„Hat = wizard, wizard = hat. Everything else is frippery.“
Zdroj: Night Watch
Podobné citáty

„A cat for a hat, or a hat for a cat. But nothing for nothing.“
— Robert Jordan American writer 1948 - 2007
Taren Ferry saying
(15 October 1994)

— Mel Brooks American director, writer, actor, and producer 1926
The 2,000 Year Old Man (and sequels)

— Slash (musician) British-American musician and songwriter 1965
Interview with Rock Guitar Player Magazine, 2003.

„I had a hat. It was not all a hat,—
Part of the brim was gone:
Yet still I wore it on.“
— Felicia Hemans English poet 1793 - 1835
Rhine Song of the German Soldiers after Victory.

— Friedrich Schiller, Wallenstein
Act IV, sc. v, Kellermeister (Master of the Cellar)
Wallenstein (1798), Part I - Die Piccolomini (The Piccolomini)

— Robert E. Howard American author 1906 - 1936
From a letter to H. P. Lovecraft (July 13, 1932)
Letters

— Phil Brown (footballer) English association football player and manager 1959
06-Mar-2007, Hull City OWS
It's tough maintaining discipline with all this hat-throwing going on.

— Henrik Ibsen Norwegian playwright, theatre director, and poet 1828 - 1906
Dr. Rank, Act III, speaking of death
A Doll's House (1879)

„The hat is the ultimum moriens of "respectability."“
— Oliver Wendell Holmes Poet, essayist, physician 1809 - 1894
"Ultimum moriens," the Autocrat explains, "is old Italian [i.e. Latin], and signifies last thing to die."
The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table (1858)

„A hat not much the worse for wear.“
— William Cowper (1731–1800) English poet and hymnodist 1731 - 1800
St. 46.
The Diverting History of John Gilpin (1785)
— Meredith Heron Canadian interior designer
4:50PM https://twitter.com/meredithheron/status/1087150421506969600 and 4:59PM https://twitter.com/meredithheron/status/1087152737245163521 on 20 January 2019
MAGA hats = Make America Great Again hats (Donald Trump presidential campaign, 2020)

— Samuel Johnson English writer 1709 - 1784
George Steevens, 310
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919), Johnsoniana
„This is the morning that we burnt a cardboard hat“
— Adrian Henri British poet 1932 - 2000
"The Blazing Hat, Part Two", from The Mersey Sound (1967).