The classics are only primitive literature. They belong to the same class as primitive machinery and primitive music and primitive medicine.
About Stephen Leacock
Stephen P. H. Butler Leacock was a Canadian teacher, political scientist, writer, and humourist. Between the years 1915 and 1925, he was the best-known English-speaking humourist in the world.
More quotes from Stephen Leacock
I am a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it.
Canadian writer and economist
In ancient times they had no statistics so they had to fall back on lies.
Canadian writer and economist
It is to be observed that ‘angling’ is the name given to fishing by people who can’t fish.
Canadian writer and economist
Each section of the British Isles has its own way of laughing, except Wales, which doesn’t.
Canadian writer and economist
It’s called political economy because it is has nothing to do with either politics or economy.
Canadian writer and economist
A sportsman is a man who every now and then, simply has to get out and kill something.
Canadian writer and economist
Writing is no trouble: you just jot down ideas as they occur to you. The jotting is simplicity itself – it is the occurring which is difficult.
Canadian writer and economist
The classics are only primitive literature. They belong to the same class as primitive machinery and primitive music and primitive medicine.
Canadian writer and economist
Many a man in love with a dimple makes the mistake of marrying the whole girl.
Canadian writer and economist
The Lord said ‘let there be wheat’ and Saskatchewan was born.
Canadian writer and economist
It may be those who do most, dream most.
Canadian writer and economist
Advertising: the science of arresting the human intelligence long enough to get money from it.
Canadian writer and economist
Men are able to trust one another, knowing the exact degree of dishonesty they are entitled to expect.
Canadian writer and economist
Personally, I would sooner have written Alice in Wonderland than the whole Encyclopedia Britannica.
Canadian writer and economist
Life, we learn too late, is in the living, the tissue of every day and hour.
Canadian writer and economist
A half truth, like half a brick, is always more forcible as an argument than a whole one. It carries better.
Canadian writer and economist
I detest life-insurance agents: they always argue that I shall some day die, which is not so.
Canadian writer and economist
The landlady of a boarding-house is a parallelogram – that is, an oblong angular figure, which cannot be described, but which is equal to anything.
Canadian writer and economist
There are two things in ordinary conversation which ordinary people dislike – information and wit.
Canadian writer and economist
On the same bill and on the same side of it there should not be two charges for the same thing.
Canadian writer and economist
Astronomy teaches the correct use of the sun and the planets.
Canadian writer and economist
Now, the essence, the very spirit of Christmas is that we first make believe a thing is so, and lo, it presently turns out to be so.
Canadian writer and economist
It takes a good deal of physical courage to ride a horse. This, however, I have. I get it at about forty cents a flask, and take it as required.
Canadian writer and economist
What we call creative work, ought not to be called work at all, because it isn’t. I imagine that Thomas Edison never did a day’s work in his last fifty years.
Canadian writer and economist
He flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse and rode madly off in all directions.
Canadian writer and economist
If every day in the life of a school could be the last day but one, there would be little fault to find with it.
Canadian writer and economist
Electricity is of two kinds, positive and negative. The difference is, I presume, that one comes a little more expensive, but is more durable; the other is a cheaper thing, but the moths get into it.
Canadian writer and economist
Golf may be played on Sunday, not being a game within the view of the law, but being a form of moral effort.
Canadian writer and economist
We think of the noble object for which the professor appears tonight, we may be assured that the Lord will forgive any one who will laugh at the professor.
Canadian writer and economist
It’s a lie, but Heaven will forgive you for it.
Canadian writer and economist