SINCLAIR LEWIS QUOTES II

American author (1885-1951)

American Democracy did not imply any equality of wealth, but did demand a wholesome sameness of thought, dress, painting, morals, and vocabulary.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Babbitt

Tags: democracy


The content of his theology was that there was a supreme being who had tried to make us perfect, but presumably had failed; that if one was a Good Man he would go to a place called Heaven.... Upon this theology he rarely pondered. The kernel of his practical religion was that it was respectable, and beneficial to one's business, to be seen going to services; that the church kept the Worst Elements from being still worse; and that the pastor's sermons, however dull they might seem at the time of taking, yet had a voodooistic power which "did a fellow good."

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Babbitt

Tags: religion


He liked three kinds of films: pretty bathing girls with bare legs; policemen or cowboys and an industrious shooting of revolvers; and funny fat men who ate spaghetti.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Babbitt


Such poverty is not for the artist in America. They pay us, indeed, only too well; that writer is a failure who cannot have his butler and motor and his villa at Palm Beach, where he is permitted to mingle almost in equality with the barons of banking. But he is oppressed ever by something worse than poverty -- by the feeling that what he creates does not matter, that he is expected by his readers to be only a decorator or a clown, or that he is good-naturedly accepted as a scoffer whose bark probably is worse than his bite and who probably is a good fellow at heart, who in any case certainly does not count in a land that produces eighty-story buildings, motors by the million, and wheat by the billions of bushels.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Nobel Lecture, December 12, 1930

Tags: artists


The one thing that can be more disconcerting than intelligent hatred is demanding love.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Main Street


Your social standing isn't even in the telephone book.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Free Air


Gentlemen, the most important part of living is not the living but the pondering upon it. And the most important part of experimentation is not doing the experiment but making notes, ve-ry accurate quantitative notes -- in ink.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Arrowsmith


He still had a fragment of his boyhood belief that congressmen were persons of intelligence and importance.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Arrowsmith

Tags: Congress


She was not a Respectable Married Woman but fully a human being.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Main Street


Whatever the misery, he could not regain contentment with a world which, once doubted, became absurd.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Babbitt


Good sense from a child was not necessarily contemptible beside foolishness from a grown-up.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

The God-Seeker


We want our Utopia now.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Main Street

Tags: utopia


I was brought up to believe that the Christian God wasn't a scared and compromising public servant, but the creator of the whole merciless truth, and I reckon that training spoiled me -- I actually took my teachers seriously!

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Elmer Gantry

Tags: God


It has not yet been recorded that any human being has gained a very large or permanent contentment from meditation upon the fact that he is better off than others.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Main Street


In the study of the profession to which he had looked forward all his life he found irritation and vacuity as well as serene wisdom; he saw no one clear path to Truth but a thousand paths to a thousand truths far-off and doubtful.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Arrowsmith

Tags: truth


It isn't what you earn but how spend it that fixes your class.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

It Can't Happen Here


Indians, of course, have no "theology," and indeed no word for the system of credulity in which the white priests arrange for God, who must be entirely bewildered by it, a series of excuses for his failures.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

The God-Seeker


So much in a revolution is nothing but waiting.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

It Can't Happen Here

Tags: revolution


He is the only real revolutionary, the authentic scientist, because he alone knows how liddle he knows.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

Arrowsmith


Now, you look here! The first thing you got to understand is that all this uplift and flipflop and settlement-work and recreation is nothing in God's world but the entering wedge for socialism. The sooner a man learns he isn't going to be coddled, and he needn't expect a lot of free grub and, uh, all these free classes and flipflop and doodads for his kids unless he earns 'em, why, the sooner he'll get on the job and produce -- produce -- produce! That's what the country needs, and not all this fancy stuff that just enfeebles the will-power of the working man and gives his kids a lot of notions above their class.

SINCLAIR LEWIS

The Man Who Knew Coolidge

Tags: socialism