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

Alexander Pope

There is no study that is not capable of delighting us after a little application to it.

Character | Little | Study | Wisdom |

Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke

Whatever study tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better men and citizens is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of idleness, and the knowledge we acquire by it only a creditable kind of ignorance, nothing more.

Better | Character | Idleness | Ignorance | Knowledge | Men | Nothing | Study |

Francis Quarles

If thy words be too luxuriant, confine them, lest they confide thee; he that thinks he never can speak enough may easily speak too much. A full tongue and an empty brain are seldom parted.

Character | Enough | Words |

Francis Quarles

A fool's heart is in his tongue; but a wise man's tongue is in his heart.

Character | Heart | Man | Wise |

Sydney Smith

One of the best methods of rendering study agreeable is to live with able men, and to suffer all those pangs of inferiority which the want of knowledge always inflicts.

Character | Inferiority | Knowledge | Men | Study |

Sappho NULL

When anger swells the heart, the idly-barking tongue restrain.

Anger | Character | Heart |

John Greenleaf Whittier

For all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: "It might have been."

Character | Words |

John Anderson

The general conclusion is that all the objects of science, including minds and goods, are things occurring in space and time... and that we can study them in virtue of the fact that we come into spatial and temporal relations with them. And therefore all ideals, ultimates, symbols, agencies and the like are to be rejected, and no such distinction as that of facts and principles, or facts and values, can be maintained. There are only facts, i.e., occurrences in space and time.

Distinction | Ideals | Principles | Science | Space | Study | Time | Virtue | Virtue | Wisdom |

Amen-em-apt NULL

The tongue of a man is the rudder of a ship, but the Universal Lord is its pilot.

Lord | Man | Wisdom |

Anahareo, given name Gertrude Moltke Bernard NULL

The tongue is, at the same, the best part of a man, and his worst; with good government, none is more useful; without it, none is more mischievous.

Good | Government | Man | Wisdom |

Vittorio Alfieri

There is a silence, the child of love, which expresses everything, and proclaims more loudly that the tongue is able to so.

Love | Silence | Wisdom | Child |

Babylonian Talmud

Slander is called the third tongue because it slays three persons, the speaker, the spoken to, and the spoken of.

Slander | Wisdom |

Mary Ritter Beard

Action without study is fatal. Study without action is futile.

Action | Study | Wisdom |

William Russell, 1st Duke of Bedford

You are to come to your study as to the table, with a sharp appetite, whereby that which you read may the better digest. He that has no stomach to his book will very hardly thrive upon it.

Appetite | Better | Study | Will | Wisdom |

Srully Blotnick

The fact remains that the overwhelming majority of people who have become wealthy have become so thanks to work they found profoundly absorbing. The long term study of people who eventually became wealthy clearly reveals that their "luck" arose from accidental dedication they had to an arena they enjoyed.

Dedication | Luck | Majority | People | Study | Wisdom | Work |

Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton, fully Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, Lord Lytton

Art does not imitate nature, but founds itself on the study of nature - takes from nature the selections which best accord with its own intention, and then bestows on them that which nature does not possess, vis.: the mind and soul of man.

Art | Intention | Man | Mind | Nature | Soul | Study | Wisdom |

William Camden

What the Harte thinketh, the Tongue speaketh.

Wisdom |