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Italy Quotes

Quotes tagged as "italy" Showing 151-180 of 434
Elif Shafak
“Jahan thought there were two main types of temple built by humankind: those that aspired to reach out to the skies and those that wished to bring the skies closer down the ground . On occasion, there there was a third: those that did both. Such was San Pietro (St Peter's Basilica)”
Elif Shafak, The Architect's Apprentice

Francis Bacon
“We are much beholden to Machiavelli and others, that write what men do, and not what they ought to do.”
Francis Bacon, The Advancement Of Learning, Volume 2

E.M. Forster
“And I do believe that Italy really purifies and ennobles all who visit her. She is the school as well as the playground of the world.”
E. M. Forster, Where Angels Fear to Tread
tags: italy

E.M. Forster
“And don't, let me beg you, go with that awful tourist idea that Italy's only a museum of antiquities and art. Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land”
E. M. Forster, Where Angels Fear to Tread
tags: italy

Sari  Gilbert
“[Italy is] A country where pleasure principle dominates.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“The mainstay of Italian coffee lore, la tazzina del caffe, or an espresso, as served by one’s local bar and during the day consumed - generally - standing up, is another one of those things about which Italians have very strong feelings. The purists want is very dense, ristrettissimo, which is the way they serve it in Naples...”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“[Italy is] A country where there is a longstanding tradition of men as stalkers and women as prey - probably willing, but prey all the same.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“Preferring confusion to order is not limited to waiting lines but spills over into other sectors of life, at least in Rome and other more southern regions of the country. One of these is driving, an area where stereotypes about Italians, or at least about Romans, tend to be confirmed. Gridlock, here caused by a willful invasion of the intersection, is a daily occurrence. Red lights and stop signs often are viewed as optional. Using la freccia (directional lights) to signal an intention to turn right or left is infrequent, to say the least, or else left to the last minute, that is when the driver has already begun his turn, frequently from the farthest lane on the opposite side of the roadway.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“It is late afternoon and the daily, or nightly, game of cat and mouse between Rome’s vigili urbani, or traffic police, and the unlicensed street peddlers who set up their portable tables and lamps in Piazza Sant’Egidio where I live, or nearby, is about to start. And, as usual, the mice will win. Not because they are smarter but simply because they care more about breaking the law than the authorities care about enforcing it.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“For historical reasons â€� centuries spent as the subjects of warring city-states with the rule of law often taking a back seat to power politics and family loyalties â€� many Italians, especially those from points south, have little respect for the law and, seemingly, little understanding of its purpose, which is that of setting the boundaries for civil cohabitation.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“In Rome, instead, it is clear: people know that most of the time they can get away, not with murder, of course, but with many other misdemeanors. The result? Ignoring the rules has become a quasi national habit.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“In Italy, most laws are honored more in the breach than the observance. “Fatta la legge, trovato l’ingannoâ€�, goes one saying that means, “pass a law and we’ll find a way to get around itâ€�. You don’t have to spend much time in Rome to realize that stop signs, and even red lights, are often disregarded, as are those reading “no parking or standingâ€�, and even “one wayâ€�.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“Absenteeism runs rife, with too many unethical doctors willing to supply fake illness certificates. "My dentist was flummoxed when he was asked by a Finanza major to provide his wife with a (false) certificate claiming he’d been performing oral surgery on her on a day she had skipped work. But he did it. “What else could I do? I mean, I might need the guy for a favor sometime.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Glenn Haybittle
“Rome lifts you up but won't let you settle down - it turns you into a bird without a nest.”
Glenn Haybittle, Scorched Earth
tags: italy, rome

Ilene Modica
“I love the way Italy makes me feel like I'm home.”
Ilene Modica, Our Italian Journey: Living our dream in Italy for one year

Robert Hellenga
“Nah," I said to myslef, crumpling up the note, "Non vale il pene".”
Robert Hellenga, The Sixteen Pleasures

Melissa Hill
“They say that when Judgement day comes, the people of Amalfi will have no change in life, for they are already living in paradise...”
Melissa Hill, The Summer Villa

Sari  Gilbert
“.. Italian journalists (like members of the Italian parliament) are among the best paid in the world. ... By law, all journalists get not only the extra 13th month bonus in December, but a 14th month paycheck in June. When you start out, you nevertheless get 26 vacation days a year...plus five days of personal leave. After five years, your annual vacation days increase to 39 plus five days, and after 15 years to 35 days (plus five). Abs if you work for a lifetime, which means 35 years of social security contributions to INPG, you’ll end up with a pension that is pretty close to your final year’s salary.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“But they {journalists} are still viewed as a rather privileged category. True, they no longer can ride buses free or go to the movies for free as was the case in Mussolini’s day. But they can still get into most museums or exhibitions without paying. If you’re a smooth operator you can get complimentary tickets for shows or the opera. Until recently, you could get a 30% discount on all domestic flights (now it’s 15%). And if you have trouble with any of your utilities,the utility company’s press office will be glad to give you a have in working things out. In addition, since many Italian journalists have a different sense of what constitutes a conflict of interest from what we do in the United States, they often accept any manner of gifts or paid vacations from companies they regularly cover.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“A corrections box such as which appears in many top US or British papers to rectify misspellings, mistaken dates, faulty identifications and so forth, is generally unheard of here... Once I pointed out to Messagero night editor that the first edition he was putting out had misspelled the name of town where the US president was holding a summit. “Oh, no one will notice,â€� he shrugged rather than change it.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“...until recently Italian institutions were totally unresponsive to consumer needs and concerns, something most people knew, or sensed. Hence their passivity. Nowadays, fewer things seem to be guasti than in the past, but a lot of things that are supposed to work, don’t.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“...the seemingly widespread conviction of many ordinary Italians that polite behavior such as standing in line is either a Nazi characteristic or a British folly, one that in any event has no real application to this country. Indeed, although things are now gradually changing, left to themselves many Italians appear constitutionally unable to stand in line. “Where do you think you are, in Bulgaria?â€� a well-dressed man once snarled at me when I protested that he had pushed ahead of me on the cashier’s line at a downtown café.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“I notice that nowadays few drivers in Rome automatically stop for you unless you have the courage to stride forward, arm outstretched, palm up in a dorky “stop-right-nowâ€� gesture. Another Roman habit that takes getting used to is that in many areas of town, such as Trastevere where I live, people seem to prefer walking in the street even when sidewalks, however narrow, exist. They seem convinced they are invincible and often don’t even look before crossing the street.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“My friend Mimmo, who owns three men’s shops in Rome but who comes from Naples where his father was in the same business, says that nowadays, after two days in Naples, he can’t wait to leave again. “Life in Rome is not easy, but at least there are some certainties. In Naples, forget it. The only thing that counts there is prepotenza,â€� roughly, bullying or arrogance.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“The fact that the policemen didn’t know their stuff didn’t really surprise me. Not long before, I had asked three different Rome traffic policemen, or vigili, how old a child had to be before being able to ride in the front passenger seat of a car and had gotten three totally different answers. Not so hard to understand, I guess for two reasons. First, if you get your job through pull and not merit then you don’t really need to get good grades on a qualifying exam and, second, if Parliament changes the law every few years it is understandably difficult to keep up.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“Until the beginning of 2003, Italians smoked everywhere and considered it quite normal; they lit up inside stores, including those which sell fabric or paper goods, in the airport, ignoring repeated loudspeaker announcements that no smoking was allowed, at the greengrocers where cigarette ash dangled perilously over the zucchini and the cherry tomatoes, and even in hospitals, although from time to time crack Italian Carabinieri units called the NAS, set up to enforce health standards, would appear, unannounced, and hand out hefty fines to all the doctors and nurses they found in flagrante. Once I even had blood taken by two white-coated doctors who took my vital fluid with cigarettes dangling from their lips, an open window their only concession to my passive smoke concerns.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“Indeed, don’t be surprised to find yourself in a taxi in which the right-side window doesn’t work or is missing its wind-down handle. The driver has done this deliberately to keep himself from getting a draft on his neck that will give him problems al cervicale, the cervical spine. He is also likely to eschew air conditioning on the grounds that it will give him pneumonia.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“According to a study done in 2011 by the welfare department of the CISL trade union, in the three-year period from 2006 to 2008 it could take as long as 540 days to have a mammogram scheduled (Puglia), 90 days to get a bone-density scan done (Veneto) and 74 days to see a geriatrics specialist in the generally well-organized Tuscany region. I myself know someone who had to wait seven months to get a heart bypass, and one of my next-door neighbors here in Rome waited almost a year for a hip replacement.
Of course, this is not unusual for a country with national health; all the Brits I know decry their own system violently and even in Sweden, once a model for such things, there is considerable disorganization. The fact remains that the Italian national health system is often more virtual than real, forcing people who can afford it to look for an alternative solution.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Sari  Gilbert
“And there may be some connection, too, with the Roman Catholic Church’s somewhat flexible attitude towards sin and thus, in general, towards wrongdoing. Otherwise, how to explain that 137 years after Italy became a modern nation-state, so many people still choose simply to ignore laws they don’t like. Maybe other nationalities would be the same if in their countries, too, law enforcement were considered an optional, even by the people charged with that task.”
Sari Gilbert, My Home Sweet Rome: Living (and loving) in Italy's Eternal City

Mayumi Cruz
“I love her. But I hate her, too. How can I feel both for her. . . at the same time?”
Mayumi Cruz, The Billionaire's Widow