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

Thomas Carlyle

The glory of a workman, still more of a master workman, that he does his work well, ought to be his most precious possession; like the honor of a soldier, dearer to him than life.

Consciousness |

Thomas Carlyle

The heart always sees before than the head can see.

History | Perfection | Sacred | Silence | Will |

Thomas Carlyle

The chambers of the East are opened in every land, and the sun come forth to sow the earth with orient pearl. Night, the ancient mother, follows him with her diadem of stars. * * * Bright creatures! how they gleam like spirits through the shadows of innumerable eyes from their thrones in the boundless depths of heaven.

Force | Insight | Law | Nature | Perfection | Will | Circumstance | Intellect | Understand |

Thomas Hardy

Crass Casualty obstructs the sun and rain, and dicing Time for gladness casts a moan . . . These purblind Doomsters had as readily strown blisses about my pilgrimage as pain.

Consciousness | Will |

Thomas Jefferson

I was bold in the pursuit of knowledge, never fearing to follow truth and reason to whatever results they led, and bearding every authority which stood in their way.

Health | Perfection | Virtue | Virtue |

Thomas Jefferson

Do not be too severe upon the errors of the people, but reclaim them by enlightening them.

Aid | Appetite | Belief | Comfort | Consciousness | Ends | Existence | Fear | Future | Happy | Hope | Inquiry | Love | Reason | Virtue | Virtue | Will |

Thomas Jefferson

I have lived temperately, eating little animal food, and that not as an aliment, so much as a condiment for the vegetables, which constitute my principal diet.

Administration | Friend | Integrity | Science | Strength | Understanding |

Thomas Jefferson

Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. Truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle.

Circumstances | Doubt | Good | Integrity |

Thomas Jefferson

With nations, as with individuals, our interests soundly calculated, will ever be found inseparable from our moral duties; and history bears witness to the fact, that a just nation is taken on its word, when recourse is had to armaments, and wars to bridle others.

Abuse | Better | Body | Corruption | Human nature | Integrity | Men | Money | Nature | Time | Trust | Will |

Thomas Mann, fully Paul Thomas Mann

Yes, they are carnal, both of them, love and death, and therein lies their terror and their great magic!

Humanity | Perfection | Soul | Spirit | Thinking |

Thomas Merton

How many people are there in the world of today who have “lost their faith” along with the vain hopes and illusions of their childhood? What they called “faith” was just one among all the other illusions. They placed all their hope in a certain sense of spiritual peace, of comfort, of interior equilibrium, of self-respect. Then when they began to struggle with the real difficulties and burdens of mature life, when they became aware of their own weakness, they lost their peace, they let go of their precious self-respect, and it became impossible for them to “believe.” That is to say it became impossible for them to comfort themselves, to reassure themselves, with the images and concepts they found reassuring in childhood. Place no hope in the feeling of assurance, of spiritual comfort. You may well have to get along without this. Place no hope in the inspirational preachers of Christian sunshine, who are able to pick you up and set you back on your feet and make you feel good for three or four days — until you fold up and collapse into despair.

Cost | Perfection | Stupidity |

Thomas Merton

One of the effects of original sin is an instinctive prejudice in favor of our own selfish desires. We see things as they are not, because we see them centered on ourselves. Fear, anxiety, greed, ambition and our hopeless need for pleasure all distort the image of reality that is reflected in our minds. Grace does not completely correct this distortion all at once: but it gives us a means of recognizing and allowing for it. And it tells us what we must do to correct it. Sincerity must be bought at a price: the humility to recognize our innumerable errors, and fidelity in tirelessly setting them right.

Anxiety | Anxiety | Charity | Courage | Experience | Perfection | Success | Taste | Will | Happiness | Understand |

Thomas Merton

The Lord did not create suffering. Pain and death came into the world with the fall of man. But after man had chosen suffering in preference to the joys of union with God, the Lord turned suffering itself into a way by which man could come to the perfect knowledge of God.

Applause | Error | Life | Life | Logic | Perfection | Success |

Thomas Merton

Man is like an alcoholic who knows that drink will destroy him but who always has a reason for drinking. So with war.

Life | Life | Love | Mystical | Perfection | Power | Qualities |

Thomas Merton

Prayers and sacrifice must be used as the most effective spiritual weapons in the war against war, and like all weapons they must be used with deliberate aim: not just with a vague aspiration for peace and security, but against violence and against war. This implies that we are also willing to sacrifice and restrain our own instinct for violence and aggressiveness in our relations with other people. We may never succeed in this campaign, but whether we succeed or not, the duty is evident. It is the great task of our time. Everything else is secondary, for the survival of the human race itself depends upon it. We must at least face this responsibility and do something about it. And the first job of all is to understand the psychological forces at work in ourselves and in society.

Absolute | Dependence | God | Life | Life | Light | Lord | Man | Need | Perfection | Prayer | God |

Thomas Merton

I have been summoned to explore a desert area of man's heart in which explanations no longer suffice, and in which one learns that only experience counts.

Confidence | God | Humility | Man | Meaning | Mistrust | Mystery | Perfection | Power | Present | Self | Time | Unique | Waste | World | Theoretical | God | Afraid |

Thomas Merton

How does it happen that even today a couple of ordinary French stonemasons, or a carpenter and his apprentice, can put up a dovecote or a barn that has more architectural perfection than the piles of eclectic stupidity that grow up at the cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars on the campuses of American universities?

Perfection |

Thomas Merton

It seems to me that policies which are content to create an ‘image’ of a benevolent and peace-loving America are valueless, because they lack the depth and the seriousness of motivation which are absolutely necessary for constructive action in a world crisis. Confronted with the difficult task of ‘assuming world leadership’ in a world from which it has remained traditionally and by preference isolated, America seems to have reacted with adolescent panic and truculence. Hostility, unpopularity and totally unsympathetic criticism have proved to be a serious test of the American political ideology.

Heart | Language | Life | Life | Love | Man | Perfection | Prayer | Time |

Thomas Merton

Inexorably life moves on toward crisis and mystery.

Consciousness | Existence | Fear | Little | People | Suffering | Torture | Truth |

Thomas Merton

God seeks Himself in us, and the aridity and sorrow of our heart is the sorrow of God who is not known in us, who cannot find Himself in us because we do not dare to believe or trust the incredible truth that He could live in us, and live there out of choice, out of preference.

Asceticism | Battle | God | Good | Gratitude | Life | Life | Light | Man | Perfection | Pleasure | Purity | Rest | Simplicity | Struggle | Terror | World | Asceticism | God | Afraid |