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

Edmund Burke

If a great change is to be made in human affairs, the minds of men will be fitted to it; the general opinions and feelings will draw that way. Every fear and hope will forward it; and they who persist in opposing this mighty current will appear rather to resist the decrees of Providence itself, than the mere designs of men. They will not be so much resolute and firm as perverse and obstinate.

Change | Fear | Feelings | Hope | Men | Providence | Will |

François de La Rochefoucauld, François VI, Duc de La Rochefoucauld, Prince de Marcillac, Francois A. F. Rochefoucauld-Liancourt

Love, like fire, cannot subsist without constant impulse; it ceases to live from the moment it ceases to hope or to fear.

Fear | Hope | Impulse | Love |

Emily Dickinson, fully Emily Elizabeth Dickinson

A great Hope fell. You heard no noise. The Ruin was within.

Hope | Noise |

Epictetus "the Stoic" NULL

The most universal thing is hope, for hope stays with those who have nothing else.

Hope | Nothing |

Eric Hoffer

Not actual suffering but the hope of better things incites people to revolt.

Better | Hope | People | Suffering |

Eric Hoffer

To have a grievance is to have a purpose in life. A grievance can almost serve as a substitute for hope; and it not infrequently happens that those who hunger for hope give their allegiance to him who offers them a grievance.

Hope | Hunger | Life | Life | Purpose | Purpose |

Elbert Green Hubbard

Love, we say, is life; but love without hope and faith is agonizing death.

Death | Faith | Hope | Life | Life | Love |

Edwin Markham

Three were the fates, - gaunt poverty that chains, gray drudgery that grinds the hope away, and gaping ignorance that starves the soul.

Hope | Ignorance | Poverty | Soul |

Eric Hoffer

It is the around-the-corner brand of hope that prompts people to action, while the distant hope acts as an opiate.

Action | Hope | People |

Francis Bacon

A man that hath no virtue in himself ever envieth virtue in others; for men's minds will either feed upon their own good, or upon others' evil; and who wanteth the one will prey upon the other; and whoso is out of hope to attain to another's virtue, will seek to come at even hand by depressing another's fortune.

Evil | Fortune | Good | Hope | Man | Men | Virtue | Virtue | Will |

Franz Kafka

The fact that there is nothing but a spiritual world deprives us of hope and gives us certainty.

Hope | Nothing | World |

Emil Brunner, fully Heinrich Emil Brunner

Faith has to do with the basis, the ground on which we stand. Hope is reaching out for something to come. Love is just being there and acting.

Faith | Hope | Love |

George Santayana

Many possessions, if they do not make a man better, are at least expected to make his children happier; and this pathetic hope is behind many exertions.

Better | Children | Hope | Man | Possessions |

George Washington

I hope I shall always possess firmness and virtue enough to maintain what I consider the most enviable of all titles, the character of an “honest man.”

Character | Enough | Firmness | Hope | Man | Virtue | Virtue |

George Washington

As Mankind becomes more liberal, they will be more apt to allow that all those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the community are equally entitled to the protections of civil government. I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations of justice and liberality.

Conduct | Government | Hope | Justice | Mankind | Nations | Will |

George Santayana

The notion that there is and can be but one time, and that half of it is always intrinsically past and the other half always intrinsically future, belongs to the normal pathology of an animal mind: it marks the egoistical outlook of an active being endowed with imagination. Such a being will project the moral contrast produced by his momentary absorption in action upon the conditions and history of that action, and upon the universe at large. A perspective of hope and one of reminiscence divide for him a specious eternity; and for him the dramatic centre of existence, though always a different point in physical time, will always be precisely in himself.

Action | Contrast | Eternity | Existence | Future | History | Hope | Imagination | Mind | Past | Time | Universe | Will |

George Santayana

To feel beauty is a better thing than to understand how we come to feel it. To have imagination and taste, to love the best, to be carried by the contemplation of nature to a vivid faith in the ideal, all this is more, a great deal more, than any science can hope to be.

Beauty | Better | Contemplation | Faith | Hope | Imagination | Love | Nature | Science | Taste | Beauty | Contemplation | Understand |

George Santayana

Sentimental time is a genuine, if poetical, version of the march of existence, even as pictorial space is a genuine, if poetical version of its distribution... the least sentimental term in sentimental time is the term now, because it marks the junction of fancy with action... For it is evident that actual succession can contain nothing but nows, so that now in a certain way is immortal. But this immortality is only a continual reiteration, a series of moments each without self-possession and without assurance of any other moment; so that if ever the now loses its indicative practical force and becomes introspective, it becomes acutely sentimental, a perpetual hope unrealized and a perpetual dying.

Action | Existence | Force | Hope | Immortality | Nothing | Self | Space | Time |