| "Art, like morality, consists of drawing the line somewhere." »G. K. Chesterton |
| "drawing on my fine command of the English language, I said nothing." »Robert Benchley |
| "The palest ink is better than the best memory." »Chinese Proverb |
| "Gardens and flowers have a way of bringing people together, drawing them from their homes." »Clare Ansberry |
| "Morality, like art, means a drawing a line someplace." »Oscar Wilde |
| "I am a galley slave to pen and ink." »Honore' de Balzac |
| "Humor is a rubber sword - it allows you to make a point without drawing blood." »Mary Hirsch |
| "Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient premises." »Samuel Butler |
| "The ink of the scholar is more sacred than the blood of the martyr." »Mohammad |
| "The very ink with which history is written is merely fluid prejudice." »Mark Twain |
| "But my dear man, reality is only a Rorschach ink-blot, you know." »Alan B. Watts |
| "One ought only to write when one leaves a piece of ones flesh in the ink-pot each time one dips one's pen." »Leo Tolstoy |
| "He who is in love is wise and is becoming wiser, sees newly every time he looks at the object beloved, drawing from it with his eyes and his mind those virtues which it possesses." »Ralph Waldo Emerson |
| "But words are things, and a small drop of ink, Falling like dew, upon a thought, produces That which makes thousands, perhaps millions, think." »George Gordon Byron |
| "Our live experiences, fixed in aphorisms, stiffen into cold epigrams. Our heart's blood, as we write it, turns to mere dull ink." »F. H. Bradley |
| "I have designed my style pantomimes as white ink drawings on black backgrounds, so that man's destiny appears as a thread lost in an endless labyrinth." »Marcel Marceau |
| "The art of drawing conclusions from experiments and observations consists in evaluating probabilities and in estimating whether they are sufficiently great or numerous enough to constitute proofs. This kind of calculation is more complicated and more difficult than it is commonly thought to be. . ." »Antoine Laurent Lavoisier |
| "'Humph' grunted Mr. Romford, seeing his worst fears about to be realized. He had dreamt that he had timbled over a poodle in the drawing-room, and squirted a bottle of porter right into a lady's face. 'Who's goin' besides ourselves' asked Romford, wishing to know the worst at once. 'Better be killed than frightened to death,' thought he." »Robert Smith Surtees |
| "It seems to me the book has not just aesthetic values-- the charming little clothy box of the thing, the smell of the glue, even the print, which has its own beauty. But there's something about the sensation of ink on paper that is in some sense a thing, a phenomenon rather than an epiphenomenon. I can't break the association of electric trash with the computer screen. Words on the screen give the sense of being just another passing electronic wriggle." »John Updike |
| "If you were in a burning house and there was a cat and a Rembrandt, what would you save The cat...you would save the cat, because the cat is alive. The art is dead. It's just paint on a canvas, ink on a page. To live for art is to deny life. It's just to destroy life." »Andrew Schneider |
| BTW, Why won't you become an editor? |