Archive

Page 14 of 24 pages.

Quote — 105

“I knew now, that it is by loving, and not by being loved, that one can come nearest the soul of another; yea, that, where two love, it is the loving of each other, and not the being loved by each other, that originates and perfects and assures their blessedness.”

George MacDonald

Quote — 104

“No one can build his security upon the nobleness of another person. Two people, when they love each other, grow alike in their tastes and habits and pride, but their moral natures (whatever we may mean by that canting expression) are never welded. The base one goes on being base, and the noble one noble, to the end.”

Willa Cather

Quote — 103

“Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient premises.”

Samuel Butler

Quote — 102

“A man is the sum of his misfortunes. One day you'd think misfortune would get tired, but then time is your misfortune.”

William Faulkner

Quote — 101

“Man is said to be a reasoning animal. I do not know why he has not been defined as an affective or feeling animal. Perhaps that which differentiates him from other animals is feeling rather than reason. More often I have seen a cat reason than laugh or weep. Perhaps it weeps or laughs inwardly — but then perhaps, also inwardly, the crab resolves equations of the second degree.”

Miguel de Unamuno

Quote — 100

“The whole secret of life is to be interested in one thing profoundly and a thousand other things as well.”

Hugh Walpole

Quote — 099

“Nobody is a villain in their own story. We're all the heroes of our own stories.”

George R. R. Martin

Quote — 098

“Words may, through the devotion, the skill, the passion, and the luck of writers prove to be the most powerful thing in the world. They may move men to speak to each other because some of those words somewhere express not just what the writer is thinking but what a huge segment of the world is thinking.”

William Golding

Quote — 097

“In the beginning when the world was young there were a great many thoughts but no such thing as truth. Man made the truths himself and each truth was a composite of a great many vague thoughts. All about in the world were truths and they were all beautiful.”

Sherwood Anderson

Quote — 096

“The principal difference between love and hate is that love is an irradiation, and hate is a concentration. Love makes everything lovely; hate concentrates itself on the object of its hatred. All the fearful counterfeits of love — possessiveness, lust, vanity, jealousy — are closer to hate: they concentrate on the object, guard it, suck it dry.”

Sydney J. Harris