Reference > Quotations > Quotations of the Day Archive: May 2006
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Quotations of the Day: May 2006
 
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May 31, 2006

The proof of a poet is that his country absorbs him as affectionately as he has absorbed it.
  —Walt Whitman

May 30, 2006

You say that you are my judge; I do not know if you are; but take good heed not to judge me ill, because you would put yourself in great peril.
  —Joan of Arc

May 29, 2006

I don’t generally feel anything until noon, then it’s time for my nap.
  —Bob Hope

May 28, 2006

I cannot give them my confidence; pardon me, gentlemen, confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom: youth is the season of credulity.
  —William Pitt, the Elder

May 27, 2006

Man differs more from Man, than Man from Beast.
  —John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester

May 26, 2006

The French are a logical people, which is one reason the English dislike them so intensely. The other is that they own France, a country which we have always judged to be much too good for them.
  —Robert Morley

May 25, 2006

Be a little careful of your Library. Do you foresee what you will do with it? Very little to be sure. But the real question is, What it will do with you? You will come here & get books that will open your eyes, & your ears, & your curiosity, & turn you inside out or outside in.
  —Ralph Waldo Emerson

May 24, 2006

Conscience was the barmaid of the Victorian soul. Recognizing that human beings were fallible and that their failings, though regrettable, must be humoured, conscience would permit, rather ungraciously perhaps, the indulgence of a number of carefully selected desires.
  —C.E.M. Joad

May 23, 2006

What armies and how much of war I have seen, what thousands of marching troops, what fields of slain, what prisons, what hospitals, what ruins, what cities in ashes, what hunger and nakedness, what orphanages, what widowhood, what wrongs and what vengeance.
  —Clara Barton

May 22, 2006

The Great Society has arrived and the task of our generation is to bring it under control. The study of how it is to be done is the function of politics.
  —Aneurin Bevan

May 21, 2006

True solidarity is only possible among the solitary.
  —José Bergamín

May 20, 2006

Ideas devour the ages as men are devoured by their passions. When man is cured, human nature will cure itself perhaps.
  —Honoré de Balzac

May 19, 2006

The thing that makes you exceptional, if you are at all, is inevitably that which must also make you lonely.
  —Lorraine Hansberry

May 18, 2006

Pervading nationalism imposes its dominion on man today in many different forms and with an aggressiveness that spares no one…. The challenge that is already with us is the temptation to accept as true freedom what in reality is only a new form of slavery.
  —John Paul II

May 17, 2006

To separate [children] from others of similar age and qualifications solely because of their race generates a feeling of inferiority as to their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever to be undone.
  —Earl Warren

May 16, 2006

There was a time we was on the land. There was a boundary to us then. Old folks died off and little fellers come. We was always one thing. We was the family, kinda whole and clear. But now we ain’t clear no more.... They ain’t no family now.
  —Nunnally Johnson

May 15, 2006

By the power elite, we refer to those political, economic, and military circles which as an intricate set of overlapping cliques share decisions having at least national consequences. In so far as national events are decided, the power elite are those who decide them.
  —C. Wright Mills

May 14, 2006

The conduct of God who disposes all things kindly, is to put religion into the mind by reason, and into the heart by grace. But to attempt to put it into the mind and heart by force and threats is not to put religion there, but terror.
  —Blaise Pascal

May 13, 2006

I am a Christian and a Democrat — that’s all.
  —Franklin D. Roosevelt

May 12, 2006

A Sonnet is a moment’s monument,— / Memorial from the Soul’s eternity / To one dead deathless hour.
  —Dante Gabriel Rossetti

May 11, 2006

The men and women of this country who toil are the ones who bear the cost of the Government. Every dollar that we carelessly waste means that their life will be so much the more meager. Every dollar that we prudently save means that their life will be so much the more abundant. Economy is idealism in its most practical form.
  —Calvin Coolidge

May 10, 2006

Hollywood’s like Egypt, full of crumbled pyramids. It’ll never come back. It’ll just keep on crumbling until finally the wind blows the last studio prop across the sands.
  —David O. Selznick

May 9, 2006

The essence of man is, discontent, divine discontent; a sort of love without a beloved, the ache we feel in a member we no longer have.
  —José Ortega y Gasset

May 8, 2006

Muhammad is the Messenger of God, / and those who are with him are hard / against the unbelievers, merciful / one to another.
  —Qur’an

May 7, 2006

We are as great as our belief in human liberty — no greater. And our belief in human liberty is only ours when it is larger than ourselves.
  —Archibald MacLeish

May 6, 2006

What progress we are making. In the Middle Ages they would have burned me. Now they are content with burning my books.
  —Sigmund Freud

May 5, 2006

There is only one success … to be able to spend your life in your own way, and not to give others absurd maddening claims upon it.
  —Christopher Morley

May 4, 2006

Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors.
  —Thomas Henry Huxley

May 3, 2006

When one’s not writing poems — and I’m not at the moment — you wonder how you ever did it. It’s like another country you can’t reach.
  —May Sarton

May 2, 2006

Gee, I wish we had one of them doomsday machines things.
  —Stanley Kubrick

May 1, 2006

My voice is still for war. / Gods! can a Roman senate long debate / Which of the two to choose, slavery or death?
  —Joseph Addison




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