Posts in Famous quotes
Words Worth Noting - October 22, 2021

“I have been through the depths of poverty and sickness. When people ask me what has kept me going through the troubles that come to all of us, I always reply: ‘I stood yesterday. I can stand today. And I will not permit myself to think about what might happen tomorrow.’ I have known want and struggle and anxiety and despair. I have always had to work beyond the limit of my strength. As I look back upon my life, I see it as a battlefield strewn with the wrecks of dead dreams and broken hopes and shattered illusions – a battle in which I always fought with the odds tremendously against me, and which has left me scarred and bruised and maimed and old before my time. Yet I have no pity for myself; no tears to shed over the past and gone sorrows; no envy for the women who have been spared all I have gone through. For I have lived. They only existed. I have drunk the cup of life down to its very dregs. They have only sipped the bubbles on top of it. I know things they will never know. I see things to which they are blind. It is only the women whose eyes have been washed clear with tears who get the broad vision that makes them little sisters to all the world. I have learned in the great University of Hard Knocks a philosophy that no woman who has had an easy life ever acquires. I have learned to live each day as it comes and not to borrow trouble by dreading the morrow.”

“’I Stood Yesterday. I Can Stand Today’ by Dorothea Dix in Dale Carnegie How to Stop Worrying and Start Living

Famous quotes, LifeJohn Robson
Words Worth Noting - October 19, 2021

“someone has pointed out that it is remarkable that we have a word for people who believe they are being persecuted when others around them do not think this is true, but we have no word for those who are in fact persecuting others without being aware of doing so.”

Ronald Macaulay The Social Art: Language and its Uses

Words Worth Noting - October 17, 2021

“The question is not whether the Catholic leadership is enlightened but whether Catholicism is true. A whole College of Cardinals filled with psychopathic tyrants provides no answer one way or the other to that question.”

Fr. Andrew Greeley quoted by William F. Buckley Jr. in National Review September 15, 1997