“The first man gets the oyster, the second man gets the shell.”
Andrew Carnegie (widely quoted online for instance at https://www.forbes.com/quotes/470/)
“The first man gets the oyster, the second man gets the shell.”
Andrew Carnegie (widely quoted online for instance at https://www.forbes.com/quotes/470/)
“The Declaration of Independence dogmatically bases all rights on the fact that God created all men equal; and it is right; for if they were not created equal, they were certainly evolved unequal. There is no basis for democracy except in a dogma about the divine origin of man.”
G.K. Chesterton What I Saw In America
“Unless a louse could really leap, believe you me, She wouldn’t go walking on that weave, it was so threadbare.”
William Langland Piers Plowman (edited, introduced and annotated by Elizabeth D. Kirk and Judith H. Anderson) Passus V ll. 196-97 (describing Covetousness’ shabby appearance)
“My life has been a series of enthusiasms.”
David Bowie in a TV interview I watched on September 24, 1999 (wording may not be exact)
“Together at one side lay a great company of men-at-arms from Semblidac and near them, but apart, horse-archers of Kaheti. Who loves a stranger?”
Wolfram von Eschenbach Parzival
“Revenge really does feel good… The [then just-published] Swiss brain-imaging study reveals how we draw satisfaction from teaching strangers a lesson when they have behaved badly... As the journal Science puts it, the study reveals what goes on in Dirty Harry’s head when ‘he succinctly informs a norm violator that he anticipates deriving satisfaction from inflicting altruistic punishment.’”
Ottawa Citizen August 27, 2004
“Harry Emerson Fosdick says in his book, The Power to See it Through, ‘There is a Scandinavian saying which some of us might well take as a rallying cry for our lives: “The north wind made the Vikings.” Wherever did we get the idea that secure and pleasant living, the absence of difficulty, and the comfort of ease, ever of themselves made people either good or happy? Upon the contrary, people who pity themselves go on pitying themselves even when they are laid softly on a cushion, but always in history character and happiness have come to people in all sorts of circumstances, good, bad, and different, when they shouldered their personal responsibility. So, repeatedly the north wind has made the Vikings.’”
Dale Carnegie How to Stop Worrying and Start Living
“What comes first in intention comes last in execution.”
St. Thomas Aquinas, quoted by Pierre Trudeau in Thomas Axworthy and Pierre Trudeau, eds., Towards a Just Society