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

Aristotle NULL

Teachers, who educate children, deserve more honor than parents who merely give them birth; for the latter provided mere life, while the former ensure a good life.

Birth | Children | Good | Honor | Life | Life | Parents |

Author Unknown NULL

Anything which parents have not learned from experience they can now learn from their children.

Children | Experience | Parents | Learn |

Bertrand Russell, fully Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell

There is no excuse for deceiving children. And when, as must happen in conventional families, they find that their parents have lied, they lose confidence in them and feel justified in lying to them.

Children | Confidence | Lying | Parents |

Elbert Green Hubbard

Where parents do too much for their children, the children will not do much for themselves.

Children | Parents | Will |

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

I have no sympathy with the old idea that children owe such immense gratitude to their parents that they can never fulfill their obligations to them. I think the obligation is all on the other side. Parents can never do too much for their children to repay them for the injustice of having brought them into the world, unless they have insured them high moral and intellectual gifts, fine physical health, and enough money and education to render life something more than one careless struggle for necessaries.

Children | Education | Enough | Gratitude | Health | Injustice | Injustice | Life | Life | Money | Obligation | Parents | Struggle | Sympathy | World | Old | Think |

Francis Bacon

The joys of parents are secret; and so are their griefs and fears. They cannot utter the one; nor they will not utter the other. Children sweeten labors; but they make misfortunes more bitter. They increase the cares of life; but they mitigate the remembrance of death. The perpetuity by generation is common to beasts; but memory, merit, and noble works are proper to men.

Children | Death | Life | Life | Memory | Men | Merit | Parents | Will |

Francis Bacon

Happy are the families where the government of parents is the reign of affection, and obedience of the children the submission of love.

Children | Government | Happy | Love | Obedience | Parents | Submission | Government |

Francis Bacon

The joys of parents are secret, and so are their griefs and fears; they cannot utter the one, nor they will not utter the other. children sweeten labors, but they make misfortunes more bitter; increase the cares of life, but they mitigate the remembrance of death.

Children | Death | Life | Life | Parents | Will |

Georg Hegel, fully Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

The relation of love between husband and wife is in itself not objective, because even if their feeling is their substantial unity, still this unity has no objectivity. Such objectivity parents first acquire in their children, in whom they can see objectified the entirety of their union.

Children | Husband | Love | Objectivity | Parents | Unity | Wife |

George Bernard Shaw

The best brought-up children are those who have seen their parents as they are. Hypocrisy is not the parents first duty.

Children | Duty | Hypocrisy | Parents |

Herbert Spencer

It is the function of parents to see that their children habitually experience the true consequences of their conduct.

Children | Conduct | Consequences | Experience | Parents |

Henry Ward Beecher

We never know the love of our parents for us till we have become parents.

Love | Parents |

Henry Ward Beecher

Let parents who hate their offspring rear them to hate labor, and to inherit riches; an before long they will be stung by every vice, racked by its poison, and damned by its penalty.

Hate | Labor | Parents | Riches | Will |

Hosea Ballou

Education commences at the mother's knee, and every word spoken in the hearing of little children tends toward the formation of character. Let parents always bear this in mind.

Character | Children | Education | Little | Mind | Mother | Parents |

John Milton

The end... of learning is to repair the ruins of our first parents by regaining to know God aright, and out of that knowledge to love him, to imitate him, to be like him, as we may the nearest by possessing our souls of true virtue, which being united to the heavenly grace of faith, makes up the highest perfection.

Faith | God | Grace | Knowledge | Learning | Love | Parents | Perfection | Virtue | Virtue | God |

Joseph Addison

Of all hardness of heart there is none so inexcusable as that of parents toward their children. An obstinate, inflexible, unforgiving temper is odious upon all occasions; but here it is unnatural.

Children | Heart | Parents | Temper |

M. Scott Peck, fully Morgan Scott Peck

It is not so much what our parents say that determines our world view as it is the unique world they create for us by their behavior.

Behavior | Parents | Unique | World |

Louisa May Alcott

My parents never bound us to any church but taught us that the love of goodness was the love of God, the cheerful doing of duty made life happy, and that the love of one’s neighbor in its widest sense was the best help for oneself. Their lives showed us how lovely this simple faith was, how much honor, gratitude and affection it brought them, and what a sweet memory they left behind.

Church | Duty | Faith | God | Gratitude | Happy | Honor | Life | Life | Love | Memory | Parents | Sense |

M. Scott Peck, fully Morgan Scott Peck

The time and the quality of the time that their parents devote to them indicate to children the degree to which they are valued by their parents.

Children | Parents | Time |

Marian Wright Edelman

Just because a child’s parents are poor or uneducated is no reason to deprive the child of basic human rights to health care, education, proper nutrition. Clearly we ignore the needs of black children, poor children, and handicapped children in the country.

Care | Children | Education | Health | Parents | Reason | Rights | Child |