Finding a quote for you…
TW

Thornton Wilder

playwright, novelist, screenwriter, writer

1897  – 1975

Thornton Niven Wilder was an American playwright and novelist. He won three Pulitzer Prizes, for the novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey and for the plays Our Town and The Skin of Our Teeth, and a U.S. National Book Award for the novel The Eighth Day.

All Quotes by Thornton Wilder

“Marriage is a bribe to make the housekeeper think she's a householder.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Love is an energy which exists of itself. It is its own value.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Either we live by accident and die by accident, or we live by plan and die by plan.”
— Thornton Wilder
“There is not a single untruth, no -but after ten lines Truth shrieks, she runs distraught and disheveled through her temple's corridors; she does not know herself. 'I can endure lies,' she cries. 'I cannot survive this stifling verisimilitude”
— Thornton Wilder
“Yes, now you know. Now you know! That's what it was to be alive. To move about in a cloud of ignorance; to go up and down trampling on the feelings of those...of those about you. To spend and waste time as though you had a million years. To be always at the mercy of one self-centered passion, or another. Now you know — that's the happy existence you wanted to go back to. Ignorance and blindness.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I would love to be the poet laureate of Coney Island.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The more decisions that you are forced to make alone, the more you are aware of your freedom to choose.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Ninety-nine percent of the people in the world are fools and the rest of us are in great danger of contagion.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I hold that we cannot be said to be aware of our minds save under responsibility.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Literature is the orchestration of platitudes.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I would love to be the poet laureate of Coney Island.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Many plays — certainly mine — are like blank checks. The actors and directors put their own signatures on them.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Love is an energy which exists of itself. It is its own value.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Many who have spent a lifetime in it can tell us less of love than the child that lost a dog yesterday.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Love, though it expends itself in generosity and thoughtfulness, though it gives birth to visions and to great poetry, remains among the sharpest expressions of self-interest. Not until it has passed through a long servitude, through its own self-hatred, through mockery, through great doubts, can it take its place among the loyalties.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I am not interested in the ephemeral — such subjects as the adulteries of dentists. I am interested in those things that repeat and repeat and repeat in the lives of the millions.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Like all the rich he could not bring himself to believe that the poor (look at their houses, look at their clothes!) could really suffer. Like all the cultivated he believed that only the widely read could be said to know that they were unhappy.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Soon we shall die and all memory of those five will have left earth, and we ourselves shall be loved for a while and forgotten. But the love will have been enough; all those impulses of love return to the love that made them. Even memory is not necessary for love. There is a land of the living and a land of the dead and the bridge is love, the only survival, the only meaning.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Style is but the faintly contemptible vessel in which the bitter liquid is recommended to the world.”
— Thornton Wilder
“People are meant to go through life two by two. 'Tain't natural to be lonesome.”
— Thornton Wilder
“A man looks pretty small at a wedding, George. All those good women standing shoulder to shoulder, making sure that the knot's tied in a mighty public way.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I know that every good and excellent thing in the world stands moment by moment on the razor-edge of danger and must be fought for.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Wherever you come near the human race there's layers and layers of nonsense.”
— Thornton Wilder
“That's what it was to be alive. To move about in a cloud of ignorance; to go up and down trampling on the feelings of those... of those about you. To spend and waste time as though you had a million years. To be always at the mercy of one self-centered passion, or another. Now you know — that's the happy existence you wanted to go back to. Ignorance and blindness.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I've never forgotten for long at a time that living is struggle. I know that every good and excellent thing in the world stands moment by moment on the razor-edge of danger and must be fought for — whether it's a field, or a home, or a country.”
— Thornton Wilder
“My advice to you is not to inquire why or whither, but just enjoy your ice cream while it's on your plate — that's my philosophy.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I hate this play and every word in it.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Marriage is a bribe to make a housekeeper think she's a householder.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Never support two weaknesses at the same time. It's your combination sinners — your lecherous liars and your miserly drunkards — who dishonor the vices and bring them into bad repute.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Nurse one vice in your bosom. Give it the attention it deserves and let your virtues spring up modestly around it. Then you'll have the miser who's no liar; and the drunkard who's the benefactor of the whole city.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The test of an adventure is that when you're in the middle of it, you say to yourself, "Oh, now I've got myself into an awful mess; I wish I were sitting quietly at home." And the sign that something's wrong with you is when you sit quietly at home wishing you were out having lots of adventure.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Money is like manure; it's not worth a thing unless it's spread around encouraging young things to grow.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Ninety-nine per cent of the people in the world are fools and the rest of us are in great danger of contagion.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The future author is one who discovers that language, the exploration and manipulation of the resources of language, will serve him in winning through to his way.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The comic spirit is given to us in order that we may analyze, weigh, and clarify things in us which nettle us, or which we are outgrowing, or trying to reshape.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Winning children (who appear so guileless) are children who have discovered how effective charm and modesty and a delicately calculated spontaneity are in winning what they want.”
— Thornton Wilder
“On the stage it is always now; the personages are standing on that razor edge, between the past and the future, which is the essential character of conscious being; the words are rising to their lips in immediate spontaneity … The theater is supremely fitted to say: "Behold! These things are."”
— Thornton Wilder
“Many great writers have been extraordinarily awkward in daily exchange, but the greatest give the impression that their style was nursed by the closest attention to colloquial speech.”
— Thornton Wilder
“A dramatist is one who believes that the pure event, an action involving human beings, is more arresting than any comment that can be made upon it.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The theatre is supremely fitted to say: "Behold! These things are." Yet most dramatists employ it to say: "This moral truth can be learned from beholding this action."”
— Thornton Wilder
“I am convinced that, except in a few extraordinary cases, one form or another of an unhappy childhood is essential to the formation of exceptional gifts.”
— Thornton Wilder
“One of the dangers of the American artist is that he finds himself almost exclusively thrown in with persons more or less in the arts. He lives among them, eats among them, quarrels with them, marries them.”
— Thornton Wilder
“It is only in appearance that time is a river. It is rather a vast landscape and it is the eye of the beholder that moves.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Those who are silent, self-effacing and attentive become the recipients of confidences.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Hope, like faith, is nothing if it is not courageous; it is nothing if it is not ridiculous.”
— Thornton Wilder
“A sense of humor judges one's actions and the actions of others from a wider reference and a longer view and finds them incongruous. It dampens enthusiasm; it mocks hope; it pardons shortcomings; it consoles failure. It recommends moderation.”
— Thornton Wilder
“We do not choose the day of our birth nor may we choose the day of our death, yet choice is the sovereign faculty of the mind.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Man is not an end but a beginning. We are at the beginning of the second week. We are children of the eighth day.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The best thing about animals is that they don't talk much.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The planting of trees is the least self-centered of all that we do. It is a purer act of faith than the procreation of children.”
— Thornton Wilder
“When God loves a creature he wants the creature to know the highest happiness and the deepest misery … He wants him to know all that being alive can bring. That is his best gift…. There is no happiness save in understanding the whole.”
— Thornton Wilder
“Imagination draws on memory. Memory and imagination combined can stage a Servants' Ball or even write a book, if that's what they want to do.”
— Thornton Wilder
“I regard the theatre as the greatest of all art forms, the most immediate way in which a human being can share with another the sense of what it is to be a human being.”
— Thornton Wilder
“The more decisions that you are forced to make alone, the more you are aware of your freedom to choose.”
— Thornton Wilder
“But there comes a moment in everybody's life when he must decide whether he'll live among the human beings or not - a fool among fools or a fool alone.”
— Thornton Wilder