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

W. H. Auden, fully Wystan Hugh Auden

When one has great gifts, what answer to the meaning of existence should one require beyond the right to exercise them?

Change | Warning | Will |

W. Clement Stone, fully William Clement Stone

All personal achievement starts in the mind of the individual. Your personal achievement starts in your mind. the first step is to know exactly what your problem, goal or desire is. If you're not clear about this, then write it down, and rewrite it until the words express precisely what you are after. Every disadvantage has an equivalent advantage - if you'll take the trouble to find it. Learn to do that and you'll kick the stuffing out of adversity every time.

Better | Change | Future |

W. Clement Stone, fully William Clement Stone

Keep your mind on your objective, and persist until you succeed. Study, think and plan.

Change | Power | Time |

W. E. B. Du Bois, fully William Edward Burghardt Du Bois

The theory of democratic government is not that the will of the people is always right, but rather that normal human beings of average intelligence will, if given a chance, learn the right and best course by bitter experience.

Change | Children | Church | Courage | Events | Men | Parents | Power | Public | Religion | Revolution | Time | Will | World | Learn |

Walker Percy

Hatred strikes me as one of the few signs of life remaining in the world. This is another thing about the world which is upsidedown: all the friendly and likable people seem dead to me; only the haters seem alive.

Day | Man | Office | Self | Will | World |

Wallace Stevens

Finally, in the last year of her age, having attained a present blessedness, she said poetry and apotheosis are one.

Change |

W. E. H. Lecky, fully William Edward Hartpole Lecky

The period of Catholic ascendancy was on the whole one of the most deplorable in the history of the human mind.... The spirit that shrinks from enquiry as sinful and deems a state of doubt a state of guilt, is the most enduring disease that can afflict the mind of man. Not till the education of Europe passed from the monasteries to the universities, not till Mohammedan science, and clasical free thought, and industrial independence broke the sceptre of the Church, did the intellectual revival of Europe begin.

Agitation | Authority | Change | Church | Conscience | Controversy | Doctrine | Enthusiasm | Force | Language | Light | Men | Method | Peace | Principles | Reason | Religion | Right | Sense | Spirit | Theology | Will |

W. Edwards Deming, fully William Edwards Deming

The average American worker has fifty interruptions a day, of which seventy percent have nothing to do with work.

Action | Change | Knowledge |

W. E. H. Lecky, fully William Edward Hartpole Lecky

It is, indeed, marvelous that science should ever have revived amid the fearful obstacles theologians cast in her way. Together with a system of biblical interpretation so stringent, and at the same time so capricious, that it infallibly came into collision with every discovery that was not in accordance with the unaided judgments of the senses, and therefore with the familiar expressions of the Jewish writers, everything was done to cultivate a habit of thought the direct opposite of the habits of science. The constant exaltation of blind faith, the countless miracles, the childish legends, all produced a condition of besotted ignorance, of groveling and trembling credulity, that can scarcely be paralleled except among the most degraded barbarians. Innovation of every kind was regarded as a crime; superior knowledge excited only terror and suspicion. If it was shown in speculation, it was called heresy. If it was shown in the study of nature, it was called magic. The dignity of the Popedom was unable to save Gerbert from the reputation of a magician, and the magnificent labors of Roger Bacon were repaid by fourteen years of imprisonment, and many others of less severe but unremitting persecution. Added to all this, the overwhelming importance attached to theology diverted to it all those intellects which in another condition of society would have been employed in the investigations of science. When Lord Bacon was drawing his great chart of the field of knowledge, his attention was forcibly drawn to the torpor of the middle ages. That the mind of man should so long have remained tranced and numbed, seemed, at first sight, an objection to his theories, a contradiction to his high estimate of human faculties. But his answer was prompt and decisive. A theological system had lain like an incubus upon Christendom, and to its influence, more than to any other single cause, the universal paralysis is to be ascribed.

Energy | Fanaticism | Influence | Melancholy | Present |

Wallace Stevens

In European thought in general, as contrasted with American, vigor, life and originality have a kind of easy, professional utterance. American—on the other hand, is expressed in an eager amateurish way. A European gives a sense of scope, of survey, of consideration. An American is strained, sensational. One is artistic gold; the other is bullion.

Change | Contentment | Death | Dreams | Fulfillment | Mother | Need |

Vladimir Lenin, fully Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

To decide once every few years which members of the ruling class is to repress and crush the people through parliament–this is the real essence of bourgeois parliamentarism, not only in parliamentary- constitutional monarchies, but also in the most democratic republics.

Change | War |

Vladimir Lenin, fully Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

The surest way to destroy a nation is to debauch its currency.

Change | Individual | Will |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

A cluster of stars palely glowed above us, between the silhouettes of long thin leaves; that vibrant sky seemed as naked as she was under her light frock. I saw her face in the sky, strangely distinct, as if it emitted a faint radiance of its own.

Change | Fallacy | Rest |

Vladimir Lenin, fully Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

Tsar Nicholas the Bloody, who has dispersed the First and Second Dumas, who has drowned Russia in blood, enslaved Poland and Finland, and is in alliance with out — and-out reactionaries conducting a policy of stifling the Jews and all “aliens”, the tsar whose loyal friends shot down the workers on the Lena and ruined the peasants to the point of starvation all over Russia — that tsar pretends to be the champion of Slav independence and freedom!"

Change | Justice | Need | People | Struggle | System | Will | Crisis |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

A change of environment is the traditional fallacy upon which rest the love-and lung-condemned.

Change | Fallacy |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

The writer's job is to get the main character up a tree, and then once they are up there, throw rocks at them.

Bitterness | Experience | Quiet |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

In those days I seemed to have had two muses: the essential, hysterical, genuine one, who tortured me with elusive snatches of imagery and wrung her hands over my inability to appropriate the magic and madness offered me; and her apprentice, her palette girl and stand-in, a little logician, who stuffed the torn gaps left by her mistress with explanatory or meter-mending fillers which became more and more numerous the further I moved away from the initial, evanescent, savage perfection.

Burial | Fallacy | Life | Life | Victim |

Vladimir Lenin, fully Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

When we are victorious on a world scale I think we shall use gold for the purpose of building public lavatories in the streets of some of the largest cities of the world.

Change | Difficulty | Position | Revolution | Time | Old |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

All at once we were madly, clumsily, shamelessly, agonizingly in love with each other; hopelessly, I should add, because that frenzy of mutual possession might have been assuaged only by our actually imbibing and assimilating every particle of eachother's soul and flesh; but there we were, unable even to mate as slum children would have so easily found an opportunity to do so.

Childhood | Duty | Heart | Life | Life | Lust | Melancholy | Mortal | Nothing | Sense | Old |

Vladimir Nabokov, fully Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov

Why do those people guess so much and shave so little, and are so disdainful of hearing aids?

Change | Fallacy | Happy | Hope |