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

Paul Tillich, fully Paul Johannes Tillich

Language has created the word loneliness to express the pain of being alone, and the word solitude to express the glory of being alone.

Glory | Language | Loneliness | Pain | Solitude |

Pythagoras, aka Pythagoras of Samos or Pythagoras the Samian NULL

Wealth is a weak anchor, and glory cannot support a man; this is the law of God, that virtue only is firm, and cannot be shaken by a tempest.

Glory | God | Law | Man | Virtue | Virtue | Wealth |

Ralph Waldo Emerson

The glory of Friendship is not the outstretched hand, nor the kindly smile, nor the joy of companionship; it is the spiritual inspiration that comes to ne when he discovers that someone else believes in him and is willing to trust him with his friendship.

Glory | Inspiration | Joy | Smile | Trust | Friendship |

Ralph Waldo Emerson

The glory of Friendship is not the outstretched hand, nor the kindly smile, nor the joy of companionship; it is the spiritual inspiration that comes to one when he discovers that someone else believes in him and is willing to trust him with his friendship. My friends have come unsought. The great God gave them to me.

Glory | God | Inspiration | Joy | Smile | Trust | Friendship | God | Friends |

Saint Francis de Sales NULL

Labor, as well as fasting, serves to mortify and subdue the flesh. Provided the labor you undertake contributes to the glory of God and your own welfare, I would prefer that you should suffer the pain of labor rather than that of fasting.

Glory | God | Labor | Pain | God |

Saint John of the Cross, born Juan de Yepes Álvarez NULL

All the riches of the world and the glory of creation, compared with the wealth of God, are extreme and abject poverty.

Extreme | Glory | God | Poverty | Riches | Wealth | World | Riches |

Robert Ingersoll, fully Robert Green "Bob" Ingersoll

Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. It is easy for the weak to be gentle, most people can bear adversity. Bit if you wish to know what a man really is, give him power. This is the supreme test. It is the glory of Lincoln that, having almost absolute power, he never abused it, except under the side of mercy.

Absolute | Adversity | Character | Glory | Man | Mercy | Nothing | People | Power |

Philip Sidney, fully Sir Philip Sidney

The glory and increase of wisdom stands in exercising it.

Glory | Wisdom |

Sophocles NULL

It is only great souls that know how much glory there is in being good.

Glory | Good |

Philip Sidney, fully Sir Philip Sidney

To be ambitious of true honor and of the real glory and perfection of our nature is the very principle and incentive of virtue; but to be ambitious of titles, place, ceremonial respects, and civil pageantry, is as vain and little as the things are which we court.

Glory | Honor | Little | Nature | Perfection | Virtue | Virtue |

Talmud or The Talmud NULL

The glory of wisdom is in humility.

Glory | Humility | Wisdom |

Thucydides NULL

To be an object of hatred and aversion to their contemporaries has been the usual fate of all those whose merit has raised them above the common level. The man who submits to the shafts of envy for the sake of noble objects pursues a judicious course for his own lasting fame. Hatred dies with its object, while merit soon breaks forth in full splendor, and his glory is handed down to posterity in never-dying strains.

Envy | Fame | Fate | Glory | Man | Merit | Object | Posterity | Fate |

William Faulkner, fully William Cuthbert Faulkner

I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. The poet’s, the writer’s duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. The poet’s voice need not merely be the record of man; it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail.

Compassion | Courage | Duty | Endurance | Glory | Heart | Man | Need | Past | Pity | Sacrifice | Soul | Spirit | Will | Privilege |

Charles Schwab, fully Charles R. "Chuck" Schwab

Business must be profitable if it is to continue to succeed, but the glory of business is to make it so successful that it may do things that are great chiefly because they ought to be done.

Business | Glory | Business |

Shneur Zalman of Liadi

The era of Moshiach is the fulfillment and culmination of the creation of the world, for which purpose it was originally created. Something of this revelation has been experienced once before on earth, at the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai [when] "To you it has been shown, to know that the L-rd is G‑d; there is none else beside Him" (Deuteronomy 4:35). G‑dliness was then perceived with physical vision.... Subsquently, however, sin coarsened both them and the world - until the era of Moshiach, when the physicality of the body and the world will be refined, and we will be able to apprehend the revealed Divine light which will shine forth to Israel by means of the Torah.... "The glory of G‑d will be revealed; and all flesh will see that the mouth of G‑d has spoken" (Isaiah 40:5)... This all depends on our deeds and labor throughout the duration of the galut... When a person does a mitzvah, he draws down a flow of Divine light into the world, to be suffused and integrated into the material reality.

Body | Deeds | Era | Fulfillment | Giving | Glory | Labor | Light | Means | Purpose | Purpose | Revelation | Sin | Will | World | Deeds | Torah |

Ella Wheeler Wilcox

Let there be many windows to your soul, that all the glory of the world may beautify it.

Glory | World |

Elizabeth Klarer

Akon says to Elizabeth: “The cradle of mankind, Venus, remained shrouded and bereft of life after the Pleistocene cycle of solar expansion, her fruitful aeons of fertility at an end, her vast warm seas that nurtured our beginning, dried out and barren. But her glory still remains as a reality in the electric mirage, perfected by her progeny, who were compelled to move from her protective surface, out into the far reaches of space to propagate their species on the surface of an alien planet called Earth, where we adapted to a different time-speed on a younger planet. Laying claim to Earth as a host to life, we continued to perfect our spaceships in rediness for the time when we would have to leave this solar system prior to another wave of mass extinctions from the star of this system.”

Earth | Glory | Life | Life | Reality | Space | System | Time |

Eugène Delacroix, fully Ferdinand Victor Eugène Delacroix

Of late, men seem to have been possessed by an incomprehensible impulse to strip themselves of everything with which nature has endowed them in order to make them superior to the beasts of burden. A philosopher is a gentleman who sits down four times a day to the best meals he can possibly obtain, and who considers that virtue, glory and noble sentiments should be indulged in only when they do not interfere with those four indispensable functions and all the rest of his little personal comforts. At this rate, a mule is a better philosopher by far, because in addition to all this he puts up with blows and hardship without complaint.

Better | Day | Glory | Impulse | Indispensable | Little | Men | Nature | Order | Rest | Hardship |