Frases de Clarence Day

Clarence Shepherd Day, Jr., ou apenas Clarence Day foi um escritor americano. Ele se graduou na Universidade de Yale em 1896. No ano seguinte, ele passou a trabalhar na Bolsa de Valores de Nova Iorque e se tornou sócio da corretora de ações de seu pai. Em 1898 ele se alistou na marinha americana, mas teve artite incapacitante passou o resto de sua vida como um semi-inválido.

O trabalho mais famoso de Clarence Day é o livro autobiográfico Nossa Vida com Papai , que apresentava episódios humorísticos da vida de sua família, centrados em seu pai dominador, ocorridos nos anos 1890, em Nova York.



A peça com o mesmo nome, de Lindsay e Crouse foi criada a partir de cenas deste livro, junto com o livro anterior de 1932, God and my Father , somados com Life with Mother , livro póstumo de 1937. Wikipedia  

✵ 18. Novembro 1874 – 28. Dezembro 1935
Clarence Day: 6   citações 0   Curtidas

Clarence Day: Frases em inglês

“The rich are not really a bad lot. We must not judge by appearances. If it weren't for their money they would be indistinguishable from the rest of us.”

""Annual Report of the League for Improving the Lives of the Rich" in The Crow's Nest (1921)
Contexto: The rich are not really a bad lot. We must not judge by appearances. If it weren't for their money they would be indistinguishable from the rest of us. But money brings out their weaknesses, naturally. Would it not bring out ours? A moderate addiction to money may not always be hurtful; but when taken in excess it is nearly always bad for the health, it limits one's chance of indulging in nice simple pleasures, and in many cases it lowers the whole moral tone. The rich admit this — of each other; but what can they do? Once a man has begun to accumulate money, it is unnatural to stop. He actually gets in a state where he wants more and more.
This may seem incomprehensible to those who have never suffered from affluence, and yet they would feel the same way, in a millionaire's place. A man begins by thinking that he can have money without being its victim. He will admit that other men addicted to wealth find it hard to be moderate, but he always is convinced that he is different and has more self-control. But the growth of an appetite is determined by nature, not men, and this is as true of getting money as of anything else. As soon as a man is used to a certain amount, no matter how large, his ideas of what is suitable expand. That is the way men are made.

“A moderate addiction to money may not always be hurtful; but when taken in excess it is nearly always bad for the health, it limits one's chance of indulging in nice simple pleasures, and in many cases it lowers the whole moral tone.”

""Annual Report of the League for Improving the Lives of the Rich" in The Crow's Nest (1921)
Contexto: The rich are not really a bad lot. We must not judge by appearances. If it weren't for their money they would be indistinguishable from the rest of us. But money brings out their weaknesses, naturally. Would it not bring out ours? A moderate addiction to money may not always be hurtful; but when taken in excess it is nearly always bad for the health, it limits one's chance of indulging in nice simple pleasures, and in many cases it lowers the whole moral tone. The rich admit this — of each other; but what can they do? Once a man has begun to accumulate money, it is unnatural to stop. He actually gets in a state where he wants more and more.
This may seem incomprehensible to those who have never suffered from affluence, and yet they would feel the same way, in a millionaire's place. A man begins by thinking that he can have money without being its victim. He will admit that other men addicted to wealth find it hard to be moderate, but he always is convinced that he is different and has more self-control. But the growth of an appetite is determined by nature, not men, and this is as true of getting money as of anything else. As soon as a man is used to a certain amount, no matter how large, his ideas of what is suitable expand. That is the way men are made.

“We must make the best of those ills which cannot be avoided.”

Alexander Hamilton, as quoted in The Home Book of Quotations, Classical and Modern (1958)
Misattributed

“Information's pretty thin stuff unless mixed with experience.”

As quoted in The International Thesaurus of Quotations (1970) edited by Rhoda Thomas Tripp