Davis Gates > Davis's Quotes

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  • #1
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Any man can make mistakes, but only an idiot persists in his error”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #2
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Knowledge which is divorced from justice may be called cunning rather than wisdom.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #3
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “The function of wisdom is to discriminate between good and evil.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #4
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “The man who backbites an absent friend, nay, who does not stand up for him when another blames him, the man who angles for bursts of laughter and for the repute of a wit, who can invent what he never saw, who cannot keep a secret -- that man is black at heart: mark and avoid him.”
    Cicero

  • #5
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Nemo enim est tam senex qui se annum non putet posse vivere.

    (No one is so old as to think that he cannot live one more year.)”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero, On Old Age, On Friendship & On Divination
    tags: age

  • #6
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “When you wish to instruct, be brief; that men's [children's] minds take in quickly what you say, learn its lesson, and retain it faithfully. Every word that is unnecessary only pours over the side of a brimming mind.”
    Cicero

  • #7
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “It is not by muscle, speed, or physical dexterity that great things are achieved, but by reflection, force of character, and judgment.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #8
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “To study philosophy is nothing but to prepare one’s self to die.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #9
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Politicians are not born; they are excreted.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #10
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “For books are more than books, they are the life, the very heart and core of ages past, the reason why men worked and died, the essence and quintessence of their lives.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #11
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. For what is the worth of human life, unless it is woven into the life of our ancestors by the records of history?”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #12
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Friendship improves happiness, and abates misery, by doubling our joys, and dividing our grief”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #13
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Never injure a friend, even in jest.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #14
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Ability without honor is useless.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #15
    Marcus Tullius Cicero
    “Freedom is participation in power.”
    Marcus Tullius Cicero

  • #16
    Seneca
    “Let no one,' I say, 'who will make me no worthy return for such a loss rob me of a single day; let my mind be fixed upon itself, let it cultivate itself, let it busy itself with nothing outside, nothing that looks towards an umpire; let it love the tranquillity that is remote from public and private concern.”
    Seneca

  • #17
    Victor Hugo
    “To love another person is to see the face of God.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #18
    Victor Hugo
    “Not being heard is no reason for silence.”
    Hugo, Victor, Les Misérables

  • #19
    Victor Hugo
    “You ask me what forces me to speak? a strange thing; my conscience.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #20
    Victor Hugo
    “Teach the ignorant as much as you can; society is culpable in not providing a free education for all and it must answer for the night which it produces. If the soul is left in darkness sins will be committed. The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but he who causes the darkness.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #21
    Victor Hugo
    “A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is visible labor and there is invisible labor.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #22
    Victor Hugo
    “The pupil dilates in darkness and in the end finds light, just as the soul dilates in misfortune and in the end finds God.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #23
    Victor Hugo
    “For there are many great deeds done in the small struggles of life.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #24
    Victor Hugo
    “Have no fear of robbers or murderers. They are external dangers, petty dangers. We should fear ourselves. Prejudices are the real robbers; vices the real murderers. The great dangers are within us. Why worry about what threatens our heads or our purses? Let us think instead of what threatens our souls.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

  • #25
    Victor Hugo
    “Algebra applies to the clouds, the radiance of the star benefits the rose--no thinker would dare to say that the perfume of the hawthorn is useless to the constellations. Who could ever calculate the path of a molecule? How do we know that the creations of worlds are not determined by falling grains of sand? Who can understand the reciprocal ebb and flow of the infinitely great and the infinitely small, the echoing of causes in the abyss of being and the avalanches of creation? A mite has value; the small is great, the great is small. All is balanced in necessity; frightening vision for the mind. There are marvelous relations between beings and things, in this inexhaustible whole, from sun to grub, there is no scorn, each needs the other. Light does not carry terrestrial perfumes into the azure depths without knowing what it does with them; night distributes the stellar essence to the sleeping plants. Every bird that flies has the thread of the infinite in its claw. Germination includes the hatching of a meteor and the tap of a swallow's beak breaking the egg, and it guides the birth of the earthworm, and the advent of Socrates. Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has a greater view? Choose. A bit of mold is a pleiad of flowers; a nebula is an anthill of stars. The same promiscuity, and still more wonderful, between the things of the intellect and material things. Elements and principles are mingled, combined, espoused, multiplied one by another, to the point that the material world, and the moral world are brought into the same light. Phenomena are perpetually folded back on themselves. In the vast cosmic changes, universal life comes and goes in unknown quantities, rolling everything up in the invisible mystery of the emanations, using everything, losing no dream from any single sleep, sowing a microscopic animal here, crumbling a star there, oscillating and gyrating, making a force of light, and an element of thought, disseminated and indivisible dissolving all, that geometric point, the self; reducing everything to the soul-atom; making everything blossom into God; entangling from the highest to the lowest, all activities in the obscurity of a dizzying mechanism, linking the flight of an insect to the movement of the earth, subordinating--who knows, if only by the identity of the law--the evolutions of the comet in the firmament to the circling of the protozoa in the drop of water. A machine made of mind. Enormous gearing, whose first motor is the gnat, and whose last is the zodiac.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables



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