// This file defines the number of quotes

var quotes = new Array(23);
var qlength = 23;
quotes[0] = "O! let my books be then the eloquence <br>And dumb presagers of my speaking breast. <br>Shakespeare, <i>Sonnet 23</i>";
quotes[1] = "Books must follow sciences, and not sciences books.<br>Francis Bacon, <i>Proposition touching Amendment of Laws</i>";
quotes[2] = "This, books can do&#151;nor this alone: they give<br>New views to life, and teach us how to live;<br>They soothe the grieved, the stubborn they chastise; <br>Fools they admonish, and confirm the wise.George Crabbe, <i>The Library</i>";
quotes[3] = "All books are divisible into two classes: the books of the hour, and the books of all time.John Ruskin, <i>Sesame and Lilies</i>";
quotes[4] = "Books will speak plain when counsellors blanch.Francis Bacon, <i>Of Counsel </i>";
quotes[5] = "I have rather studied books than men.Francis Bacon, <i>Works</i>";
quotes[6] = "The true University of these days is a collection of books.Thomas Carlyle, <i>The Hero as Man of Letters</i>";
quotes[7] = "Give me books, fruit, french wine and fine weather and a little music out of doors, played by somebody I do not know.John Keats, <i>Letters</i>";
quotes[8] = "In books lies the soul of the whole Past Time; the articulate audible voice of the Past, when the body and material substance of it has altogether vanished like a dream.Thomas Carlyle, <i>The Hero as Man of Letters</i>";
quotes[9] = "&quot;Classic.&quot; A book which people praise and don't read.Mark Twain, <i>Following the Equator</i>";
quotes[10] = "What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it.Holden Caufield, from J.D. Salinger's <i>Catcher in the Rye</i>";
quotes[11] = "All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened.Ernest Hemingway, <i>Esquire</i>, Dec. 1934";
quotes[12] = "We all know that books burn&#151;yet we have the greater knowledge that books cannot be killed by fire. People die, but books never die. No man and no force can abolish memory.Franklin D. Roosevelt, <i>speech</i>";
quotes[13] = "I suggest that the only books that influence us are those for which we are ready, and which have gone a little farther down our particular path than we have yet got ourselves.E.M. Forster, <i>Two Cheers for Democracy</i>";
quotes[14] = "The proper study of mankind is books.Aldous Huxley, <i>Crome Yellow</i>";
quotes[15] = "Reading maketh a full man; conference a ready man; and writing an exact man.Francis Bacon, <i>Of Studies</i>";
quotes[16] = "I read, much of the night, and go south in the winter.T.S. Eliot, <i>Waste Land</i>";
quotes[17] = "I cannot live without books.Thomas Jefferson, <i>letter to John Adams</i>";
quotes[18] = "To be a well-favored man is the gift of fortune;<br>but to write and read comes by nature. Shakespeare, <i>Much Ado About Nothing, III, iii</i>";
quotes[19] = "People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading.Logan Pearsall Smith, <i>Afterthoughts</i>";
quotes[20] = "Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.Aldous Huxley, <i>Crome Yellow</i>";
quotes[21] = "The proper study of mankind is books.Sir Richard Steele, <i>The Tattler, No. 147</i>";
quotes[22] = "He has gained every point who has mixed practicality with pleasure, by delighting the reader at the same time as instructing him.Horace, <i>Ars Poetica</i>";