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

Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt

There are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, its melancholy and its charm.

Achievement | Business | Duty | Fighting | Kill | Life | Life | Pleasure | Sorrow | Success | Worth | Business | Happiness |

Théophile Gautier, fully Pierre Jules Théophile Gautier, aka Le Bon Theo

White men should exhibit the same insensibility to moral tortures that red men do to physical torments.

Heart | Love | Man | Pleasure | Satiety | Self |

Thomas Boston

No mother is so tender of the fruit of her womb as God is of his children,

Bible | Heart | Pleasure | Reading | Bible |

Thomas Dekker

Few for heaven would care, should they be ever happy.

Health | Little | Pleasure | Taste |

Thomas Chalmers

That even among the most hackneyed and most hardened of malefactors there is still about them a softer part which will give way to the demonstrations of tenderness; that this one ingredient of a better character is still found to survive the dissipation of all the others, that, fallen as a brother may be from the moralities which at one time adorned him, the manifested good will of his fellow-man still carries a charm and an influence along with it; and that, therefore, there lies in this an operation which, as no poverty can vitiate, so no depravity can extinguish.

Chance | Conscience | Indulgence | Law | Mind | Object | Pleasure | Present | Will | Guilty |

Thomas Hobbes

A beauty is a promise of happiness.

Earth | Enough | Heaven | Life | Life | Pleasure | Think |

Thomas Hardy

Pessimism is, in brief, playing the sure game. You cannot lose at it; you may gain. It is the only view of life in which you can never be disappointed. Having reckoned what to do in the worst possible circumstances, when better arise, as they may, life becomes child's play.

Pleasure |

Thomas Hobbes

They that approve a private opinion, call it opinion; but they that dislike it, heresy; and yet heresy signifies no more than private opinion

Action | Beginning | Consequences | Enough | Events | Life | Life | Man | Pleasure | Providence | Will |

Thomas Hobbes

Every man calleth that which pleaseth, and is delightful to himself, good; and that evil which displeaseth him.

Envy | Fortune | Grief | Hope | Imagination | Pleasure | Self | Time |

Thomas Hobbes

Sudden glory is the passion which maketh those grimaces called laughter.

Men | Pleasure | Truth |

Thomas Jefferson

Democracy is 51% of the people taking away the rights of the other 49%.

Indignation | Pleasure |

Thomas Jefferson

I had for a long time ceased to read newspapers, or pay any attention to public affairs, confident they were in good hands, and content to be a passenger in our bark to the shore from which I am not distant. But this momentous question, like a firebell in the night, awakened and filled me with terror. I considered it at once as the knell of the Union.

Little | Pain | Pleasure |

Thomas Jefferson

An individual, thinking himself injured, makes more noise than a State.

Man | Pleasure | Power |

Thomas Jefferson

Do you want to know who you are? Don't ask. Act! Action will delineate and define you.

Art | Life | Life | Pleasure | Society | Friendship | Society | Art |

Thomas Jefferson

I believe that justice is instinct and innate, that the moral sense is as much a part of our constitution as that of feeling, seeing, or hearing; as a wise Creator must have seen to be necessary in an animal destined to live in society.

Good | Mind | Pleasure |

Thomas Jefferson

I can never join Calvin in addressing his god. He was indeed an Atheist, which I can never be; or rather his religion was Daemonism. If ever man worshipped a false god, he did. The being described in his 5 points is not the God whom you and I acknowledge and adore, the Creator and benevolent governor of the world; but a daemon of malignant spirit. It would be more pardonable to believe in no god at all, than to blaspheme him by the atrocious attributes of Calvin. Indeed I think that every Christian sect gives a great handle to Atheism by their general dogma that, without a revelation, there would not be sufficient proof of the being of a god.

Good | Mind | Pleasure |

Thomas Jefferson

Locke denies toleration to those who entertain opinions contrary to those moral rules necessary for the preservation of society; as for instance, that faith is not to be kept with those of another persuasion… that dominion is founded in grace, or who will not own and teach the duty of tolerating all men in matters of religion, or who deny the existence of a god (it was a great thing to go so far—as he himself says of the parliament who framed the act of toleration… He says 'neither Pagan nor Mahomedan nor Jew ought to be excluded from the civil rights of the Commonwealth because of his religion.' Shall we suffer a Pagan to deal with us and not suffer him to pray to his god? Why have Christians been distinguished above all people who have ever lived, for persecutions? Is it because it is the genius of their religion? No, it’s genius is the reverse. It is the refusing toleration to those of a different opinion which has produced all the bustles and wars on account of religion. It was the misfortune of mankind that during the darker centuries the Christian priests following their ambition and avarice combining with the magistrate to divide the spoils of the people, could establish the notion that schismatics might be ousted of their possessions and destroyed. This notion we have not yet cleared ourselves from.

Health | Individual | Pleasure | Happiness |

Thomas Jefferson

It must be acknowledged that the term republic is of very vague application in every language... Were I to assign to this term a precise and definite idea, I would say purely and simply it means a government by its citizens in mass, acting directly and personally according to rules established by the majority; and that every other government is more or less republican in proportion as it has in its composition more or less of this ingredient of direct action of the citizens. Such a government is evidently restrained to very narrow limits of space and population. I doubt if it would be practicable beyond the extent of a New England township.

Government | Peace | Pleasure | Friendship | Government |

Thomas Mann, fully Paul Thomas Mann

Culture and possessions, there is the bourgeoisie for you.

Cruelty | Patience | Pleasure | Cruelty |

Thomas Merton

Do the one task which God has imposed upon us in the world today. That task is to work for total abolition of war. Living is the constant adjustment of thought to life and life to thought in such a way that we are always growing, always experiencing new things in the old and old things in the new. Thus life is always new.

Joy | Pleasure | Rest |