<Li> It is used by College humor in a mini series "The CHinning </Li> <Ul> <Li> It appears in chapter 10 of Karl Marx's Capital: Critique of Political Economy (Volume one), from 1867 </Li> <Li> It appears in chapter 36 of George Moore's 1894 novel Esther Waters </Li> <Li> It appears in chapter 16 of John Dewey's How We Think, from 1910 . </Li> <Li> It appears in James Joyce's story "Araby" as the nameless narrator's uncle mentions the old saying . </Li> <Li> It appears in Act II Scene I of the 1924 play Marco Millions by Eugene O'Neill . </Li> <Li> It appears in chapter eight of Carson McCullers's 1998 novel Clock Without Hands . </Li> <Li> It appears in Jack Kerouac's novel Big Sur from 1962 . </Li> <Li> It appears in Chinua Achebe's 1966 children's novel Chike and the River . </Li> <Li> It appears in Tom Sharpe's novel Porterhouse Blue, by Mrs Biggs to Zipser . </Li> <Li> It appears in Kurt Vonnegut's novel Jailbird from 1979 . </Li> <Li> It appears in Stephen King's novel Pet Sematary as a brief mention . </Li> <Li> It appears in the 1985 novel Ender's Game, by Orson Scott Card, as Peter Wiggin's mother addresses him . </Li> <Li> It appears slightly altered in chapter 7 of Brian Jaques's 1986 novel Redwall, by Abbot Mortimer to Matthias . </Li> <Li> It appears in Paul Auster's novel Squeeze Play from 1997 . </Li> <Li> It appears in Lee Child's 2006 novel The Hard Way . </Li> <Li> It appears in chapter 24 of Grant Morrison's run in the comic book Doom Patrol . </Li> </Ul> <Li> It appears in chapter 10 of Karl Marx's Capital: Critique of Political Economy (Volume one), from 1867 </Li> <Li> It appears in chapter 36 of George Moore's 1894 novel Esther Waters </Li>

All talk and no play makes jack a dull boy