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Quotes

What mighty contests rise from trivial things.

—Alexander Pope, 1712

Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education.

—Mark Twain, 1893

Of troubles none is greater than to be robbed of one’s native land.

—Euripides, 431 BC

Let us leave this Europe which never stops talking of Man yet massacres him at every one of its street corners, at every corner of the world.

—Frantz Fanon, 1961

God walks among the pots and pans.

—Saint Teresa of Ávila, c. 1582

Who sees all beings in his own self, and his own self in all beings, loses all fear.

—The Upanishads, c. 800 BC

I imagined it was more difficult to die. 

—Louis XIV, 1715

The king times are fast finishing. There will be blood shed like water, and tears like mist; but the peoples will conquer in the end.

—Lord Byron, 1821

I have never felt salvation in nature. I love cities above all.

—Michelangelo Antonioni, 1967

While gossip among women is universally ridiculed as low and trivial, gossip among men, especially if it is about women, is called theory, or idea, or fact.

—Andrea Dworkin, 1983

Laws, like houses, lean on one another.

—Edmund Burke, 1765

Happiness (as the mathematicians might say) lies on a curve, and we approach it only by asymptote.

—Christopher Morley, 1919

One machine can do the work of fifty ordinary men. No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man.

—Elbert Hubbard, 1911