Roosevelt) have always elicited strong views (`ferocious, it forgives nothing' - Diana, Princess of Wales), but the importance of journalism is stated, with dignity, by Amy Goodman: `Go to where the silence is, and say something.' Views of the Present range from Cicero (`O tempora! O mores!') to Tom Wolfe (`We are now in the Me decade').
As well as author descriptions, we have included biographical
In compiling this title we have as always drawn on the substantial resources of Oxford Quotations Dictionaries: our existing published texts, and our growing bank of new quotations. Fed by our reading programme, this is constantly enhanced by the generosity of those who write to us with questions, comments, and suggestions, a practice which we continue to welcome. Among those who have contributed particularly to our resources and replied to specific questions, thanks are due to Pauline Adams, Ralph Bates, Archie Burnett, Glynnis Chantrell, Margot Charlton, Mike Clark, Robert Franklin, Peter Hennessy, Simon Hornblower, Antony Jay, Richard Judd, Peter Kemp, John McNeill, Bernard O'Donoghue, Nigel Rees, Brenda Richardson, Ned Sherrin, Robin Sawers, Hilary Spurling, and Norman Vance. Colleagues in the Dictionary Department have, as always, supplied us with quotations that they have come across. We hope once more that our contributors, as well as those who use the dictionary, will share in the pleasure and interest felt by the editorial staff in working on it.
Elizabeth Knowles
Oxford 1999
How to use the Dictionary
The sequence of entries is by alphabetical order of author, usually by surname but with occasional exceptions such as members of royal families (e.g. Diana, Princess of Wales and Elizabeth II) and Popes (John Paul II), or authors known by a pseudonym (‘Saki’) or a nickname (Caligula). In general authors’ names are given in the form by which they are best known, so that we have Harold Macmillan (not Lord Stockton), George Eliot (not Mary Ann Evans), and H.G.Wells (not Herbert George Wells). Collections such as Anonymous, the Bible, the Book of Common Prayer, the Missal, and so forth, are included in the alphabetical sequence. Some Anonymous quotations may be included in one of the special category sections (see below).
Author names are followed by dates of birth and death (where known) and brief descriptions; where appropriate,
Quotations from diaries, letters, and speeches are given in chronological order and usually follow the literary or published works quoted, with the form for which the author is best known taking precedence. Thus in the case of political figures, speeches appear first, just as poetry quotations precede those in prose for poets, and poetry quotations come second for an author regarded primarily as a novelist.
Quotations from secondary sources such as biographies and other writer’s works, to which a date in the author’s lifetime can be assigned, are arranged in sequence with diary entries, letters and speeches. Other quotations from secondary sources and attributed quotations which cannot be so dated are arranged in alphabetical order of quotation text.
Within the alphabetical sequence there are a number of special category entries, such as Advertising slogans, Catchphrases, Film lines, Misquotations, and Newspaper headlines and leaders. Quotations in these sections are arranged
53