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

Henri Frédéric Amiel

I have traversed the universe from the deepest depths of the empyrean to the peristaltic movements of the atoms in the elementary cell. And on all sides stretched mysteries, marvels, and prodigies without limit, without number, and without end. I felt the unfathomable thought, of which the Universe is the symbols, live and burn within me; I touched, proved, tasted, embraced my nothingness and my immensity; I kissed the hem of the garments of god, and gave Him thanks for being Spirit and for being Life.

God | Life | Life | Spirit | Thought | Universe |

Tennessee Williams, fully Thomas Lanier "Tennessee" Williams

I think time is a merciless thing. I think life is a process of burning oneself out and time is the fire that burns you. But I think the spirit of man is a good adversary.

Good | Life | Life | Man | Spirit | Time | Wisdom | Think |

Johann Georg Ritter von Zimmermann

All our distinctions are accidental; beauty and deformity, though personal qualities, are neither entitled to praise nor censure; yet it is so happens that they color our opinion of those qualities to which mankind have attached responsibility.

Beauty | Censure | Mankind | Opinion | Praise | Qualities | Responsibility | Wisdom | Beauty |

Ancrene Wisse, aka Ancrene Riwle NULL

You ought to say fewer fixed prayers so that you may do more reading. Reading is good prayer. Reading teaches us how to pray, and what to pray for, and then prayer achieves it. In the course of reading, when the heart is pleased, there arises a spirit of devotion which is worth many prayers.

Devotion | Good | Heart | Prayer | Reading | Spirit | Worth |

John Blofeld, fully John Eaton Calthorpe Blofeld

The world is full of paradox. For example, [in Buddhism] though no notion of a creator is entertained, great stress is laid upon the need for faith and piety. By faith is meant not trust in a benevolent diety avid for love, praise and obedience, but conviction that beyond the seeming reality misreported by our senses which is inherently unsatisfactory, lies a mystery which, when intuitively unsatisfactory, lies a mystery which, when intuitively perceived, will give our lives undreamed-of meaning and endow the most insignificant object with holiness and beauty.

Beauty | Example | Faith | Love | Meaning | Mystery | Need | Obedience | Object | Paradox | Piety | Praise | Reality | Trust | Will | World |

Athenagoras NULL

Prophets… lifted in ecstasy above the natural operation of their minds by the impulses of the Divine Spirit, were inspired to utterance, the Spirit making use of them as a flute-player breathes into his flute.

Ecstasy | Spirit |

Henri Bergson, aka Henri-Louis Bergson

The great error of the doctrines on the spirit has been the idea that by isolating the spiritual life from all the rest, by suspending it in space as high as possible above the earth, they were placing it beyond attack, as if they were not thereby simply exposing it to be taken as an effect of mirage!

Earth | Error | Life | Life | Rest | Space | Spirit |

Saint Bonaventure, born John of Fidanza Bonaventure

If there be any man who is not enlightened by this sublime magnificence of created things, he is blind. If there be any man who is not aroused by the clamor of nature, he is deaf. If there be any one who, seeing all these works of God, does not praise him, he is dumb; if there be any one who, from so many signs, cannot perceive the First Principle, that man is foolish.

God | Man | Nature | Praise |

William Wordsworth

Blessings be with them, and eternal praise who gave us nobler loves, and nobler cares, the poets, who on earth have made us heirs of truth and pure delight, by heavenly lays.

Blessings | Earth | Eternal | Praise | Truth | Wisdom |

Peter Abelard, Latin: Petrus Abaelardus or Abailard; French: Pierre Abélard

God considers not the action, but the spirit of the action. It is the intention, not the deed wherein the merit or praise of the doer consists.

Action | God | Intention | Merit | Praise | Spirit |

Nikolai Berdyaev, fully Nikolai Alexandrovich Berdyaev, also spelled Nichlas Berdiaev

Spirit is man’s whole creative act. Spirit is freedom, and freedom has its roots in the depths of pre-existential being.

Freedom | Man | Spirit |

Gaius Glenn Atkins

The human spirit has fashioned its prayers out of its loneliness, its persuasion of being something other than earthdust or star-dust.

Loneliness | Persuasion | Spirit |

Walt Whitman, fully Walter "Walt" Whitman

The poet is the equable man, not in him but off from him things are grotesque, eccentric, fail of their full returns, nothing out of its place is good, nothing in its place is bad, he bestows on every object or quality its fit proportion, neither more nor less, he is the arbiter of the diverse, he is the key... As he sees the farthest he has the most faith, his thoughts are the hymns of the praise of things, in the dispute on God and eternity he is silent, he sees eternity less like a play with a prologue and denouement, he sees eternity in men and women, he does not see men and women as dreams or dots.

Dispute | Dreams | Eternity | Faith | God | Good | Man | Men | Nothing | Object | Play | Praise | Wisdom | God |

Gilbert Keith "G.K." Chesteron

Facts as facts do not always create a spirit of reality, because reality is a spirit.

Reality | Spirit |

Carlos Castaneda, fully Carlos César Salvador Arana Castaneda

To attune your spirit to your own special place in the world is never to know envy, or malice, or despair.

Despair | Envy | Malice | Spirit | World |

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Truth needs not the service of passion; yea, nothing so dis-serves it, as passion when set to serve it. The Spirit of Truth is the Spirit of Meekness.

Meekness | Nothing | Passion | Service | Spirit | Truth |