Related Quotes
All quotes about:
memories mind firsts
Charles Caleb Colton Of all the faculties of the mind, memory is the first that flourishes, and the first that dies.
memories book reader
Charles Caleb Colton Many books owe their success to the good memories of their authors and the bad memories of their readers.
memories teaching should-have
Charles Caleb Colton All preceptors should have that kind of genius described by Tacitus, "equal to their business, but not above it;" a patient industry, with competent erudition; a mind depending more on its correctness than its originality, and on its memory rather than on its invention.
memories dictator amnesia
Charles Stross Where would dictators be without our compliant amnesia? Make the collective lose its memory, you can conceal anything.
memories liberty might
Charles Stross If I forget, then it might as well never have happened. Memory is liberty.
memories heart passion
Charles Spurgeon Oh, to have “the word of Christ” always dwelling inside of us;-in the memory, never forgotten; in the heart, always loved; in the understanding, really grasped; with all the powers and passions of the mind fully submitted to its control!
memories past reality
Alan Watts We are living in a culture entirely hypnotized by the illusion of time, in which the so-called present moment is felt as nothing but an infinitesimal hairline between a causative past and an absorbingly important future. We have no present. Our consciousness is almost completely preoccupied with memory and expectation. We do not realize that there never was, is, nor will be any other experience than present experience. We are therefore out of touch with reality.
memories dark childhood
Alan Moore Memory's so treacherous. One moment you're lost in a carnival of delights with poignant childhood aromas, the flashing neon on puberty, all that sentimental candyfloss The next, it leads you somewhere you don't want to go.. Somewhere dark and cold, filled with the damp ambiguous shapes of things you'd hoped were forgotten.
sadness faces brightness
Charles Dickens Some women's faces are, in their brightness, a prophecy; and some, in their sadness, a history.
sadness night years
Charles Spurgeon God alone can do what seems impossible. This is the promise of his grace: 'I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten' (Joel 2:25). God can give back all those years of sorrow, and you will be the better for them. God will grind sunlight out of your black nights. In the oven of affliction, grace will prepare the bread of delight. Someday you will thank God for all your sadness.
sadness hands all-alone
Al Stewart You reach out your hand, but you're all alone, in those time passages.
sadness mind want
Akhenaton What is the source of sadness, but feebleness of the mind? What giveth it power but the want of reason? Rouse thyself to the combat, and she quitteth the field before thou strikest.
sadness
Deborah Harkness And happiness is always louder than sadness.
sadness humility thinking
C. S. Lewis My own idea, for what it is worth, is that all sadness which is not either arising from the repentance of a concrete sin and hastening towards concrete amendment or restitution, or else arising from pity and hastening to active assistance, is simply bad; and I think we all sin by needlessly disobeying the apostolic injunction to 'rejoice' as much as by anything else. Humility, after the first shock, is a cheerful virtue.
sadness being-funny
Charlie Chaplin What a sad business is being funny!
sadness sunshine darkness
Bill Withers Ain't no sunshine when she's gone, only darkness every day.
sadness tantrums
Byron Katie All sadness is a tantrum.
intelligent men thinking
Alan Watts But, as Douglas E Harding has pointed out, we tend to think of this planet as a life-infested rock, which is as absurd as thinking of the human body as a cell infested skeleton. Surely all forms of life, including man, must be understood as "symptoms" of the earth, the solar system, and the galaxy in which case we cannot escape the conclusion that the galaxy is intelligent.
intelligent people creative
Akio Morita Once you have a staff of prepared, intelligent, and energetic people, the next step is to motivate them to be creative.
intelligent perception-of-beauty judgement
David Hume There has been a controversy started of late, much better worth examination, concerning the general foundation of Morals; whether they be derived from Reason, or from Sentiment; whether we attain the knowledge of them by a chain of argument and induction, or by an immediate feeling and finer internal sense; whether, like all sound judgement of truth and falsehood, they should be the same to every rational intelligent being; or whether, like the perception of beauty and deformity, they be founded entirely on the particular fabric and constitution of the human species.
intelligent skills rude
David Hume Everything is sold to skill and labor; and where nature furnishes the materials, they are still rude and unfinished, till industry, ever active and intelligent, refines them from their brute state, and fits them for human use and convenience.
intelligent thinking important
Benedict Cumberbatch Even in cerebral roles that are seemingly intelligent and nothing else, I think it's so important to wrap your characterization in a physical form as well.
intelligent worry behaviour
Benedict Cumberbatch 'Sherlock' fans are, by and large, an intelligent breed, so they've gone through my back catalogue and got what I've done, why and how I've done it. There is some obsessive behaviour, but I worry for them rather than me.
intelligent hands political
Frederic Bastiat I find it hard to understand why those who demand Unitary Education by the State do not also demand a Unitary Press by the State... Either the State is infallible, in which case we could not do better than to submit to it the entire domain of intelligent thought, or it is not, in which case it is no more rational to hand over education to it than the press.
intelligent bird slaughterhouse-five
Kurt Vonnegut It is so short and jumbled and jangled, Sam, because there is nothing intelligent to say about a massacre. Everybody is supposed to be dead, to never say anything or want anything ever again. Everything is supposed to be very quiet after a massacre, and it always is, except for the birds. And what do the birds say? All there is to say about a massacre, things like "Poo-tee-weet?
intelligent laughing grace
C. S. Lewis Giant Wimbleweather burst into one of those not very intelligent laughs to which the nicer sort of Giants are so liable. He checked himself at once and looked as grace as a turnip by the time Reepicheep discovered where the noise came from.