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Quotes
to Remember
Author: Samuel Metz
Date: 01/23/07
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Quotes are deceptive. Taken out of
context, they may imply something totally different from the original
intent. Sometimes we mistake wit, irony, or wordplay for wisdom. The
rhythm and rhyme of a phrase lend a false sense of truth.
Still, quotes provoke thought. They
present poignantly something it might us many paragraphs to express.
Sometimes we simply respond, "I wish I had said that."
With these caveats, here are favorites
of mine taken from several years of reading. They cover many topics. May
you enjoy and use them in good health.
Mario Puzo (Source: Godfather
Legacy by Harlan Lebo, p 3)
"I was 45 & tired of being an
artist...it was time to grow up & sell out."
Attributed to Stalin (Stalin
edited by TH Rigby, p167)
"There is nothing sweeter in life
than to bide the proper moment for revenge, to insert the knife, to turn
it around, and to go home for a good night's sleep."
Harry Truman (The
Quotable Harry S Truman edited by T.S. Settel)
"It's almost impossible for a man
to be President of the
United States
without learning something."
"A President may dismiss the abuse
of scoundrels, but to be denounced by honest men, honestly outraged, is
a test of greatness that none but strongest men can survive."
William R. Davie (Miracle
at
Philadelphia
by Catherine Drinker Bowen)
"It is much easier to alarm people
than inform them."
Benjamin Franklin (Miracle
at
Philadelphia
by Catherine Drinker Bowen)
"To get the bad customs of a
country changed, and new ones, though better, introduced, it is
necessary first to remove the prejudices of the people, enlighten their
ignorance, and convince them that their interests will be promoted by
the proposed changes; and this is not the work of a day."
J.M. Thompson (Robespierre &
the French Revolution, on Maximilien Robespierre, p33, 53)
"He was feared more than admired,
& admired more than liked."
"The real problem before the
legislator is to govern without oppression."
Richard Hofstadter (American
Political Thought, p 149)
"...a strategy dictated by absolute
moral intransigence, however defensible in logic, was not so effective
in reality..."
John Adams (John
Adams by McCullough, p 373)
"A man must be sensible of the
errors of the people & upon his guard against them & must run
the risk of their displeasure sometimes or he will never do them any
good in the long run"
Ben Franklin (Benjamin
Franklin by Carl van Doren, p. 695)
[ On John Adams] "He means well for
his country, is always an honest man, often a wise one, but sometimes,
and in some things, absolutely out of his senses."
Alexander Hamilton (Alexander
Hamilton by Robert Chernow, p 171)
"The inquiry constantly is what
will PLEASE, not what will BENEFIT the people."
Steven D. Goldfien, MD (American
Society of Anesthesiologists Newsletter, July 2005 p 32)
[Referring to a period in Chinese
history with application to 2005] "...philosophical differences
over right and wrong coupled with the controversial behavior of its
leader have led to the moralization of politics; this in turn has led to
gridlock in the government. Instead of viewing opposition as reasoned
disagreement among reasonable people, political factions, intoxicated
with the righteousness of their own beliefs, now view political rivals
as evil people with evil ideas."
Fritz Stern (Foreign
Affairs 2005 (May/June); 84 (#3):14 p16)
"...civic passivity & willed
blindness were necessary preconditions for the triumph of National
Socialism..."
Jimmy Carter (Presidential farewell
address, 1981)
"The national interest is not
always the sum of all our single or special interests."
Cardinal Richelieu ( ~1624)
"If you give me six lines written
by the most honest man, I will find something in them to hang him"
Arthur Cebrowski, USN (New York
Times Magazine The fighting next time, by Bill Keller Mar 10, 2002, p 32)
"Historically, victors don't learn
nearly as well as losers"
Pastor Martin Niemoller (1930s)
"In
Germany
they first came for the Communists & I didn't speak up because I
wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews & I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists & I
didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for
the Catholics and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then
they came for me and by that time no one was left to speak up."
Albert Camus (Preface to Caligula)
"Yet I have little regard for an
art that deliberately aims to shock because it is unable to
convince."
Harry S Truman (in
Beinhart
,
New York
Times Magazine 30 April 2006)
"We all have to recognize, no
matter how great our strength, that we must deny ourselves the license
to do always as we please."
Bernard Lewis (in Faoud Ajami, In
appreciation - a sage in Christendom)
"Make no mistake, those who are
unwilling to confront the past will be unable to understand the present
and unfit to face the future."
John Severinghaus, MD
"To every problem, there is a
solution: neat, plausible, & wrong."
Bertolt Brecht (Writing
the Truth - Five Difficulties, appendix to Black Cat edition of Galileo)
"That which is sure is not sure. As
things are, they shall not remain."
"Many of the persecuted lose the
capacity for seeing their own mistakes."
"The man who does not know the
truth expresses himself in lofty, general, and imprecise terms."
"But the truth cannot merely be
written. It must be written for someone, someone who can do something
with it."
George Bernard Shaw (Man
of Destiny, quoted in The
Story of English, by McCrum)
"There is nothing so bad or so good
that you will not find an Englishman doing it; but you will never find
an Englishman in the wrong. He does everything on principle. He fights
you on patriotic principles; he robs you on business principles; he
enslaves you on imperial principles."
Samuel Metz
"The
United States
tolerates all religions that tolerate all religions."
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (Atlantic
Monthly, Nov 1973)
Quote: (Speaking about Nixon) "I
would argue that what the country needs today is a little serious
disrespect for the office of the presidency; a refusal to give any more
weight to a president's words than the intelligence of the utterance, if
spoken by anyone, would command; an understanding of the point made so
aptly by Montaigne: 'Sits he on never so high a throne, a man stills
sits on his bottom.'"
Lee Hamilton (ex-Congressman, Indiana
1965-1999)
"At the end of the day, the
responsibility we have placed on our politicians is to make the country
work - not to satisfy their own, partisan outlooks on the world."
Peter Weiss (Marat/Sade,
scene 25, Corday's second visit, Sade speaks)
That's
how it is, Marat
That's
how she sees your revolution
They
have toothache
and
their teeth should be pulled
Their
soup's burnt
They
shout for better soup
A
woman finds her husband too short
she
wants a taller one
A
man finds his wife too skinny
he
wants a plumper one
A
man's shoes pinch
but
his neighbour's shoes fit comfortably
A
poet runs out of poetry
and
desperately gropes for new images
For
hours an angler casts his line
why
aren't the fish biting
And
so they join the Revolution
thinking
the Revolution will give them everything
A
fish
A
poem
A
new pair of shoes
A
new wife
A
new husband
and
the best soup in the world
So
they storm all the citadels
and
there they are
and
everything is just the same
No
fish biting
Verses
botched
Shoes
pinching
A
worn and stinking partner in bed
and
the soup burnt
and
all that heroism
which
drove us down to the sewers
Well
we can talk about it to our grandchildren
If
we have grandchildren"
Walter Van
Tilburg
Clark
(The Ox Bow Incident)
"Night's like a room. It makes the
little things in your head too important."
"I couldn't help thinking about
what Davies had said on getting angry enough not to be scared when you
knew you were wrong."
Winston Churchill (Wicked
Wit edited by Enright)
"It is a fine thing to be honest,
but it is also important to be right."
John LeCarre (Introduction to The
Philby Conspiracy, p 4)
"From his father, Kim [Philby]
acquired ... the Establishment's easy trick of rationalising selfish
decisions and dressing them in the clothes of a higher cause;"
"But let us be fair in this
respect: no secret service can be more clear-headed than its government.
Everything rests upon a clear-cut statement of requirements by those who
formulate the nation's policy. If the Secret Service is properly used,
it is a fighting arm, an extension of Government policy. But in times of
dismay and national corruption it sinks swiftly into intrigue, slovenly
security and inter-departmental rivalry."
H.C. Kee (Jesus
in History, p252)
"We must constantly remind
ourselves that devotion to fact is a relatively modern dimension of
human thought..."
Edward R. Morrow (Quoted by
I.
Ozernoy in the Atlantic Monthly,
November 2006 p 30)
[Referring to damage control & his
role as chief of USIA 1961] "If they want me in on the crash
landings, I better damn well be in on the takeoffs."
Donald Calne, MD, neurologist (in Marketing
that Matters by Chip Conley and Eric Friedenwald-Fishman, p112)
"The essential difference between
emotion & reason is that emotion leads to action while reason leads
to conclusion."
Henry Chadwick (The
Early Christian Church, p107)
"Accordingly, Origen concludes that
the prime purpose of scripture is to convey spiritual truth, and that
the narrative of historical events is secondary to this."
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