Quotes and anectdotes from the wise to the foolish, and the courageous to the drunk

Malcolm De Chazal Author

  • Gender: Male
  • Born: Sep 12, 1902
  • Died: Oct 1, 1981

Malcolm de Chazal (12 September 1902- 1 October 1981) was a Mauritian writer, painter, and visionary, known especially for his Sens-Plastique, a work consisting of several thousand aphorisms and pensées.

Chazal was born in Vacoas of a French family long established in Mauritius and wrote all his works in French. Except for six years at Louisiana State University, where he received an engineering degree, he spent most of his time in Mauritius where he worked as an agronomist on sugar plantations and later for the Office of Telecommunications.

In 1940 he began to publish in Mauritius a series of volumes consisting of hundreds of numbered thoughts and ideas entitled Pensées. In 1945, a seventh volume of Pensées, bound with another collection of unnumbered aphorisms entitled Sens-Plastique appeared, and two years later a separate Sens-Plastique, Volume II, appeared. It was this latter volume on which the Gallimard edition of 1948 was based that brought Chazal into prominence in France.He was hailed as a surrealist by André Breton. The following examples may illustrate the novelty and variety of Sens-Plastique.

A women knows how to keep quiet when she is in the right, whereas a man, when he is in the right, will keep on talking. women

Laughter is regional: a smile extends over the whole face. smile

Monkeys are superior to men in this: when a monkey looks into a mirror, he sees a monkey. men

We sometimes laugh from ear to ear, but it would be impossible for a smile to be wider than the distance between our eyes. smile

Art is nature speeded up and God slowed down. art & nature

The flower in the vase smiles, but no longer laughs. smile