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

Martha Washington, fully Martha Dandridge Curtis Washington

I am still determined to be cheerful and happy in whatever situation I may be, for I have also learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends on our dispositions and not on our circumstances. We carry the seeds of the one or the other about with us in our minds wherever we go.

Circumstances | Experience | Happy | Wisdom | Happiness |

E. B. White, fully Elwyn Brooks White

I have yet to see a piece of writing, political or non-political, that doesn’t have a slant. All writing slants the way a writer leans, and no man is born upright. The beauty of the American free press is that the slants and the twists and the distortions come from so many directions, and the special interests are so numerous, the reader must sift and sort and check and countercheck in order to find out what the score is.

Beauty | Free press | Man | Order | Wisdom | Writing | Beauty |

Nikolai Berdyaev, fully Nikolai Alexandrovich Berdyaev, also spelled Nichlas Berdiaev

The world is full of wickedness and misery precisely because it is based on freedom – yet that freedom constitutes the whole dignity of man and of his world. Doubtless at the price of its repudiation evil and suffering could be abolished, and the world forced to be “good” and “happy”; but man would have lost his likeness to God, which primarily resides in his freedom.

Dignity | Evil | Freedom | God | Good | Happy | Man | Price | Suffering | Wickedness | World |

Theodore Dreiser, fully Theodore Herman Albert Dreiser

Art is the stored honey of the human soul, gathered on wings of misery and travail.

Art | Soul |

Henry George

The press rules the people, and capital rules the press.

People |

Samuel Johnson, aka Doctor Johnson

The misery of man proceeds not from any single crush of overwhelming evil, but from small vexations continually repeated.

Evil | Man |

Anthony Lewis

The press has its own version of Gresham’s Law: the tendency, in the competition for readers, to let the scandalous and sensational drive out serious news.

Competition | Law | News |

Eleanor Roosevelt, fully Anna Eleanor Roosevelt

When will our consciences grow so tender that we will act to prevent human misery rather than avenge it?

Will |

Hedrick Smith

When the print press examines a politician’s performance, very few voters are interested in detail. The essence of the modern campaign is personality politics: the direct impressions that viewers form from thirty-second daily blips on the Boss Tube, preaching homilies and honing bumpers-sticker themes to stick in voter’s memories.

Personality | Politics |

Max Lucado

I will not let past failures haunt me. Even though my life is scarred with mistakes, I refuse to rummage through my trash heap of failures. I will admit them. I will correct them. I will press on. Victoriously. No failure is fatal. It's OK to stumble...I will get up. It's OK to fail...I will rise again. Today I will make a difference.

Failure | Life | Life | Past | Will | Failure |

Adam Smith

What so great happiness as to be beloved, and to know that we deserve to be beloved? What so great misery as to be hated, and to know that we deserve to be hated?

Happiness |

Albert Camus

We know that we live in contradiction, but that we must refuse this contradiction and do what is needed to reduce it. Our task as men is to find those few first principles that will calm the infinite anguish of free souls. We must stitch up what has been torn apart, render justice in the world which is so obviously unjust, and make happiness meaningful for nations poisoned by the misery of this century.

Contradiction | Justice | Men | Nations | Principles | Will | World | Happiness |

Alfred North Whitehead

The task of democracy is to relive mass misery and yet preserve the freedom of the individual.

Democracy | Freedom | Individual |

Aristotle NULL

Tragedy is essentially an imitation not of persons but of action and life, of happiness and misery. All human happiness or misery takes the form of action; the end for which we live is a certain kind of activity, not a quality. Character gives us qualities, but it is our actions - what we do - that we are happy or the reverse.

Action | Character | Happy | Imitation | Life | Life | Qualities | Tragedy | Happiness |

Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield

The press is not only free; it is powerful. That power is ours. It is the proudest that man can enjoy. It was not granted by monarchs, it was not gained for us by aristocracies; but it sprang from the people, and, with an immortal instinct, it has always worked for people.

Instinct | Man | People | Power |

Blaise Pascal

We desire truth, and find within ourselves only uncertainty. We seek happiness, and find only misery and death.

Death | Desire | Truth | Uncertainty |