JAMES BRANCH CABELL QUOTES II

American author (1879-1958)

Love, I take it, must look toward something not quite accessible, something not quite understood.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Cream of the Jest


Good and evil keep very exact accounts ... and the face of every man is their ledger.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Jurgen


I can but entreat you to remember it is only by preserving faith in human dreams that we may, after all, perhaps some day make them come true.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Cream of the Jest


Hey, my masters, lords and brothers, ye that till the fields of rhyme,
Are ye deaf ye will not hearken to the clamor of your time?

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Certain Hour


I would like this life which moves and yearns in me, to be able itself to attain to comeliness, though but in transitory performance. The life of a butterfly, for example, is just a graceful gesture: and yet, in that its loveliness is complete and perfectly rounded in itself, I envy this bright flicker through existence. And the nearest I can come to my ideal is punctiliously to pay my bills, be polite to my wife, and contribute to deserving charities.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


Some few there must be in every age and every land of whom life claims nothing very insistently save that they write perfectly of beautiful happenings.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Certain Hour


Every notion that any man, dead, living, or unborn, might form as to the universe will necessarily prove wrong.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Cream of the Jest


I take it that I must be the eternal playfellow of time. For piety and common-sense and death are rightfully time's toys; and it is with these three that I divert myself.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Way of Ecben


The religion of Hell is patriotism, and the government is an enlightened democracy.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Jurgen


Criticism, whatever may be its pretensions, never does more than to define the impression which is made upon it at a certain moment by a work wherein the writer himself noted the impression of the world which he received at a certain hour.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The Certain Hour


I shall not ever return to you, my pigs, because, at worst, to die valorously is better than to sleep out one's youth in the sun.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Figures of Earth


I ask of literature precisely those things of which I feel the lack in my own life.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


When you consider that presidents and chief-justices and archbishops and kings and statesmen are human beings like you and me and the laundryman, the thought becomes too horrible for humanity to face.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


I am not so wonderful but that in the hour of my triumph I am frightened by my own littleness.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Figures of Earth


Well, to my finding human beings do not like one another. Indeed, why should they, being rational creatures?

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


The only way of rendering life endurable is to drink as much wine as one can come by.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


That moving carcass does but very inadequately symbolizes you ... a subtle and immortal spirit.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life


Well, love is very pleasant to observe as he advances, overthrowing all ancient memories with laughter. And yet for each gay lover who concedes the lordship of love, and wears intrepidly love's liveries, the end of all is death.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Jurgen


To submit is the great lesson. I too was once a dreamer: and in dreams there are lessons. But to submit, without dreaming any more, is the great lesson; to submit, without either understanding or repining, and without demanding of life too much of beauty or of holiness, and without shirking the fact that this universe is under no least bond ever to grant us, upon either side of the grave, our desires.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

The High Place


No person of quality ever remembers social restrictions save when considering how most piquantly to break them.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL

Beyond Life