Alphonse Daudet (French: [dodɛ]; 13 May 1840 – 16 December 1897) was a French novelist. He was the husband of Julia Daudet and father of Edmée Daudet, and writers Léon Daudet and Lucien Daudet.
My imagination doesn't require anything more of the book than to provide a framework within which it can wander.
Music is another planet.
Children are like grown people; the experience of others is never of any use to them.
Hatred - The anger of the weak.
Poets are people who can still see the world through the eyes of children.
Suffering is nothing. It's all a matter of preventing those you love from suffering.
There is often seen this anomaly in women, especially in those of childish natures,--that they possess at once great promptness and unskilfulness in falsehood.
Hate is the wrath of the weak.
The clever way death cuts us down, but makes it look like just a thinning-out. Generations never fall with one blow - that would be too sad and too obvious. Death prefers to do it piecemeal. The meadow is attacked from several sides at the same time. One of us goes one day; another some time afterwards; you have to stand back and look around you to take in what's missing, to grasp the vast slaughter of your generation.
Howard W. Koch
Jack Dee
Gerald Jay Sussman
Al-Shafi‘i
Delbert L. Stapley
James Forten
Lindsey Wixson
Benjamin Barber
Paul J. Manafort
Ranbir Kapoor
John Toshack
William McChesney Martin