Quotable Quotes

Ros cartoon 2008 sepiaSorry I’m away today, 7E. That ankle of mine is black and blue. Work hard on your research for the Night of Notables in my absence. If you are inspired, leave a quotation as a comment below.

One of my former students, Tina of 7F, has kindly added several of her favourite quotations in her comments. This inspired me to write a post about my favourite quotations, in the hope that all of you, as you do your research for the Night of Notables, might like to add some of yours in a comment too. Sam, for instance, must undoubtedly have found many pithy quotations already. He is studying Lao Tzu, a Chinese philosopher and the founder of Taoism, which has been translated as “The Way” or “The Way of Life”. I’m sure many others in the class will have some ideas too.

Here are some of my favourite quotations:

AV001628Ancora imparo.

I am still learning.

This was evidently Michelangelo’s motto. It inspires me never to stop reading, never to think I know enough.

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You can’t know everything in the world. Whatever happens you’ll die a fool.

These are the words of one of my favourite characters in literature, Oleg Kostoglotov from Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s book, Cancer Ward. That book is also one of my favourites. I love this quotation because it is the converse of the first; no matter how much you think you know, how much you have learned and striven to achieve, you can never hope to know everything. This is a humbling but strangely reassuring thought.

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And while I’m on Solzhenitsyn, here’s what he said when he finally accepted his Nobel Prize for literature:

A word of truth shall outweigh the world.

This is evidently a Russian proverb. Solzhenitsyn was a political dissident who was eventually exiled for writing books that were critical of the brutal regime in his country. He exposed the cruelty of Stalin and the horror of the forced labour camps where so many people suffered, starved and died. So you see, this is like a motto for his life work.   

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You must do the thing which you think you cannot do.

Eleanor Roosevelt, American diplomat and writer

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BE060435We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.

Oscar Wilde, English playwright

(But my favourite quotation from this man, whose every word is a joy, is “I can resist everything except temptation”.)

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Jane Austen, public domain image drawn by her sister CassandraA COMMENT ON HISTORY: The quarrels of popes and kings, with wars and pestilences in every page; the men all so good for nothing, and hardly any women at all — it is very tiresome.

Jane Austen   (You should also read every word she ever wrote.)

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The creative adult is the child who has survived.

Ursula Le Guin

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Planning your display for the Night of Notables

Night of Notables Display Table Example

One of the useful things you can do as you prepare for the Night of Notables is try to picture your display area and how you plan to fill it. You will need a range of display materials. Here are some suggestions:

A tablecloth is a simple but vital part of your display. For some reason a display with a tablecloth looks far better than one with a bare old laminex table.

Notice that in the picture above, the laptop takes up very little space; students who spend all their time on a Powerpoint, however clever it is, have a very bare table! If you aim for variety you will create a much more appealing display.

Interactive activities are certain to attract people to your display. One of my favourite interactive activities ever was the brainchild of two boys now in Year 10 (I think their names are Aaron and Chris). They had chosen Michelangelo as their notable person and they brought along a hunk of marble and a chisel so that people could try their hand at sculpting. (This is the activity I have shown on the table above.) Another inspirational idea was thought up by Anne (now in Year 9), who had chosen Fred Hollows. She had a special eye-testing activity, which fitted neatly with her notable’s purpose in life of restoring sight to those with preventable blindness.

Excursion Details and Notable Poster Download

Reminder!

Don’t forget that the excursion is on Tuesday 18 August. In class on Monday I’m going to show you a film called “Vesuvius: Deadly Fury”. This should get you in the mood for the Pompeii exhibition. This film details the latest archaeological finds and shows scientists speculating on how long it would have taken, during the full heat of the pyroclastic surge, for a person to dessicate into a skeleton. The answer is, not long. It was a horrible human disaster and to soften it in my mind I like to focus on the people who escaped.

What you need for the excursion:

  • A small bag (not your school bag)
  • A water bottle
  • A snack for morning tea (VERY important – lunch will be late)
  • Lunch or money to buy lunch
  • A note if you wish to be dismissed anywhere other than at school or our closest railway station

Here’s a version of the little handout that I gave you on Thursday to show you what should be on your poster for the Night of Notables. Click on the picture below to download the file. Depending on the speed of your modem and computer, this could take a very long time or be a swift and easy process. If you’re at school on one of our ponderous computers in Room 205, you might have to wait till midway through Year 12 before the file successfully downloads. Sigh.

Poster on notable person

Night of Notables