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

John Morley, 1st Viscount Morely of Blackburn, Lord Morley

I believe the recipe for happiness to be just enough money to pay the monthly bills you acquire, a little surplus to give you confidence, a little too much work each day, enthusiasm for your work, a substantial share of good health, a couple of real friends, and a wife and children to share life's beauty with you.

Beauty | Children | Confidence | Day | Enough | Enthusiasm | Good | Health | Life | Life | Little | Money | Surplus | Wife | Wisdom | Work | Beauty | Happiness |

James McCosh

In the end, thought rules the world. There are times when impulses and passions are more powerful, but they soon expend themselves; while mind, acting constantly, is ever ready to drive them back and work when their energy is exhausted.

Energy | Mind | Thought | Wisdom | Work | World | Thought |

Mendele Mokher Sforim or Sfarim, pseudonymn of Shalom Jacob Abramowitsch

Respect the children of the poor! From them come most poets.

Children | Respect | Wisdom |

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, aka "Pat"

The United States in the 1980s may be the first society in history in which children are distinctly worse off than adults.

Children | History | Society | Wisdom | Society |

Thomas Merton

Violence is essentially wordless, and it can begin only where thought and rational communication have broken down.

Thought | Wisdom | Thought |

Alex Faickney Osborn

Most ideas are step-by-step children of other ideas.

Children | Ideas | Wisdom |

Harold W. Percival, fully Sir Harold Waldwin Percival

All destiny begins with thinking. Responsibilities connected with the present duty. Duty of which leads to the balancing of the thought. One of the objects of life is to think without creating thoughts. That is without being attached to the object for which the thought is created and can be attained only when desire is self-controlled and directed by thinking. Until then, thoughts are created and are destiny.

Desire | Destiny | Duty | Life | Life | Object | Present | Self | Thinking | Thought | Wisdom | Think | Thought |

Joseph Opatoshu

In every evil thought there is a spark of divinity, which has sunk to a very low degree, and begs to be elevated.

Divinity | Evil | Thought | Wisdom | Thought |

Angelo Patri

One of the most difficult lessons parents have to learn is this one: Children are only loaned for a brief term of infancy and childhood. Soon they become people, strangers in the home, and instead of children to be directed they are grown-ups to be studied, understood and accepted. The acceptance is never quite complete on either side, but affection will bridge the gap if it is permitted to do so.

Acceptance | Childhood | Children | Infancy | Parents | People | Will | Wisdom | Learn |

Philolaus, aka Philolaus of Croton NULL

All things that can be known contain number; without this nothing could be thought or known.

Nothing | Thought | Wisdom | Thought |

Harold W. Percival, fully Sir Harold Waldwin Percival

Every thing existing on the physical plain is an exteriorization of a thought which must be balanced through the one who issued the thought and in accordance with that one's responsibility at the conjunction of time, condition and place. This law of thought is Destiny. Thinking is the basic factor in shaping human destiny. The machinery of the law is nature. The purpose of the universe is to make all units of matter conscious of progressively higher degrees.

Destiny | Law | Nature | Purpose | Purpose | Responsibility | Thinking | Thought | Time | Universe | Wisdom | Thought |

Adam Gottlob Oehlenschlager

The plays of natural lively children are the infancy of art. Children live in a world of imagination and feeling. They invest the most insignificant object with any form they please, and see in it whatever they wish to see.

Art | Children | Imagination | Infancy | Object | Wisdom | World |

Robert Oppenheimer, fully Julius Robert Oppenheimer

There are children playing in the street who could solve some of my top problems in physics... they have modes of sensory perception that I lost long ago.

Children | Perception | Problems | Wisdom |

Johann Pestalozzi, fully Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi

Thinking leads man to knowledge. He may see and hear, and read and learn whatever he pleases, and as much as he pleases; he will never know anything of it, except that which he has thought over, that which by thinking he has made the property of his own mind. Is it then saying too much if I say that man, by thinking only, becomes truly man? Take away thought from man's life, and what remains?

Knowledge | Life | Life | Man | Mind | Property | Thinking | Thought | Will | Wisdom | Learn | Thought |

Jane Porter

Beauty of form affects the mind, but then it must not be the mere shell that we admire, but the thought that this shell is only the beautiful case adjusted to the shape and value of a still more beautiful pearl within. The perfection of outward loveliness is the soul shining through its crystalline covering.

Beauty | Mind | Perfection | Soul | Thought | Wisdom | Thought | Value |

Philip Bennett Power

To tell the truth, however, family and poverty have done more to support me than I have to support them. They have compelled me to make exertions that I hardly thought myself capable of; and often when on the eve of despairing, they have forced me, like a coward in a corner, to fight like a hero, not for myself, but for my wife and little ones.

Family | Hero | Little | Poverty | Thought | Truth | Wife | Wisdom | Thought |

Dan Pursuit

All children wear the sign: 'I want to be important NOW.' Many of our juvenile delinquency problems arise because nobody reads the sign.

Children | Important | Problems | Wisdom |

Earl Rivers, Richard Woodville (or Wydeville), 1st Earl Rivers

The thought is the myrrour of the man, wherein he may behold his beaute & his filth.

Man | Thought | Wisdom | Thought |