8 Quotes & Sayings By Robert Bringhurst

Robert Bringhurst (1931–2015) was a Canadian typographer and author of The Elements of Typographic Style. He was also the author of the article "The Elements of Typographic Style," which was published in the second edition (1983) of The Chicago Manual of Style, and the co-author (with Matthew Carter) of The Elements of Typographic Style, 2nd Edition (2001).

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If language is lost, humanity is lost. If writing is lost, certain kinds of civilization and society are lost, but many other kinds remain - and there is no reason to think that those alternatives are inferior. Robert Bringhurst
Wings are a constraint that makes it possible to fly.
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Wings are a constraint that makes it possible to fly. Robert Bringhurst
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If you divide the world into them and us, and history into ours and theirs, or if you think of history as something only you and your affiliates possess, then no matter what you know, no matter how noble your intentions, you have taken one step toward the destruction of the world. Robert Bringhurst
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Essay on Adam"There are five possibilities. One: Adam fell. Two: he was pushed. Three: he jumped. Four:he only looked over the edge, and one look silenced him. Five: nothing worth mentioning happened to Adam.The first, that he fell, is too simple. The fourth, fear, we have tried and found useless. The fifth, nothing happened, is dull. The choice is between:he jumped or was pushed. And the difference between theseis only an issue of whether the demonswork from the inside out or from the outsidein: the onetheological question. . Robert Bringhurst
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Typography is the craft of endowing human language with a durable visual form. Robert Bringhurst
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When you die, your culture takes you in, and then, if you've given enough, your place is near the centre. Robert Bringhurst
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I think of something quite different from a snapshot. I know of a lot of poems, some very fine ones, that are like snapshots, but I'm more interested in poetry that is like an endless film, long stories, things that weave together many different strands, like a big piece of cloth, not like a photograph. Robert Bringhurst