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nukesafe Jan 18th, 2016 02:54 PM

Any neat travel quotes?
 
Does anyone have any neat, humorous, interesting, or even outrageous travel quotes?

I stole one from a book I just read, "Education begins with books and instruction and ends with travel. It is a rolling classroom."

flpab Jan 18th, 2016 03:14 PM

“I have found out that there ain’t no surer way to find out whether you like people or hate them than to travel with them.” – Mark Twain

travelchat Jan 18th, 2016 04:40 PM

You don't take the trip, the trip takes you.
Steinbeck: Travels With Charlie

nytraveler Jan 18th, 2016 04:48 PM

Take half the clothes and twice the money - Susan Heller

texasbookworm Jan 18th, 2016 05:40 PM

I have a folder entitled "Travel Quotes" but I won't post them all here!

The one I always start with and come back to is St. Augustine's "The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page."

Jerome K. Jerome said, “Sometimes it is through busy streets, and sometimes through the fields and lanes; sometimes we can be spared for a few hours, and sometimes for a few days. But long or short, but here or there, our thoughts are ever on the running of the sand. We nod and smile to many as we pass; with some we stop and talk awhile; and with a few we walk a little way. We have been much interested, and often a little tired. <b>But on the whole we have had a pleasant time, and are sorry when ‘tis over.” </b>

Whathello Jan 20th, 2016 11:11 PM

Texas ! that was THE quote I wanted to post.

Michel Delpech : 'on dirait que ca te gêne de marcher dans la boue' (seems you don't like walking in the mud'.
http://www.paroles.net/michel-delpec...e-loir-et-cher

More about going back to his family but I like it in travel - I don't mind going through mud to visit.

PatrickLondon Jan 20th, 2016 11:35 PM

He meant it for something much more profound than a trip to Paris, but:

<i>We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.</i>
(TS Eliot, "Little Gidding")

And then there's the perennial worry:

<i>Outside they found a lovely cariage lined with olive green cushons to match the footman and the horses had green bridles and bows on their manes and tails. They got gingerly in. Will he bring our luggage asked Ethel nervously.

I expect so said Mr Salteena lighting a very long cigar.

Do we tip him asked Ethel quietly.

Well no I dont think so not yet we had better just thank him perlitely.</i>
(Daisy Ashford, The Young Visiters)

bilboburgler Jan 21st, 2016 06:22 AM

I seem to remember that handbag holding Earnest Worthing was found on the Brighton line.

Ladt Bracknell.."The line is immaterial". always struck me as pretty much on the mark.

take photos, leave footprints

we have recently taken to "art is our spinach" which rather sums up modern art as seen during any vacation, though my SIL comes out with "that is art" in a withering German accent (she is German) when we come across tax payer art.

IMDonehere Jan 21st, 2016 06:27 AM

Not that has a farthing to do with travel, the lines that are most remembered are:

Lady Bracknell: Are your parents living?

Jack Worthing: I have lost both my parents.

Lady Bracknell: To lose one parent, Mr. Worthing, may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness.


I guess that can go for luggage as well.

ziggypop Mar 2nd, 2016 03:24 PM

Hi Nukesafe, this is my life motto;

attitude is everything and misery is optional.

maitaitom Mar 2nd, 2016 04:30 PM

Ziggy, my motto is Enjoy The Journey! Attitude Is Everything! I might have to incorporate your "Misery Is Optional" to my France 2014 report. (:

((H))

Nelson Mar 2nd, 2016 04:38 PM

I've paid good money knowing I was going to be miserable on trips, but that's another story.

Anyway:

<i>But how many have been
where we've been...
...and seen what we've seen?
- Bloody few. And that's a fact.
Even now, I wouldn't change places
with the viceroy himself...
...if it meant giving up my memories.</i>

Dialog from the movie <i>The Man Who Would Be King.</i>

ssander Mar 2nd, 2016 05:42 PM

Never go on trips with anyone you do not love.

--Ernest Hemingway

ssander Mar 2nd, 2016 05:43 PM

Reminds me of my safari in Africa. Somebody forgot the corkscrew and for several days we had to live on nothing but food and water.

--W. C. Fields

IMDonehere Mar 2nd, 2016 05:48 PM

Leave home home.

livetoroam Mar 2nd, 2016 07:20 PM

I haven't been everywhere, but it is on my list. Susan Sontag

MmePerdu Mar 2nd, 2016 08:18 PM

We are torn between nostalgia for the familiar and an urge for the foreign and strange. As often as not, we are homesick most for the places we have never known.

Carson McCullers

grandmere Mar 2nd, 2016 08:29 PM

"Travel makes a wise man better, and a fool worse"--Thomas Fuller

Ackislander Mar 3rd, 2016 12:35 AM

"Abroad is bloody" and "Abroad is a sewer." Lord Redesdale, father of Nancy Mitford and, as "Uncle Matthew", a character in her novels.

"Being in a ship is being in a jail with the chance of being drowned." Samuel Johnson

Ackislander Mar 3rd, 2016 12:37 AM

Sorry, I can't resist another Samuel Johnson, highly appropriate here:


"The greater part of travellers tell nothing, because their method of travelling supplies them with nothing to be told. He that enters a town at night and surveys it in the morning, and then hastens away to another place, and guesses at the manners of the inhabitants by the entertainment which his inn afforded him, may please himself for a time with a hasty change of scenes, and a confused remembrance of palaces and churches; he may gratify his eye with a variety of landscapes, and regale his palate with a succession of vintages; but let him be contented to please himself without endeavouring to disturb others. Why should he record his excursions by which nothing could be learned, or wish to make a show of knowledge, which, without some power of intuition unknown to other mortals, he never could attain?"
Johnson: Idler #97 (February 23, 1760)
Link

IMDonehere Mar 3rd, 2016 12:43 AM

You never know a place until you are ready to leave.

annhig Mar 3rd, 2016 12:58 AM

Lady Bracknell: To lose one parent, Mr. Worthing, may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness.


I guess that can go for luggage as well.>>

to digress further, my favourite lines from that play are these:

"Cecily: Do you suggest, Miss Fairfax, that I entrapped Ernest into an engagement? How dare you? This is no time for wearing the shallow mask of manners. When I see a spade I call it a spade.

Gwendolen: I am glad to say that I have never seen a spade. It is obvious that our social spheres have been widely different."

to return to the topic, my two both come from phrase books, the first apocryphal the second real:

"my postilion has been hit by lightening"

and from a real but ancient Berlitz spanish phrase book:

"please can you tell me where I may buy some chewing tobacco".

Rubicund Mar 3rd, 2016 12:59 AM

Can you get that case for me? Mrs Rubicund.

traveller1959 Mar 3rd, 2016 02:10 AM

In foreign countries, the fools go into the museums, the wise go into the taverns.

(Toren bereisen in fremden Ländern die Museen, Weise gehen in die Tavernen.)

Erich Kästner

traveller1959 Mar 3rd, 2016 07:38 AM

The tourist destroys what he is searching for by finding it.

(Der Tourist zerstört, was er sucht, indem er es findet.)

Hans Magnus Enzensberger

Pegontheroad Mar 3rd, 2016 08:26 AM

The last part of Tennyson's "Ulysses" always touches me.

Come, my friends,
'Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.

IMDonehere Mar 3rd, 2016 09:38 AM

In foreign countries, the fools go into the museums, the wise go into the taverns.


The next place on the itinerary is the nearest 12 step program.

annhig Mar 3rd, 2016 12:30 PM

nice quotes, traveller.

Good to see my favourite Erich Erich Kästner mentioned here.

hetismij2 Mar 3rd, 2016 01:18 PM

That second quote of traveller's is so true.

Both are excellent, as are the Samuel Johnson quotes.

Rubicund, you made me laugh.:)

Ackislander Mar 3rd, 2016 05:05 PM

"Maybe that's what Hell is; all eternity stuck in Bruges."
Ray, the dying assassin "In Bruges."

sundriedtopepo Mar 3rd, 2016 10:13 PM

A journey is like marriage. The certain way to be wrong is to think you control it.” – John Steinbeck

bvlenci Mar 3rd, 2016 10:19 PM

Are we there yet?

sundriedtopepo Mar 3rd, 2016 10:20 PM

And this
“Too often travel, instead of broadening the mind, merely lengthens the conversation.” – Elizabeth Drew

crellston Mar 3rd, 2016 11:16 PM

“You don’t have to be rich to travel well.” – Eugene Fodor

"When overseas you learn more about your own country, than you do the place you’re visiting.” – Clint Borgen

"In the end what we regret most are the chances we never took" Frazier Crane (with apologies to Mark Twain)

sandralist Mar 4th, 2016 12:28 AM

"Don't you love the smell of grease about the engine of a Channel steamer? Isn't there a lot of hope in it?" - Samuel Butler, The Way of All Flesh

“Journeys end in lovers meeting.” – William Shakespeare

"Avrai tu l'universo, resta l'Italia a me." -- Giuseppe Verdi, Attila

Blueeyedcod Mar 4th, 2016 01:02 AM

'Not all those who wander are lost' -JRR Tolkein

'Did you ever notice that the first piece of luggage on the carousel belongs to no one' - Erma Bombeck

Teacher91 Mar 4th, 2016 03:56 AM

"Travel is the only thing you buy that makes you richer" UNKNOWN

I have never regretted one $ the Mr. and I have spent on travel. :D

PVR340PLA Mar 4th, 2016 05:12 AM

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Mark Twain

brubenow Mar 4th, 2016 05:13 AM

My favorite thing is to go where I have never gone.

-Diane Arbus

StCirq Mar 4th, 2016 06:37 AM

La vallée de la Dordogne est le sourire de la France.


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