kierkegaard
When I open my eyes in the morning, I am not confronted by a world, but by a million possible worlds. - Colin Wilson
Happiness is as a butterfly, which, when pursued is always beyond our grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you. - Nathaniel Hawthorne
Today was productive: I worked on the proof of one of my poems all day. In the morning I took out a comma.
In the afternoon I put it back again. - Oscar
Wilde
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