Archive

Quotes

If a man be gracious and courteous to strangers, it shows he is a citizen of the world, and that his heart is no island cut off from other lands, but a continent that joins to them.

—Francis Bacon, 1625

What will not attract a man’s stare at sea?—a gull, a turtle, a flying fish!

—Richard Burton, 1883

There’s plenty of fire in the coldest flint!

—Rachel Field, 1939

Those things are better which are perfected by nature than those which are finished by art.

—Cicero, c. 45 BC

The law is not the same at morning and at night.

—George Herbert, c. 1633

Science is a cemetery of dead ideas.

—Miguel de Unamuno, 1913

It is not my design to drink or sleep; my design is to make what haste I can to be gone.

—Oliver Cromwell, 1658

The whole dream of democracy is to raise the proletariat to the level of bourgeois stupidity.

—Gustave Flaubert, 1871

What a torture to talk to filled heads that allow nothing from the outside to enter them.

—Joseph Joubert, 1807

The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.

—Aristotle, c. 350 BC

The main object of a revolution is the liberation of man, not the interpretation and application of some transcendental ideology.

—Jean Genet, 1983

Some men never recover from education.

—Oliver St. John Gogarty, 1954

In psychoanalysis nothing is true except the exaggerations.

—Theodor Adorno, 1951