Make the work interesting and the discipline will take care of itself. E. B. White More Quotes by E. B. White More Quotes From E. B. White Loneliness is a strange gift. E. B. White strange loneliness life Stuart rose from the ditch, climbed into his car, and started up the road that led toward the north...As he peeked ahead into the great land that stretched before him, the way seemed long. But the sky was bright, and he somehow felt he was headed in the right direction. E. B. White car land sky From three to four, he planned to stand perfectly still and think of what it was like to be alive. E. B. White alive three thinking I can only assume that your editorial writer tripped over the First Amendment and thought it was the office cat. E. B. White cat office firsts The trouble with the profit system has always been that it was highly unprofitable to most people. E. B. White diversity business people You can dissect a joke just as you can a frog. But it tends to die on you. E. B. White frogs jokes dies I am still encouraged to go on. I wouldn't know where else to go. E. B. White stills goes-on knows Nationalism has two fatal charms for its devotees: It presupposes local self-sufficiency, which is a pleasant and desirable condition, and it suggests, very subtly, a certain personal superiority by reason of one's belonging to a place which is definable and familiar, as against a place that is strange, remote. E. B. White strange self two Well,” said Stuart, “a misspelled word is an abomination in the sight of everyone. E. B. White abomination well-said sight I believe in dreams. People should have faith in the songs poets sing. E. B. White dream song believe Early summer days are a jubilee time for birds. In the fields, around the house, in the barn, in the woods, in the swamp - everywhere love and songs and nests and eggs. E. B. White eggs summer song Books are the door of escape from the forest. E. B. White forests doors book A single overstatement, wherever or however it occurs, diminishes the whole, and a carefree superlative has the power to destroy, for the reader, the object of the writer's enthusiasm. E. B. White carefree reader enthusiasm It is at a fair that man can be drunk forever on liquor, love, or fights; at a fair that your front pocket can be picked by a trotting horse looking for sugar, and your hind pocket by a thief looking for his fortune. E. B. White horse fighting love The terror of the atom age is not the violence of the new power but the speed of man's adjustment to it, the speed of his acceptance. E. B. White acceptance power men A writer is like a bean plant - he has his little day, and then gets stringy. E. B. White comedy writing littles When my wife's Aunt Caroline was in her nineties, she lived with us, and she once remarked: 'Remembrance is sufficient of the beauty we have seen.' I cherish the remembrance of the beauty I have seen. I cherish the grave, compulsive word. E. B. White aunt wife inspiring It is Sunday, mid-morning-Sunday in the living room, Sunday in the kitchen, Sunday in the woodshed, Sunday down the road in the village: I hear the bells, calling me to share God's grace. E. B. White sunday grace morning Extreme cold when it first arrives seems to generate cheerfulness and sociability. For a few hours all life's dubious problems are dropped in favor of the clear and congenial task of keeping alive. E. B. White dubious tasks weather It seemed to me that I should have a desk, even though I had no real need for a desk. I was afraid that if I had no desk in my room my life would seem too haphazard. E. B. White real should-have order