You Can Quote Us: Commonplace Books Offer Uncommon Pleasures

The Table of Contents alone runs to two pages

While Theatre isn’t just about words, those things that characters say usually matter a great deal both to the group presenting them and to the audience experiencing them. Unsurprisingly, a theater company with the name of Knowledge Workings does pay special attention to the words of others. Hence this post including a link to our commonplace book, a rather extensive list of quotations. T.J. Elliott began this commonplace book in 1990 and continues to add to its quotations as of August 2025. (He also collects quotes to read while playwrighting and you can read those in the Word doc at this link.)

What is a commonplace book? According to the Oxford English dictionary, it is “a book in which ‘commonplaces’ or passages important for reference were collected, usually under general heads; hence, a book in which one records passages or matters to be especially remembered or referred to, with or without arrangement”. The one by W.H. Auden is a good example of sententiae or wise sayings that are more idiosyncratic than still treasured quotation collections such as Bartlett’s or Oxford and the very political collection by George Seldes.

Wonderfully wise and droll

The version of our commonplace book that you have through this linkis on OneDrive. If you are looking for that killer saying or just ‘le mot juste’, perhaps you will find this collection, which generally captures quotes that are not found in the usual collections, to be of some value. To draw upon just one of our thousands of quotes in the word document, Sextus Empiricus in Fragment 2, as quoted in Against the Mathematicians reminds us that, Though wisdom is common, yet the many live as if they had a wisdom of their own.”

A commonplace book acknowledges that wisdom is common if we only take the time to look to those who offered it in the past and even those sharing it in our present. For for those of us at Knowledge Workings Theater, our work begins with the text, but there is no illusion that whatever text we create is completely original, lacks connections to all of the many texts we have read and heard. One way into the creation of theater is to swim in the words of others, refreshed and challenged, submerged and afloat, until you reach your own spot, your own place where what you think and feel merges with what others have offered. As Tom Stoppard once wrote, “Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.”

Nudge, nudge!

Enjoy!

Comments

6 responses to “You Can Quote Us: Commonplace Books Offer Uncommon Pleasures”

  1. T.J.

    The quote you cite from Alice in Wonderland « Which way do you want to go from here. I don’t know. Then it doesn’t matter which way you go, » was used in the Manhattan College Yearbook for 1973, and was the suggestion of my father.

    Gerard Robinson

    >

  2. TJ

    I am beginning production on a second screenplay, « Failure to State a Claim » this summer. Flying out to L.A. to meet the cinematographer, Nicola Raggi, at the end of the month. Attached is the screenplay, formerly “Bell Atlantic. » If you think you’re a fit for any of the characters make an audition tape and send me a link. Where do you live again? New York or New Jersey? Shooting will be on location in Atlanta, where I live. There will be a per diem of some kind but no salary.

    Cheers

    Gerard Robinson a.k.a. « Gerry. »

    >

    1. elliotttj

      Wow! I don’t think my acting chops are sharp enough but I will give the script a look, Gerard. Thanks for thinking of me.

    2. elliotttj

      I live in Princeton and could not find any attachment, Gerard.

  3. I guess I didn’t follow through which is just as well because I’m on my third draft of “Failure to State a Claim,” a satire of the legal profession and there may be at least one more after this. I have completed rewriting my other screenplay “Anybody Seen My Baby?,” a mix of screwball comedy and magic realism. I’ve entered it in multiple screenwriting competitions. I plan to be in New York City again at the end of February. Where in New Jersey do you live and will Knowledge Working have anything running then? How often do you get to the City? I’m going to check out your book of quotes. What a great idea. Hope you included movie quotes from movies like “Casablanca,” which has some great ones like “Here’s Looking at You Kid,” and “This could be the start of beautiful relationship.”

    Gerard Robinson (I don’t use Gerry anymore.)

    1. elliotttj

      Gerard, email me your dates. I would love to meet with you in February. We live in Princeton, bit are in NYC very frequently. T.J.

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