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Sherwood Anderson Quotes - Page 2

Everyone in the world is Christ and they are all crucified.

Sherwood Anderson (2015). “Winesburg, Ohio”, p.42, Sheba Blake Publishing

If you are to become a writer you'll have to stop fooling with words.

Sherwood Anderson (2012). “Sherwood Anderson: Collected Stories: Winesburg, Ohio / The Triumph of the Egg / Horses and Men / Death in the Woods / Uncollected Stories (Library of America #235)”, p.155, Library of America

Above all avoid taking the advice of men who have no brains and do not know what they are talking about.

Sherwood Anderson (1953). “Letters: selected and edited with an introd. and notes by Howard Mumford Jones, in association with Walter B. Rideout”

If I can write everything out plainly, perhaps I will myself understand better what has happened.

Sherwood Anderson (2012). “Sherwood Anderson: Collected Stories: Winesburg, Ohio / The Triumph of the Egg / Horses and Men / Death in the Woods / Uncollected Stories (Library of America #235)”, p.987, Library of America

You must not become a mere peddler of words. The thing to learn is to know what people are thinking about, not what they say.

Sherwood Anderson (2012). “Sherwood Anderson: Collected Stories: Winesburg, Ohio / The Triumph of the Egg / Horses and Men / Death in the Woods / Uncollected Stories (Library of America #235)”, p.155, Library of America

It may be true of all relationships, not only between fathers and sons, but between men and women. Nothing seems fixed. Everything is always changing. We seem to have very little control over our emotional life.

Sherwood Anderson (1953). “Letters: selected and edited with an introd. and notes by Howard Mumford Jones, in association with Walter B. Rideout”

There is a kind of shrewdness many men have that enables them to get money. It is the shrewdness of the fox after the chicken. A low order of mentality often goes with it.

Sherwood Anderson (1953). “Letters: selected and edited with an introd. and notes by Howard Mumford Jones, in association with Walter B. Rideout”

Those who are to follow the arts should have a training in what is called poverty. Given a comfortable middle-class start in life, the artist is almost sure to end up by becoming a bellyacher, constantly complaining because the public does not rush forward at once to proclaim him.

Sherwood Anderson (1924). “A Story Teller's Story: The Tale of an American Writer's Journey Through His Own Imaginative World and Through the World of Facts, with Many of His Experiences and Impressions Among Other Writers--told in Many Notes--in Four Books--and an Epilogue”, p.5, University of Michigan Press

Draw, draw, hundreds of drawings. Try to remain humble. Smartness kills everything.

Sherwood Anderson (1977). “The Portable Sherwood Anderson”, Viking Press

Nothing gives quite the satisfaction that doing things brings.

Sherwood Anderson (1953). “Letters: selected and edited with an introd. and notes by Howard Mumford Jones, in association with Walter B. Rideout”

Friends you have, people you love, die and are born again.

Sherwood Anderson (1947). “The Sherwood Anderson reader”

Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples.

Sherwood Anderson (1919). “Winesburg, Ohio: A Group of Tales of Ohio Small-town Life”, p.19, Primedia E-launch LLC