aus: Off we all went to see Germany. In: LIFE Magazine, Bd. 19, Nr.6, 6. August 1945, pp.54-58, 56 books.google https://books.google.at/books?id=0EkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA56&dq=disobedience, ISSN 0024-3019.
Original engl.: "When General Osborne came to see me just after the victory, he asked me what I thought should be done to educate the Germans. I said there is only one thing to be done and that is to teach them disobedience, as long as they are obedient so long sooner or later they will be ordered about by a bad man and there will be trouble. Teach them disobedience, I said, make every German child know that it is its duty at least once a day to do its good deed and not believe something its father or its teacher tells them, confuse their minds, get their minds confused and perhaps then they will be disobedient and the world will be at peace. The obedient peoples go to war, disobedient people like peace, that is the reason that Italy did not really become a good Axis, the people were not obedient enough, the Japs and the Germans are the only really obedient people on earth and see what happens, teach them disobedience, confuse their minds, teach them disobedience, and the world can be peaceful. General Osborne shook his head sadly, you'll never make the heads of an army understand that."
Gertrude Stein Berühmte Zitate
Everybody's Autobiography, Kap. 2
Original engl.: "It takes a lot of time to be a genius, you have to sit around so much doing nothing, really doing nothing."
„Rose ist eine Rose ist eine Rose ist eine Rose.“
Die Welt ist rund/The World Is Round, 1939
Original engl.: "Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose." - Sacred Emily, 1913
Zitate über Zweifel von Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein Zitate und Sprüche
Everybody's Autobiography, Kap. 1
Original engl.: "The white race does not really think they belong anywhere because they think of everybody else as native."
„Jede jeder beschließt dass keine keiner etwas erfährt selbst wenn jede jeder es weiß“
aus: Keine keiner, 1990, Arche-Verlag, Zürich, Seite 36, ISBN 3-7160-2117-2, Originalausgabe: Blood on the Dining-Room Floor, 1948
Everybody's Autobiography
“Einstein was the creative philosophic mind of the century, and I have been the creative literary mind of the century also with the Oriental mixing with the European.” - Everybody's Autobiography. PT25 books.google https://books.google.de/books?id=R_qGqJ01RFMC&pg=PT25
„Kommunisten sind Leute, die sich einbilden, sie hätten eine unglückliche Kindheit gehabt.“
gemäß Thornton Wilder The Paris Review: Writers at Work, First Series (1958)
Original engl.: "Communists are people who fancied that they had an unhappy childhood."
Gertrude Stein: Zitate auf Englisch
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 5
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 2
“It is always a mistake to be plain-spoken.”
"As Eighty," from Bee Time Vine (1953, Yale University Press); written in 1923
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 4
“It is not what France gave you but what it did not take from you that was important.”
An American and France (1936)
Four in America (1933)
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 4, p. 289
What Are Masterpieces and Why Are There So Few of Them (1936), Afterword of a later edition
“As there was never any question there was never any answer.”
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch.1
Comment to Ernest Hemingway, Ch. 7
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1933)
Manuscript (1903), published in Q.E.D. Book 1, from Q.E.D., and Other Early Writings (1971)
“Communists are people who fancied that they had an unhappy childhood.”
Quoted by Thornton Wilder, interview (December 14-15, 1956) with Richard Goldstone, The Paris Review: Writers at Work, First Series (1958)
“It is a difficult thing to like anybody else's ideas of being funny.”
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 3
Quoted in Really Reading Gertrude Stein : A Selected Anthology with essays (1989) by Judy Grahn (Crossing Press ISBN 0-895-94380-8, p. 253
“Suppose no one asked a question, what would be the answer.”
"Near East or Chicago A Description"
Useful Knowledge (1928)
“Before the flowers of friendship faded friendship faded.”
This phrase was used as the title of a work published in 1931, but was originally used in Ch. LXII of A Novel of Thank You, written in 1925-1926, but not published until 1958 by the Yale University Press
“The deepest thing in any one is the conviction of the bad luck that follows boasting.”
Mrs. Reynolds and Five Earlier Novelettes (1952) Pt. 1 (written 1940-1943)
“One does not get better but different and older and that is always a pleasure.”
Letter to F. Scott Fitzgerald (22 May 1925), published in Fitzgerald's The Crack-Up (1945)
“Politeness does not interfere with facts, politeness is just another fact.”
Paris France (1940)
“To know to know to love her so.
Four saints prepare for saints.”
Four Saints in Three Acts (1927)
Operas and Plays (1932)
Quelle: Everybody’s Autobiography (1937), Ch. 2