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

Tryon Edwards

Piety and morality are but the same spirit differently manifested. Piety is religion with its face toward God; morality is religion with its face toward the world.

Censure | Envy | Evidence | Think |

Tryon Edwards

This world is the land of the dying; the next is the land of the living.

Evidence | God | Love | Motives | God |

Tryon Edwards

Right actions for the future are the best apologies for wrong ones in the past - the best evidence of regret for them that we can offer, or the world receive.

Bitterness | Evidence | Little | Reason | Wit |

Tryon Edwards

Right actions in the future are the best explanations or apologies for wrong ones in the past; the best evidence of regret for them that we can offer, or the world receive.

Evidence | Future | Past | Regret | World | Wrong |

Tryon Edwards

Sinful and forbidden pleasures are like poisoned bread; they may satisfy appetite for the moment, but there is death in them at the end.

Correctness | Evidence | Truth | Will |

Turkish Proverbs

When God wants to please a poor man, He lets him lose his donkey and then helps him find it again.

Bribery | Bribery | Faith |

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 R. Kelly, fully Thomas Raymond Kelly

But whatever the earthly history of this moment of charm, this vision of an absolutely holy life is, I am convinced, the invading, urging, inviting, persuading work of the Eternal One. It is curious that modern psychology cannot account wholly for flashes of insight of any kind, sacred or secular. It is as if a fountain of creative Mind were welling up, bubbling to expression within prepared spirits. There is an infinite fountain of lifting power, pressing within us, luring us by dazzling visions, and we can only say, The creative God comes into our souls. An increment of infinity is about us. Holy is imagination, the gateway of Reality into our hearts. The Hound of Heaven is on our track, the God of Love is wooing us to His Holy Life. Once having the vision, the second step to holy obedience is this: Begin where you are. Obey now. Use what little obedience you are capable of, even if it be like a grain of mustard seed. Begin where you are. Live this present moment, this present hour as you now sit in your seats, in utter, utter submission and openness toward Him. Listen outwardly to these words, but within, behind the scenes, in the deeper levels of your lives where you are all alone with God the Loving Eternal One, keep up a silent prayer, "Open Thou my life. Guide my thoughts where I dare not let them go. But Thou darest. Thy will be done." Walk on the streets and chat with your friends. But every moment behind the scenes be in prayer, offering yourselves in continuous obedience. I find this internal continuous prayer life absolutely essential. It can be carried on day and night, in the thick of business, in home and school. Such prayer of submission can be so simple. It is well to use a single sentence, repeated over and over and over again, such as this: "Be Thou my will. Be Thou my will," or "I open all before Thee. I open all before Thee," or "See earth through heaven, See earth through heaven." This hidden prayer life can pass, in time, beyond words and phrases into mere ejaculations, "My God, my God, my Holy One, my Love," or into the adoration of the Upanishad, "O Wonderful, O Wonderful, O Wonderful." Words may cease and one stands and walks and sits and lies in wordless attitudes of adoration and submission and rejoicing and exultation and glory.

Enough | Faith | God | Greed | Heart | Humility | Imperialism | Little | Means | Smile | War | Will | Wise | God |

Thomas L. Friedman, fully Thomas Lauren Friedman

You take one bomber and deploy him in Baghdad, and another is manufactured in Riyadh the next day. It’s exactly like when you take the toy off the shelf at Wal-Mart and another is made in Shen Zhen the next day.

Energy | Evidence | Panic | Wonder | World |

Thomas Wentworth Higginson

We need to become national, not by any conscious effort, such as implies attitudinizing and constraint, but by simply accepting our own life. It is not desirable to go out of one’s way to be original, but it is to be hoped that it may lie in one’s way. Originality is simply a fresh pair of eyes. If you want to astonish the whole world, said Rahel, tell the simple truth. It is easier to excuse a thousand defects in the literary man who proceeds on this faith, than to forgive the one great defect of imitation in the purist who seeks only to be English. As Wasson has said, “The Englishman is undoubtedly a wholesome figure to the mental eye; but will not twenty million copies of him do, for the present?” We must pardon something to the spirit of liberty. We must run some risks, as all immature creatures do, in the effort to use our own limbs. Professor Edward Channing used to say that it was a bad sing for a college boy to write too well; there should be exuberances and inequalities. A nation which has but just begun to create a literature must sow some wild oats. The most tiresome vaingloriousness may be more hopeful than hypercriticism and spleen. The follies of the absurdest spread-eagle orator may be far more promising, because they smack more of the soil, than the neat Londonism of the city editor who dissects him.

Culture | Faith | Little | Need | People | Pride | Slavery | War | Will |

Woodrow Wilson, fully Thomas Woodrow Wilson

There are blessed intervals when I forget by one means or another that I am President of the United States.

Compensation | Desire | Ends | Faith | Freedom | Nations | Peace | Rights | Safe | World |

Thorstein Veblen, fully Thorstein Bunde Veblen, born Torsten Bunde Veblen

These various habits of thought, or habitual expressions of life, are all phases of the single life sequence of the individual; therefore a habit formed in response to a given stimulus will necessarily affect the character of the response made to other stimuli. A modification of human nature at any one point is a modification of human nature as a whole.

Evidence | Purpose | Purpose |

Thornton Wilder, fully Thornton Niven Wilder

The public for which masterpieces are intended is not of this earth.

Faith |

Tibetan Proverbs

If there is no solution to the problem then don’t waste time worrying about it. If there is a solution to the problem then don’t waste time worrying about it.

Evidence |

Tom Robbins, fully Thomas Eugene "Tom" Robbins

My grandmother, he said, confessed to me once that before she'd ever let herself become deeply involved with a man, she'd make sure to get him drunk. Maestra claims you can never know who a person really is unless you've seen how they behave when under the spell of Bacchus. It's a hard and fast rule with no exceptions: a bad drunk will make a bad husband. Or wife, for that matter. Sobriety, for some people, is a thin and temporary disguise.

Faith | Good | Hell | Religion |

William Shakespeare

Are you good men and true? Much Ado about Nothing. Act iii. Sc. 3.

Death | Evidence | Hope | Men | Redemption | World |

William Shakespeare

Beauty is all very well at first sight; but whoever looks at it when it has been in the house three days?

Faith |

Iris Murdoch, aka Dame Jean Iris Murdoch

One of the secrets of a happy life is continuous small treats.

Better | Faith | God | Good | Love | Time | Will | Work | God | Afraid | Learn |

Bible or The Bible or Holy Bible NULL

What is man and what use is he? What do his good or evil deeds signify? His span of life is at most a hundred years; compared with endless time, his few years are like one drop of sea-water or a single grain of sand. That is why the Lord is patient with them, lavishing his mercy upon them.

Faith | Good | Man |

William James

Fatalism, whose solving word in all crises of behavior is "All striving is vain," will never reign supreme, for the impulse to take life strivingly is indestructible in the race. Moral creeds which speak to that impulse will be widely successful in spite of inconsistency, vagueness, and shadowy determination of expectancy. Man needs a rule for his will, and will invent one if one be not given him.

Belief | Cause | Doubt | Faith | Means |