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 Piper, fully John Stephen Piper

Idleness and the incapacity for leisure correspond with one another; leisure is the contrary of both. Leisure is only possible to a man who is at one with himself and also at one with the world. These are the presuppositions of leisure, for leisure is an affirmation. Idleness, on the other hand, is rooted in the omission of these two affirmations.

Idleness | Leisure | Man | Wisdom | World |

Joshua Reynolds, fully Sir Joshua Reynolds

There is no expedient to which man will not resort to void the real labor of thinking.

Labor | Man | Thinking | Will | Wisdom |

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

The great inequality in manner of living, the extreme idleness of some, and the excessive labor of others, the easiness of exciting and gratifying our sensual appetites, the too exquisite foods of the wealthy which overheat and fill them with indigestion, and, on the other hand, the unwholesome food of the poor, often, bad as it is, insufficient for their needs, which induces them, when opportunity offers, to eat voraciously and overcharge their stomachs; all these, together with sitting up late, and excesses of every kind, immoderate transports of every passion, fatigue, mental exhaustion, the innumerable pains and anxieties inseparable from every condition of life, by which the mind of man is incessantly tormented; these are too fatal proofs that the greater part of our ills are our own making, and that we might have avoided them nearly all by adhering to that simple, uniform and solitary manner of life which nature prescribed.

Extreme | Idleness | Indigestion | Inequality | Labor | Life | Life | Man | Mind | Nature | Opportunity | Passion | Wisdom |

Scipio Africanus, fully Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus

I'm never less at leisure than when at leisure, or less alone than when alone.

Leisure | Wisdom |

Nathalie Sarraute, fully Nathalie Tcherniak Sarraute

Today, thanks to technical progress, the radio and television, to which we devote so many of the leisure hours once spent listening to parlor chatter and parlor music, have succeeded in lifting the manufacture of banality out of the sphere of handicraft and placed it in that of a major industry.

Industry | Leisure | Listening | Music | Progress | Television | Wisdom |

Robert Louis Stevenson, fully Robert Louis Balfour Stevenson

If a man loves the labor of his trade, apart from any question of success or fame, the gods have called him.

Fame | Labor | Man | Question | Success | Wisdom |

Alexis de Tocqueville, fully Alexis-Charles-Henri Clérel de Tocqueville

As the principle of the division of labor is more extensively applied, the workman becomes more weak, more narrow-minded, and more dependent.

Labor | Wisdom |

Giovanni Battista Pergolesi

The most sublime labor of poetry is to give sense and passion to insensate things; and it is characteristic of children to take inanimate things in their hands and talk to them in play as if they were living persons... in the world's childhood, men were by nature sublime poets.

Childhood | Children | Labor | Men | Nature | Passion | Play | Poetry | Sense | Wisdom | World |

Daniel Webster

If you divorce capital from labor, capital is hoarded, and labor starves.

Labor | Wisdom |

Daniel Webster

Employment gives health, sobriety, and morals. Constant employment and well-paid labor produce, in a country like ours, general prosperity, content, and cheerfulness. Thus happy have we seen the country.

Cheerfulness | Happy | Health | Labor | Prosperity | Wisdom |

Al-Jāḥiẓ, full name Abū ʿUthman ʿAmr ibn Baḥr al-Kinānī al-Baṣrī NULL

The reward of work is to come, whereas the endurance of the labor is immediate.

Endurance | Labor | Reward | Work |

Alan Bennett

I am doing nothing. I like to be doing nothing to some purpose. That is what leisure means.

Leisure | Means | Nothing | Purpose | Purpose |

Benedict of Nursia, aka Saint Benedict of Nursia NULL

Idleness is the enemy of the soul; and therefore the brethren ought to be employed in manual labor at certain times, at others, in devout reading.

Enemy | Idleness | Labor | Soul |

Thomas Edison, fully Thomas Alva Edison

There is no expedient to which a man will go to avoid the real labor of thinking.

Labor | Man | Thinking | Will |

Benjamin Franklin

Sloth (like Rust) consumes faster than Labor wears: the used Key is always bright.

Labor | Sloth |

Benjamin Franklin

Is not hope of being one day able to purchase and enjoy luxuries a great spur to labor and industry? May not luxury, therefore, produce more than it consumes, if without such a spur people would be, as they are naturally enough inclined to be, lazy and indolent?

Day | Enough | Hope | Industry | Labor | Luxury | People |