Great Throughts Treasury

This site is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Alan William Smolowe who gave birth to the creation of this database.

Related Quotes

Thomas Jefferson

That to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical.

Freedom | Language | People | Rights | Sentiment |

Thomas Jefferson

We ought not to schismatize on either men or measures. Principles alone can justify that.

Better | Fault | Fidelity | Generosity | History | Man | Murder | Reading | Sentiment | Story | Truth | Murder | Fault |

Willem de Kooning

The texture of experience is prior to everything else.

Force | Machines | Man | Need | Practice | Reason | Reflection | Sacrifice | Sentiment |

Walter Lippmann

In making the great experiment of governing people by consent rather than by coercion, it is not sufficient that the party in power should have a majority. It is just as necessary that the party in power should never outrage the minority.

Government | Luxury | Men | News | Office | Passion | Public | Sentiment | Truth | Vehemence | Wrong | Government | Trial |

Washington Irving

There is something nobly simple and pure in a taste for the cultivation of forest trees. It argues, I think, a sweet and generous nature to have his strong relish for the beauties of vegetation, and this friendship for the hardy and glorious sons of the forest. He who plants a tree looks forward to future ages, and plants for posterity. Nothing could be less selfish than this.

Better | Devotion | Excellence | Joy | Self | Sense | Sentiment | World | Excellence |

Walker Percy

Pascal told only half the story. He said man was a thinking reed. What man is, is a thinking reed and a walking genital.

Character | Civilization | History | Mediocrity | People | Sentiment | Time |

Voltaire, pen name of François-Marie Arouet NULL

An ideal form of government is democracy tempered with assassination.

Men | Sentiment | Worth |

Vincent van Gogh, fully Vincent Willem van Gogh

Then I squeezed roots and trunks into it from the tube, and modelled them a little with the brush. Yes, now they stand in it - shoot up out of it - stand firmly rooted in it.

Debt | Duty | Sentiment | World |

Vincent van Gogh, fully Vincent Willem van Gogh

There are two ways of thinking about painting, how not to do it and how to do it; how to do it -- with much drawing and little color; how not to do it -- with much color and little drawing.

Good | Life | Life | Light | Love | People | Pity | Reason | Sentiment | Society | Sympathy | Society |

Victor Hugo

The animal is ignorant of the fact that he knows. The man is aware of the fact that he is ignorant.

Good | Liberty | Man | Sentiment | Will |

Tryon Edwards

Let your holidays be associated with great public events, and they may be the life of patriotism as well as a source of relaxation and personal employment.

Public | Sentiment |

Thomas Wentworth Higginson

In ancient Boeotia brides were carried home in vehicles whose wheels were burned at the door, in token, that they would never again be needed.

People | Sentiment | War |

Thomas Wentworth Higginson

Lavish thousands of dollars on your baby clothes, and after all the child is prettiest when every garment is laid aside. That becoming nakedness, at least, may adorn the chubby darling of the poorest home.

Children | Choice | Faith | Good | Important | Man | Need | Patience | Sentiment | Time | Happiness |

Thomas Love Peacock

The waste of plenty is the resource of scarcity.

Absolute | Attention | Little | Poetry | Public | Reading | Reason | Rest | Science | Sentiment | Worth |

Thomas Malthus, fully Thomas Robert Malthus

The lower classes of people in Europe may at some future period be much better instructed then they are at present; they may be taught to employ the little spare time they have in many better ways than at the ale-house; they may live under better and more equal laws than they have hitherto done, perhaps, in any country; and I even conceive it possible, though not probable, that they may have more leisure; but it is not in the nature of things, that they can be awarded such a quantity of money or substance, as will allow them all to marry early, in the full confidence that they shall be able to provide with ease for a numerous family.

Law | Love | Sentiment | System |

Hugh Blair

Such is the infatuation of self-love, that, though in the general doctrine of the vanity of the world all men agree, yet almost every one flatters himself that his own case is it to be an exception from the common rule.

Good | Sentiment | Simplicity | Virtue | Virtue | Vice |

William Godwin

The illustrious archbishop of Cambray was of more worth than his chambermaid, and there are few of us that would hesitate to pronounce, if his palace were in flames, and the life of only one of them could be preserved, which of the two ought to be preferred … Supposing the chambermaid had been my wife, my mother or my benefactor. This would not alter the truth of the proposition. The life of Fenelon would still be more valuable than that of the chambermaid; and justice, pure, unadulterated justice, would still have preferred that which was most valuable. Justice would have taught me to save the life of Fenelon at the expence of the other. What magic is there in the pronoun "my", to overturn the decisions of everlasting truth?

Love | Model | Parents | Sentiment |

William James

The simplest rudiment of mystical experience would seem to be that deepened sense of the significance of a maxim or formula which occasionally sweeps over one.

Belief | Existence | Life | Life | Mind | Object | Present | Purpose | Purpose | Reality | Sense | Sentiment |

Dugald Stewart

That the principle of self-love (or, in other words, the desire of happiness) is neither an object of approbation nor of blame is sufficiently obvious. It is inseparable from the nature of man as a rational and a sensitive being.

Sentiment |

Elihu Root

War comes today as the result of one of three causes: either actual or threatened wrong by one country to another, or suspicion by one country that another intends to do it wrong ... or, from bitterness of feeling, dependent in no degree whatever upon substantial questions of difference. . . . The least of these three causes of war is actual injustice.

Brotherhood | Charity | Desire | Duty | Individual | Judgment | Love | Malice | People | Progress | Prosperity | Regard | Sentiment | Happiness |