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  1. %@1@%%@AB@%Concise Columbia Dictionary of Quotations%@AE@%%@EH@%
  2.  
  3.  
  4.  
  5. %@1@%%@AS@%Absence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6. %@CR:ABSENCE         @%%@NL@%
  7. %@2@%See:%@QR:Absence@%%@NL@%
  8.      Grief: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          11b378@%%@NL@%
  9. %@NL@%
  10.      %@2@%Absence, hear thou my protestation%@NL@%
  11.      Against thy strength,%@NL@%
  12.      Distance and length.%@NL@%
  13. %@CR:ABSENCHoskins   @%%@NL@%
  14.                                                   John Hoskins (1566-1638)%@NL@%
  15.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17. %@NL@%
  18. %@NL@%
  19. %@2@%Absence diminishes minor passions and inflames great ones,%@EH@%
  20. as the wind douses a candle and fans a fire.%@NL@%
  21. %@CR:ABSENCLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  22.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  23.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  24. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25. %@NL@%
  26. %@NL@%
  27. %@2@%Judicious absence is a weapon.%@NL@%
  28. %@CR:ABSENCReade1    @%%@NL@%
  29.                                                  Charles Reade (1814-1884)%@NL@%
  30.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  31. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32. %@NL@%
  33. %@NL@%
  34. %@2@%Absence blots people out. We really have no absent friends.%@NL@%
  35. %@CR:ABSENCBowen2    @%%@NL@%
  36.                                                Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  37.                                                       Anglo-Irish novelist%@NL@%
  38. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39. %@NL@%
  40. %@NL@%
  41. %@2@%Presents, I often say, endear absents.%@NL@%
  42. %@CR:ABSENCLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  43.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  44.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  45. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46. %@NL@%
  47. %@NL@%
  48. %@2@%I was court-martialled in my absence, and sentenced to death%@EH@%
  49. in my absence, so I said they could shoot me in my absence.%@NL@%
  50. %@CR:ABSENCBehan     @%%@NL@%
  51.                                                  Brendan Behan (1923-1964)%@NL@%
  52.                                                           Irish playwright%@NL@%
  53. %@AS@%                                                                   Absence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54. %@NL@%
  55. %@NL@%
  56. %@NL@%
  57. %@1@%%@AS@%Absurdity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  58. %@CR:ABSURDITY       @%%@NL@%
  59. %@2@%See:%@QR:Absurdity@%%@NL@%
  60.      Imitation: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          147c7a@%%@NL@%
  61. %@NL@%
  62. %@2@%It is only one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.%@NL@%
  63. %@CR:ABSURDNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  64.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  65.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  66.                                                 of his retreat from Moscow%@NL@%
  67. %@AS@%                                                                 Absurdity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  68. %@NL@%
  69. %@NL@%
  70. %@2@%Only man has dignity; only man, therefore, can be funny.%@NL@%
  71. %@CR:ABSURDKnox1     @%%@NL@%
  72.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  73.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  74. %@AS@%                                                                 Absurdity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  75. %@NL@%
  76. %@NL@%
  77. %@2@%It is not funny that anything else should fall down; only that%@EH@%
  78. a man should fall down  . . .  Why do we laugh? Because it is a gravely
  79. religious matter: it is the fall of man. Only man can be absurd:
  80. for only man can be dignified.%@NL@%
  81. %@CR:ABSURDChesterton@%%@NL@%
  82.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  83.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  84. %@AS@%                                                                 Absurdity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  85. %@NL@%
  86. %@NL@%
  87. %@2@%There are few moments in a man's existence when he experiences%@EH@%
  88. so much ludicrous distress, or meets with so little charitable
  89. commiseration, as when he is in pursuit of his own hat.%@NL@%
  90. %@CR:ABSURDDickens   @%%@NL@%
  91.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  92.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  93. %@AS@%                                                                 Absurdity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  94. %@NL@%
  95. %@NL@%
  96. %@2@%Absurdity. A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with%@EH@%
  97. one's own opinion.%@NL@%
  98. %@CR:ABSURDBierce    @%%@NL@%
  99.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  100.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  101. %@AS@%                                                                 Absurdity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  102. %@NL@%
  103. %@NL@%
  104. %@NL@%
  105. %@1@%%@AS@%Abuse%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  106. %@CR:ABUSE           @%%@NL@%
  107. %@2@%See:%@QR:Abuse@%%@NL@%
  108.      Controversy: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           81344@%%@NL@%
  109.      %@AB@%Insults%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          151b3c@%%@NL@%
  110.      Praise: %@AB@%Steele%@AE@%%@BO:          1f9b3c@%%@NL@%
  111.      Swearing: %@AB@%Cohen%@AE@%%@BO:          2796a2@%%@NL@%
  112. %@NL@%
  113. %@2@%It seldom pays to be rude. It never pays to be only half-rude.%@NL@%
  114. %@CR:ABUSE Douglas   @%%@NL@%
  115.                                                 Norman Douglas (1868-1952)%@NL@%
  116.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  117. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  118. %@NL@%
  119. %@NL@%
  120. %@2@%Some guy hit my fender the other day, and I said unto him,%@EH@%
  121. "Be fruitful, and multiply." But not in those words.%@NL@%
  122. %@CR:ABUSE Allen4    @%%@NL@%
  123.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  124.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  125. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  126. %@NL@%
  127. %@NL@%
  128. %@2@%A man has no more right to say an uncivil thing to another%@EH@%
  129. man than he has to knock him down.%@NL@%
  130. %@CR:ABUSE Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  131.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  132.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  133. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  134. %@NL@%
  135. %@NL@%
  136. %@2@%There is more credit in being abused by fools than praised%@EH@%
  137. by rogues.%@NL@%
  138. %@CR:ABUSE Smith4    @%%@NL@%
  139.                                   F. E. Smith, Lord Birkenhead (1872-1930)%@NL@%
  140.                                    British Conservative politician, lawyer%@NL@%
  141. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  142. %@NL@%
  143. %@NL@%
  144. %@2@%Abuse is as great a mistake in controversy as panegyric in%@EH@%
  145. biography.%@NL@%
  146. %@CR:ABUSE Newman1   @%%@NL@%
  147.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  148.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  149. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  150. %@NL@%
  151. %@NL@%
  152. %@2@%I will name you the degrees. The first, the Retort Courteous;%@EH@%
  153. the second, the Quip Modest; the third, the Reply Churlish; the
  154. fourth, the Reproof Valiant; the fifth, the Countercheck Quarrelsome;
  155. the sixth, the Lie with Circumstance; the seventh, the Lie
  156. Direct.%@NL@%
  157. %@CR:ABUSE Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  158.                                                 Touchstone, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  159.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  160.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  161. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  162. %@NL@%
  163. %@NL@%
  164. %@2@%A fly, Sir, may sting a stately horse and make him wince; but%@EH@%
  165. one is but an insect, and the other is a horse still.%@NL@%
  166. %@CR:ABUSE Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  167.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  168.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  169. %@AS@%                                                                     Abuse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  170. %@NL@%
  171. %@NL@%
  172. %@NL@%
  173. %@1@%%@AS@%Accusation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  174. %@CR:ACCUSATION      @%%@NL@%
  175. %@2@%%@QR:Accusation@%Accuse. To affirm another's guilt or unworth; most commonly%@EH@%
  176. as a justification of ourselves for having wronged him.%@NL@%
  177. %@CR:ACCUSABierce    @%%@NL@%
  178.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  179.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  180. %@AS@%                                                                Accusation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  181. %@NL@%
  182. %@NL@%
  183. %@NL@%
  184. %@1@%%@AS@%Acquaintance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  185. %@CR:ACQUAINTANCE    @%%@NL@%
  186. %@2@%%@QR:Acquaintance@%I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not make a%@EH@%
  187. new acquaintance.%@NL@%
  188. %@CR:ACQUAIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  189.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  190.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  191. %@AS@%                                                              Acquaintance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  192. %@NL@%
  193. %@NL@%
  194. %@2@%Acquaintance. A person whom we know well enough to borrow from,%@EH@%
  195. but not well enough to lend to.%@NL@%
  196. %@CR:ACQUAIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  197.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  198.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  199. %@AS@%                                                              Acquaintance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  200. %@NL@%
  201. %@NL@%
  202. %@NL@%
  203. %@1@%%@AS@%Acting%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  204. %@CR:ACTING          @%%@NL@%
  205. %@2@%See:%@QR:Acting@%%@NL@%
  206.      Busts: %@AB@%Davis%@AE@%%@BO:           4f4fb@%%@NL@%
  207.      Drink: %@AB@%Burton%@AE@%%@BO:           b952e@%%@NL@%
  208. %@NL@%
  209. %@2@%Acting is a question of absorbing other people's personalities%@EH@%
  210. and adding some of your own experience.%@NL@%
  211. %@CR:ACTINGNewman3   @%%@NL@%
  212.                                                      Paul Newman (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  213.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  214. %@AS@%                                                                    Acting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  215. %@NL@%
  216. %@NL@%
  217. %@2@%Acting is the expression of a neurotic impulse. It's a bum's%@EH@%
  218. life. Quitting acting, that's the sign of maturity.%@NL@%
  219. %@CR:ACTINGBrando    @%%@NL@%
  220.                                                    Marlon Brando (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  221.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  222. %@AS@%                                                                    Acting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  223. %@NL@%
  224. %@NL@%
  225. %@2@%You spend all your life trying to do something they put people%@EH@%
  226. in asylums for.%@NL@%
  227. %@CR:ACTINGFonda     @%%@NL@%
  228.                                                       Jane Fonda (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  229.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  230. %@AS@%                                                                    Acting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  231. %@NL@%
  232. %@NL@%
  233. %@2@%Left eyebrow raised, right eyebrow raised.%@NL@%
  234. %@CR:ACTINGMoore4    @%%@NL@%
  235.                                                      Roger Moore (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  236.                                          British film and television actor%@NL@%
  237.                                                        on his acting range%@NL@%
  238. %@AS@%                                                                    Acting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  239. %@NL@%
  240. %@NL@%
  241. %@NL@%
  242. %@1@%%@AS@%Action%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  243. %@CR:ACTION          @%%@NL@%
  244. %@2@%See:%@QR:Action@%%@NL@%
  245.      Caution: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:           55375@%%@NL@%
  246.      Eloquence: %@AB@%Lloyd George%@AE@%%@BO:           c4b89@%%@NL@%
  247.      Hope: %@AB@%Levi%@AE@%%@BO:          134eb6@%%@NL@%
  248. %@NL@%
  249. %@2@%It is vain to say human beings ought to be satisfied with tranquillity:%@EH@%
  250. they must have action; and they will make it if they cannot find
  251. it.%@NL@%
  252. %@CR:ACTIONEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  253.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  254.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  255. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  256. %@NL@%
  257. %@NL@%
  258. %@2@%The shortest answer is doing.%@NL@%
  259. %@CR:ACTIONHerbert3  @%%@NL@%
  260.                                                   Lord Herbert (1583-1648)%@NL@%
  261.                                              English philosopher, diplomat%@NL@%
  262. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  263. %@NL@%
  264. %@NL@%
  265. %@2@%Our actions are neither so good nor so evil as our impulses.%@NL@%
  266. %@CR:ACTIONMarquisVau@%%@NL@%
  267.                                   Luc, Marquis de Vauvenargues (1715-1747)%@NL@%
  268.                                                            French moralist%@NL@%
  269. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  270. %@NL@%
  271. %@NL@%
  272. %@2@%I prefer thought to action, an idea to an event, reflection%@EH@%
  273. to activity.%@NL@%
  274. %@CR:ACTIONBalzac    @%%@NL@%
  275.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  276.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  277. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  278. %@NL@%
  279. %@NL@%
  280. %@2@%Nothing will ever be attempted if all possible objections must%@EH@%
  281. be first overcome.%@NL@%
  282. %@CR:ACTIONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  283.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  284.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  285. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  286. %@NL@%
  287. %@NL@%
  288.      %@2@%If it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well%@NL@%
  289.      It were done quickly.%@NL@%
  290. %@CR:ACTIONShakespear@%%@NL@%
  291.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  292.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  293.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  294. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  295. %@NL@%
  296. %@NL@%
  297. %@2@%If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly.%@NL@%
  298. %@CR:ACTIONChesterton@%%@NL@%
  299.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  300.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  301. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  302. %@NL@%
  303. %@NL@%
  304. %@2@%An ounce of action is worth a ton of theory.%@NL@%
  305. %@CR:ACTIONEngels    @%%@NL@%
  306.                                               Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)%@NL@%
  307.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  308. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  309. %@NL@%
  310. %@NL@%
  311. %@2@%Patience has its limits. Take it too far and it's cowardice.%@NL@%
  312. %@CR:ACTIONJackson1  @%%@NL@%
  313.                                                 George Jackson (1942-1971)%@NL@%
  314.                                                           American radical%@NL@%
  315. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  316. %@NL@%
  317. %@NL@%
  318. %@2@%What you do speaks so loud that I cannot hear what you say.%@NL@%
  319. %@CR:ACTIONEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  320.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  321.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  322. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  323. %@NL@%
  324. %@NL@%
  325. %@2@%Talk that does not end in any kind of action is better suppressed%@EH@%
  326. altogether.%@NL@%
  327. %@CR:ACTIONCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  328.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  329.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  330. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  331. %@NL@%
  332. %@NL@%
  333. %@2@%I want to see you shoot the way you shout.%@NL@%
  334. %@CR:ACTIONRoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  335.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  336.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  337. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  338. %@NL@%
  339. %@NL@%
  340. %@2@%Men of action intervene only when the orators have finished.%@NL@%
  341. %@CR:ACTIONGaboriau  @%%@NL@%
  342.                                                 Emile Gaboriau (1835-1873)%@NL@%
  343.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  344. %@AS@%                                                                    Action%@AE@%%@NL@%
  345. %@NL@%
  346. %@NL@%
  347. %@NL@%
  348. %@1@%%@AS@%Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  349. %@CR:ACTORS          @%%@NL@%
  350. %@2@%See:%@QR:Actors/Actresses@%%@NL@%
  351.      Hollywood: %@AB@%Quinn%@AE@%%@BO:          1301d6@%%@NL@%
  352.      Interviews: %@AB@%Hudson%@AE@%%@BO:          157a39@%%@NL@%
  353.      %@AB@%Marilyn Monroe%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1ae8df@%%@NL@%
  354.      Self-doubt: %@AB@%Field%@AE@%%@BO:          246f50@%%@NL@%
  355.      Theater: %@AB@%Duse%@AE@%%@BO:          288ad2@%%@NL@%
  356. %@NL@%
  357.      %@2@%A walking shadow, a poor player,%@NL@%
  358.      That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,%@NL@%
  359.      And then is heard no more.%@NL@%
  360. %@CR:ACTORSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  361.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  362.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  363.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  364. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  365. %@NL@%
  366. %@NL@%
  367. %@2@%Have patience with the jealousies and petulance of actors,%@EH@%
  368. for their hour is their eternity.%@NL@%
  369. %@CR:ACTORSGarnett1  @%%@NL@%
  370.                                                Richard Garnett (1835-1906)%@NL@%
  371.                                              English author, bibliographer%@NL@%
  372. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  373. %@NL@%
  374. %@NL@%
  375. %@2@%You can pick out actors by the glazed look that comes into%@EH@%
  376. their eyes when the conversation wanders away from themselves.%@NL@%
  377. %@CR:ACTORSWilding   @%%@NL@%
  378.                                                Michael Wilding (1912-1979)%@NL@%
  379.                                                              British actor%@NL@%
  380. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  381. %@NL@%
  382. %@NL@%
  383.      %@2@%And here come tired youths and maids%@NL@%
  384.      That feign to love or sin%@NL@%
  385.      In tones like rusty razor blades%@NL@%
  386.      To tunes like smitten tin.%@NL@%
  387. %@CR:ACTORSKipling   @%%@NL@%
  388.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  389.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  390. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  391. %@NL@%
  392. %@NL@%
  393. %@2@%A character actor is one who cannot act and therefore makes%@EH@%
  394. an elaborate study of disguise and stage tricks by which acting
  395. can be grotesquely simulated.%@NL@%
  396. %@CR:ACTORSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  397.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  398.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  399. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  400. %@NL@%
  401. %@NL@%
  402. %@2@%To see him act is like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning.%@NL@%
  403. %@CR:ACTORSColeridge @%%@NL@%
  404.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  405.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  406.                                                             of Edmund Kean%@NL@%
  407. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  408. %@NL@%
  409. %@NL@%
  410. %@2@%Every actor in his heart believes everything bad that's printed%@EH@%
  411. about him.%@NL@%
  412. %@CR:ACTORSWelles    @%%@NL@%
  413.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  414.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  415. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  416. %@NL@%
  417. %@NL@%
  418. %@2@%The only reason they come to see me is that I know that life%@EH@%
  419. is great - and they know I know it.%@NL@%
  420. %@CR:ACTORSGable     @%%@NL@%
  421.                                                    Clark Gable (1901-1960)%@NL@%
  422.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  423. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  424. %@NL@%
  425. %@NL@%
  426. %@2@%His ears made him look like a taxicab with both doors open.%@NL@%
  427. %@CR:ACTORSHughes1   @%%@NL@%
  428.                                                  Howard Hughes (1905-1976)%@NL@%
  429.                                        American businessman, film producer%@NL@%
  430.                                                             of Clark Gable%@NL@%
  431. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  432. %@NL@%
  433. %@NL@%
  434. %@2@%He has turned almost alarmingly blond - he's gone past platinum,%@EH@%
  435. he must be plutonium; his hair is coordinated with his teeth.%@NL@%
  436. %@CR:ACTORSKael      @%%@NL@%
  437.                                                     Pauline Kael (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  438.                                                       American film critic%@NL@%
  439.                                                          of Robert Redford%@NL@%
  440. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  441. %@NL@%
  442. %@NL@%
  443. %@2@%An actor is something less than a man, while an actress is%@EH@%
  444. something more than a woman.%@NL@%
  445. %@CR:ACTORSBurton1   @%%@NL@%
  446.                                                 Richard Burton (1925-1984)%@NL@%
  447.                                                         British film actor%@NL@%
  448. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  449. %@NL@%
  450. %@NL@%
  451. %@2@%She has a face that belongs to the sea and the wind, with large%@EH@%
  452. rocking-horse nostrils and teeth that you just know bite an apple
  453. every day.%@NL@%
  454. %@CR:ACTORSBeaton    @%%@NL@%
  455.                                                   Cecil Beaton (1904-1980)%@NL@%
  456.                                                       British photographer%@NL@%
  457.                                                       of Katherine Hepburn%@NL@%
  458. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  459. %@NL@%
  460. %@NL@%
  461. %@2@%Actresses will happen in the best-regulated families.%@NL@%
  462. %@CR:ACTORSHerford   @%%@NL@%
  463.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  464.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  465. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  466. %@NL@%
  467. %@NL@%
  468. %@2@%For an actress to be a success she must have the face of Venus,%@EH@%
  469. the brains of Minerva, the grace of Terpsichore, the memory of
  470. Macaulay, the figure of Juno, and the hide of a rhinoceros.%@NL@%
  471. %@CR:ACTORSBarrymore1@%%@NL@%
  472.                                                Ethel Barrymore (1879-1959)%@NL@%
  473.                                                           American actress%@NL@%
  474. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  475. %@NL@%
  476. %@NL@%
  477. %@2@%A deer in the body of a woman, living resentfully in the Hollywood%@EH@%
  478. zoo.%@NL@%
  479. %@CR:ACTORSLuce      @%%@NL@%
  480.                                              Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987)%@NL@%
  481.                                                  American diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  482.                                                             of Greta Garbo%@NL@%
  483. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  484. %@NL@%
  485. %@NL@%
  486. %@2@%An actor is never so great as when he reminds you of an animal - falling%@EH@%
  487. like a cat, lying like a dog, moving like a fox.%@NL@%
  488. %@CR:ACTORSTruffaut  @%%@NL@%
  489.                                              Francois Truffaut (1932-1984)%@NL@%
  490.                                                       French film director%@NL@%
  491. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  492. %@NL@%
  493. %@NL@%
  494. %@2@%So much of our profession is taken up with pretending, that%@EH@%
  495. an actor must spend at least half his waking hours in a fantasy.%@NL@%
  496. %@CR:ACTORSReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  497.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  498.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  499. %@AS@%                                                          Actors/Actresses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  500. %@NL@%
  501. %@NL@%
  502. %@NL@%
  503. %@1@%%@AS@%Addicts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  504. %@CR:ADDICTS         @%%@NL@%
  505. %@2@%See:%@QR:Addicts@%%@NL@%
  506.      Drugs: %@AB@%Bankhead%@AE@%%@BO:           bbd79@%; %@AB@%Neville%@AE@%%@BO:           bc0ed@%%@NL@%
  507. %@NL@%
  508.      %@2@%Go mad, and beat their wives;%@NL@%
  509.      Plunge (after shocking lives)%@NL@%
  510.      Razors and carving knives%@NL@%
  511.      Into their gizzards.%@NL@%
  512. %@CR:ADDICTCalverley @%%@NL@%
  513.                                                C. S. Calverley (1831-1884)%@NL@%
  514.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  515. %@AS@%                                                                   Addicts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  516. %@NL@%
  517. %@NL@%
  518. %@2@%All sins tend to be addictive, and the terminal%@EH@%
  519. point of addiction is what is called damnation.%@NL@%
  520. %@CR:ADDICTAuden     @%%@NL@%
  521.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  522.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  523. %@AS@%                                                                   Addicts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  524. %@NL@%
  525. %@NL@%
  526. %@NL@%
  527. %@1@%%@AS@%Admiration%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  528. %@CR:ADMIRATION      @%%@NL@%
  529. %@2@%%@QR:Admiration@%Admiration. Our polite recognition of another's resemblance%@EH@%
  530. to ourselves.%@NL@%
  531. %@CR:ADMIRABierce    @%%@NL@%
  532.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  533.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  534. %@AS@%                                                                Admiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  535. %@NL@%
  536. %@NL@%
  537. %@2@%Admiration is a very short-lived passion that immediately decays%@EH@%
  538. upon growing familiar with its object, unless it be still fed with
  539. fresh discoveries, and kept alive by a new perpetual succession
  540. of miracles rising up to its view.%@NL@%
  541. %@CR:ADMIRAAddison   @%%@NL@%
  542.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  543.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  544. %@AS@%                                                                Admiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  545. %@NL@%
  546. %@NL@%
  547. %@2@%Usually we praise only to be praised.%@NL@%
  548. %@CR:ADMIRALaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  549.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  550.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  551. %@AS@%                                                                Admiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  552. %@NL@%
  553. %@NL@%
  554. %@2@%No animal admires another animal.%@NL@%
  555. %@CR:ADMIRAPascal    @%%@NL@%
  556.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  557.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  558. %@AS@%                                                                Admiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  559. %@NL@%
  560. %@NL@%
  561. %@NL@%
  562. %@1@%%@AS@%Adolescence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  563. %@CR:ADOLESCENCE     @%%@NL@%
  564. %@2@%See:%@QR:Adolescence@%%@NL@%
  565.      Boys: %@AB@%Rosebery%@AE@%%@BO:           4ab68@%%@NL@%
  566. %@NL@%
  567. %@2@%The imagination of a boy is healthy, and the mature imagination%@EH@%
  568. of a man is healthy; but there is a space of life between, in which
  569. the soul is in a ferment, the character undecided, the way of
  570. life uncertain, the ambition thicksighted: thence proceeds mawkishness.%@NL@%
  571. %@CR:ADOLESKeats     @%%@NL@%
  572.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  573.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  574. %@AS@%                                                               Adolescence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  575. %@NL@%
  576. %@NL@%
  577. %@2@%The big mistake that men make is that when they turn thirteen%@EH@%
  578. or fourteen and all of a sudden they've reached puberty, they believe
  579. that they like women. Actually, you're just horny. It doesn't
  580. mean you like women any more at twenty-one than you did at ten.%@NL@%
  581. %@CR:ADOLESFeiffer   @%%@NL@%
  582.                                                    Jules Feiffer (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  583.                                                        American cartoonist%@NL@%
  584. %@AS@%                                                               Adolescence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  585. %@NL@%
  586. %@NL@%
  587. %@2@%Boys will be boys. And even that wouldn't matter if only we%@EH@%
  588. could prevent girls from being girls.%@NL@%
  589. %@CR:ADOLESHawkins   @%%@NL@%
  590.                                           Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  591.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  592. %@AS@%                                                               Adolescence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  593. %@NL@%
  594. %@NL@%
  595. %@2@%For the affection of young ladies is of as rapid growth as%@EH@%
  596. Jack's beanstalk, and reaches right up to the sky in a night.%@NL@%
  597. %@CR:ADOLESThackeray @%%@NL@%
  598.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  599.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  600. %@AS@%                                                               Adolescence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  601. %@NL@%
  602. %@NL@%
  603. %@2@%Remember that as a teenager you are in the last stage of your%@EH@%
  604. life when you will be happy to hear that the phone is for you.%@NL@%
  605. %@CR:ADOLESLebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  606.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  607.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  608. %@AS@%                                                               Adolescence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  609. %@NL@%
  610. %@NL@%
  611. %@NL@%
  612. %@1@%%@AS@%Adultery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  613. %@CR:ADULTERY        @%%@NL@%
  614. %@2@%See:%@QR:Adultery@%%@NL@%
  615.      Catholicism: %@AB@%Menen%@AE@%%@BO:           5413e@%%@NL@%
  616.      Jealousy: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          15d713@%%@NL@%
  617.      The Suburbs: %@AB@%Bible, Jeremiah%@AE@%%@BO:          2719d6@%%@NL@%
  618. %@NL@%
  619.      %@2@%Adultery? Thou shalt not die: die for adultery? No!%@NL@%
  620.      The wren goes to't, and the small gilded fly%@NL@%
  621.      Does lecher in my sight. Let copulation thrive.%@NL@%
  622. %@CR:ADULTEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  623.                                                            Lear, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  624.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  625.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  626. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  627. %@NL@%
  628. %@NL@%
  629.      %@2@%What men all gallantry, and gods adultery%@NL@%
  630.      Is much more common where the climate's sultry.%@NL@%
  631. %@CR:ADULTEByron2    @%%@NL@%
  632.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  633.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  634. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  635. %@NL@%
  636. %@NL@%
  637. %@2@%Adultery is in your heart not only when you look with excessive%@EH@%
  638. sexual zeal at a woman who is not your wife, but also if you look
  639. in the same manner at your wife.%@NL@%
  640. %@CR:ADULTEPopeJohnPa@%%@NL@%
  641.                                                Pope John Paul II (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  642. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  643. %@NL@%
  644. %@NL@%
  645. %@2@%Having a wife, be watchful of thy friend, lest false to thee%@EH@%
  646. thy fame and goods he spend.%@NL@%
  647. %@CR:ADULTECato      @%%@NL@%
  648.                                                Cato the Elder (234-149 BC)%@NL@%
  649.                                                            Roman statesman%@NL@%
  650. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  651. %@NL@%
  652. %@NL@%
  653. %@2@%The husband who decides to surprise his wife is often very%@EH@%
  654. much surprised himself.%@NL@%
  655. %@CR:ADULTEVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  656.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  657.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  658. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  659. %@NL@%
  660. %@NL@%
  661.      %@2@%He that is robb'd, not wanting what is stol'n,%@NL@%
  662.      Let him not know't, and he's not robbed at all.%@NL@%
  663. %@CR:ADULTEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  664.                                                           Othello, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  665.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  666.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  667. %@AS@%                                                                  Adultery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  668. %@NL@%
  669. %@NL@%
  670. %@NL@%
  671. %@1@%%@AS@%Adventure%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  672. %@CR:ADVENTURE       @%%@NL@%
  673. %@2@%See:%@QR:Adventure@%%@NL@%
  674.      Caution: %@AB@%Jung%@AE@%%@BO:           5567e@%; %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:           55375@%%@NL@%
  675.      Marriage: %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:          1937f5@%%@NL@%
  676.      Science: %@AB@%Freud%@AE@%%@BO:          23ad26@%%@NL@%
  677. %@NL@%
  678. %@2@%Adventure is the champagne of life.%@NL@%
  679. %@CR:ADVENTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  680.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  681.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  682. %@AS@%                                                                 Adventure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  683. %@NL@%
  684. %@NL@%
  685. %@2@%When you're safe at home you wish you were having an adventure;%@EH@%
  686. when you're having an adventure you wish you were safe at home.%@NL@%
  687. %@CR:ADVENTWilder2   @%%@NL@%
  688.                                                Thornton Wilder (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  689.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  690. %@AS@%                                                                 Adventure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  691. %@NL@%
  692. %@NL@%
  693. %@2@%One does not discover new lands without consenting%@EH@%
  694. to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.%@NL@%
  695. %@CR:ADVENTGide      @%%@NL@%
  696.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  697.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  698. %@AS@%                                                                 Adventure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  699. %@NL@%
  700. %@NL@%
  701. %@2@%If we do not find anything pleasant, at least we shall find%@EH@%
  702. something new.%@NL@%
  703. %@CR:ADVENTVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  704.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  705.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  706. %@AS@%                                                                 Adventure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  707. %@NL@%
  708. %@NL@%
  709. %@2@%The true adventurer goes forth aimless and uncalculating to%@EH@%
  710. meet and greet unknown fate. A fine example was the Prodigal Son - when
  711. he started back home.%@NL@%
  712. %@CR:ADVENTHenry1    @%%@NL@%
  713.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  714.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  715. %@AS@%                                                                 Adventure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  716. %@NL@%
  717. %@NL@%
  718. %@NL@%
  719. %@1@%%@AS@%Adversity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  720. %@CR:ADVERSITY       @%%@NL@%
  721. %@2@%See:%@QR:Adversity@%%@NL@%
  722.      Friends: %@AB@%Dietrich%@AE@%%@BO:           fdee7@%%@NL@%
  723.      %@AB@%Hard Times%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          12225c@%%@NL@%
  724.      Success: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:          272df2@%%@NL@%
  725. %@NL@%
  726. %@2@%The bravest sight in the world is to see a great man struggling%@EH@%
  727. against adversity.%@NL@%
  728. %@CR:ADVERSSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  729.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  730.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  731. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  732. %@NL@%
  733. %@NL@%
  734. %@2@%The struggle to the top is in itself enough to fulfill the%@EH@%
  735. human heart. Sisyphus should be regarded as happy.%@NL@%
  736. %@CR:ADVERSCamus1    @%%@NL@%
  737.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  738.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  739. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  740. %@NL@%
  741. %@NL@%
  742. %@2@%Man needs difficulties; they are necessary for health.%@NL@%
  743. %@CR:ADVERSJung      @%%@NL@%
  744.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  745.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  746. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  747. %@NL@%
  748. %@NL@%
  749. %@2@%Not everything that is more difficult is more meritorious.%@NL@%
  750. %@CR:ADVERSAquinas   @%%@NL@%
  751.                                           Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)%@NL@%
  752.                                            Italian philosopher, theologian%@NL@%
  753. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  754. %@NL@%
  755. %@NL@%
  756. %@2@%A reasonable amount o' fleas is good fer a dog - keeps him%@EH@%
  757. from broodin' over %@AI@%bein'%@AE@% a dog.%@NL@%
  758. %@CR:ADVERSWestcott  @%%@NL@%
  759.                                          Edward Noyes Westcott (1847-1898)%@NL@%
  760.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  761. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  762. %@NL@%
  763. %@NL@%
  764. %@2@%By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity. Another%@EH@%
  765. man's, I mean.%@NL@%
  766. %@CR:ADVERSTwain     @%%@NL@%
  767.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  768.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  769. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  770. %@NL@%
  771. %@NL@%
  772. %@2@%Struggle is the father of all things  . . .  It is not by the%@EH@%
  773. principles of humanity that man lives or is able to preserve himself
  774. above the animal world, but solely by means of the most brutal
  775. struggle.%@NL@%
  776. %@CR:ADVERSHitler    @%%@NL@%
  777.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  778.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  779. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  780. %@NL@%
  781. %@NL@%
  782. %@2@%In prosperity our friends know us; in adversity we know our%@EH@%
  783. friends.%@NL@%
  784. %@CR:ADVERSCollins1  @%%@NL@%
  785.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  786.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  787. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  788. %@NL@%
  789. %@NL@%
  790. %@2@%Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.%@NL@%
  791. %@CR:ADVERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  792.                                                      Trinculo, %@AI@%The Tempest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  793.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  794.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  795. %@AS@%                                                                 Adversity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  796. %@NL@%
  797. %@NL@%
  798. %@NL@%
  799. %@1@%%@AS@%Advertising%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  800. %@CR:ADVERTISING     @%%@NL@%
  801. %@2@%See:%@QR:Advertising@%%@NL@%
  802.      Royalty: %@AB@%Sampson%@AE@%%@BO:          231d70@%%@NL@%
  803. %@NL@%
  804. %@2@%You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.%@NL@%
  805. %@CR:ADVERTDouglas   @%%@NL@%
  806.                                                 Norman Douglas (1868-1952)%@NL@%
  807.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  808. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  809. %@NL@%
  810. %@NL@%
  811. %@2@%The incessant witless repetition of advertisers' moron-fodder%@EH@%
  812. has become so much a part of life that if we are not careful, we
  813. forget to be insulted by it.%@NL@%
  814. %@CR:ADVERTDouglas   @%%@NL@%
  815.                                                     %@AI@%The London Times%@AE@%, 1986%@NL@%
  816. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  817. %@NL@%
  818. %@NL@%
  819. %@2@%Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket.%@NL@%
  820. %@CR:ADVERTOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  821.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  822.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  823. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  824. %@NL@%
  825. %@NL@%
  826. %@2@%Publicity is the life of this culture - in so far as without%@EH@%
  827. publicity capitalism could not survive - and at the same time
  828. publicity is its dream.%@NL@%
  829. %@CR:ADVERTBerger    @%%@NL@%
  830.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  831.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  832. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  833. %@NL@%
  834. %@NL@%
  835. %@2@%We grew up founding our dreams on the infinite promise of American%@EH@%
  836. advertising.%@NL@%
  837. %@CR:ADVERTFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  838.                                               Zelda Fitzgerald (1900-1948)%@NL@%
  839.                                                wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald%@NL@%
  840. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  841. %@NL@%
  842. %@NL@%
  843. %@2@%The case cannot stand if it is the process of satisfying the%@EH@%
  844. wants that creates the wants.%@NL@%
  845. %@CR:ADVERTGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  846.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  847.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  848. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  849. %@NL@%
  850. %@NL@%
  851. %@2@%Advertising is the greatest art form of the twentieth century.%@NL@%
  852. %@CR:ADVERTMcLuhan   @%%@NL@%
  853.                                               Marshall McLuhan (1911-1981)%@NL@%
  854.                                                  Canadian social scientist%@NL@%
  855. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  856. %@NL@%
  857. %@NL@%
  858. %@2@%Advertising agency: eighty-five percent confusion and fifteen%@EH@%
  859. percent commission.%@NL@%
  860. %@CR:ADVERTAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  861.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  862.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  863. %@AS@%                                                               Advertising%@AE@%%@NL@%
  864. %@NL@%
  865. %@NL@%
  866. %@NL@%
  867. %@1@%%@AS@%Advice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  868. %@CR:ADVICE          @%%@NL@%
  869. %@2@%See:%@QR:Advice@%%@NL@%
  870.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:            fa35@%%@NL@%
  871.      Royalty: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:          233d4e@%%@NL@%
  872. %@NL@%
  873. %@2@%When a man comes to me for advice, I find out the kind of advice%@EH@%
  874. he wants, and I give it to him.%@NL@%
  875. %@CR:ADVICEBillings  @%%@NL@%
  876.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  877.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  878. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  879. %@NL@%
  880. %@NL@%
  881. %@2@%I have lived some thirty years on this planet, and%@EH@%
  882. I have yet to hear the first syllable of valuable or even earnest
  883. advice from my seniors.%@NL@%
  884. %@CR:ADVICEThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  885.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  886.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  887. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  888. %@NL@%
  889. %@NL@%
  890. %@2@%The advice of their elders to young men is very apt to be as%@EH@%
  891. unreal as a list of the hundred best books.%@NL@%
  892. %@CR:ADVICEHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  893.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  894.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  895. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  896. %@NL@%
  897. %@NL@%
  898. %@2@%In matters of religion and matrimony I never give any advice;%@EH@%
  899. because I will not have anybody's torments in this world or the
  900. next laid to my charge.%@NL@%
  901. %@CR:ADVICEChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  902.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  903.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  904. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  905. %@NL@%
  906. %@NL@%
  907. %@2@%The only thing one can do with good advice is to pass it on.%@EH@%
  908. It is never of any use to oneself.%@NL@%
  909. %@CR:ADVICEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  910.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  911.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  912. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  913. %@NL@%
  914. %@NL@%
  915. %@2@%A good scare is worth more to a man than good advice.%@NL@%
  916. %@CR:ADVICEHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  917.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  918.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  919. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  920. %@NL@%
  921. %@NL@%
  922. %@2@%To ask advice is to tout for flattery.%@NL@%
  923. %@CR:ADVICECollins1  @%%@NL@%
  924.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  925.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  926. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  927. %@NL@%
  928. %@NL@%
  929. %@2@%Consult. To seek another's approval of a course already decided%@EH@%
  930. on.%@NL@%
  931. %@CR:ADVICEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  932.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  933.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  934. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  935. %@NL@%
  936. %@NL@%
  937. %@2@%I'm not a teacher: only a fellow-traveller of whom you asked%@EH@%
  938. the way. I pointed ahead - ahead of myself as well as you.%@NL@%
  939. %@CR:ADVICEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  940.                                         Bishop of Chelsea, %@AI@%Getting Married%@AE@%%@NL@%
  941.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  942.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  943. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  944. %@NL@%
  945. %@NL@%
  946. %@2@%Never trust the advice of a man in difficulties.%@NL@%
  947. %@CR:ADVICEAesop     @%%@NL@%
  948.                                                  Aesop (b. 6th century BC)%@NL@%
  949.                                                      Greek fabulist, slave%@NL@%
  950. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  951. %@NL@%
  952. %@NL@%
  953. %@2@%One day I sat thinking, almost in despair; a hand fell on my%@EH@%
  954. shoulder and a voice said reassuringly: "Cheer up, things could
  955. get worse." So I cheered up and, sure enough, things got worse.%@NL@%
  956. %@CR:ADVICEHagerty   @%%@NL@%
  957.                                                  James Hagerty (1909-1981)%@NL@%
  958.                                     President Eisenhower's press secretary%@NL@%
  959. %@AS@%                                                                    Advice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  960. %@NL@%
  961. %@NL@%
  962. %@NL@%
  963. %@1@%%@AS@%Africa%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  964. %@CR:AFRICA          @%%@NL@%
  965. %@2@%See:%@QR:Africa@%%@NL@%
  966.      Decolonization: %@AB@%Lord Macmillan%@AE@%%@BO:           a19c6@%%@NL@%
  967. %@NL@%
  968. %@2@%By the end of the century, Africa will either be saved or completely%@EH@%
  969. destroyed.%@NL@%
  970. %@CR:AFRICAKodjo     @%%@NL@%
  971.                                                       Eden Kodjo (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  972.                            Togolese politician and administrator 1978-1984%@NL@%
  973. %@AS@%                                                                    Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  974. %@NL@%
  975. %@NL@%
  976. %@NL@%
  977. %@1@%%@AS@%The Afterlife%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  978. %@CR:THEAFTERLIFE    @%%@NL@%
  979. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Afterlife@%%@NL@%
  980.      Christianity: %@AB@%Waller%@AE@%%@BO:           6537b@%%@NL@%
  981.      The Church: %@AB@%Robinson%@AE@%%@BO:           68409@%%@NL@%
  982.      %@AB@%Immortality%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          147f43@%%@NL@%
  983. %@NL@%
  984. %@2@%For the sword outwears its sheath, and the soul wears out the%@EH@%
  985. breast.%@NL@%
  986. %@CR:THEAFTByron2    @%%@NL@%
  987.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  988.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  989. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  990. %@NL@%
  991. %@NL@%
  992. %@2@%We understand living for others and dying for others. The first%@EH@%
  993. is easy  . . .  it's a way out of boredom. To make the second popular
  994. we had to invent a belief in personal resurrection.%@NL@%
  995. %@CR:THEAFTGranvilleB@%%@NL@%
  996.                                        Harley Granville-Barker (1877-1946)%@NL@%
  997.                                            English actor, producer, author%@NL@%
  998. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  999. %@NL@%
  1000. %@NL@%
  1001.      %@2@%The dread of something after death,%@NL@%
  1002.      The undiscovered country, from whose bourn%@NL@%
  1003.      No traveller returns.%@NL@%
  1004. %@CR:THEAFTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1005.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1006.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1007.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1008. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1009. %@NL@%
  1010. %@NL@%
  1011. %@2@%The chief problem about death, incidentally, is the fear that%@EH@%
  1012. there may be no afterlife - a depressing thought, particularly
  1013. for those who have bothered to shave. Also, there is the fear that
  1014. there is an afterlife but no one will know where it's being held.%@NL@%
  1015. %@CR:THEAFTAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  1016.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  1017.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  1018. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1019. %@NL@%
  1020. %@NL@%
  1021. %@2@%I don't want to express an opinion. You see, I have friends%@EH@%
  1022. in both places.%@NL@%
  1023. %@CR:THEAFTTwain     @%%@NL@%
  1024.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  1025.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1026.                                            on his belief in heaven or hell%@NL@%
  1027. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1028. %@NL@%
  1029. %@NL@%
  1030. %@2@%Oh, one world at a time!%@NL@%
  1031. %@CR:THEAFTThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  1032.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  1033.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  1034. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1035. %@NL@%
  1036. %@NL@%
  1037. %@2@%Never did Christ utter a single word attesting to a personal%@EH@%
  1038. resurrection and a life beyond the grave.%@NL@%
  1039. %@CR:THEAFTTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  1040.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  1041.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  1042. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1043. %@NL@%
  1044. %@NL@%
  1045. %@2@%All argument is against it; but all belief is for it.%@NL@%
  1046. %@CR:THEAFTJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  1047.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  1048.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  1049. %@AS@%                                                             The Afterlife%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1050. %@NL@%
  1051. %@NL@%
  1052. %@NL@%
  1053. %@1@%%@AS@%Age%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1054. %@CR:AGE             @%%@NL@%
  1055. %@2@%See:%@QR:Age@%%@NL@%
  1056.      Advice: %@AB@%Holmes%@AE@%%@BO:            aeff@%%@NL@%
  1057.      Compliments: %@AB@%Irving%@AE@%%@BO:           79de4@%%@NL@%
  1058.      Death: Dying: %@AB@%Thomas%@AE@%%@BO:           9cc34@%%@NL@%
  1059.      Emotion: %@AB@%Santayana%@AE@%%@BO:           c5fe4@%%@NL@%
  1060.      %@AB@%The Generation Gap%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          105fe2@%%@NL@%
  1061.      Innocence: %@AB@%Bradbury%@AE@%%@BO:          14ed9b@%%@NL@%
  1062.      Marriage: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          193b69@%%@NL@%
  1063.      %@AB@%Maturity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19d976@%%@NL@%
  1064.      %@AB@%Middle Age%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a550d@%%@NL@%
  1065.      Sex: %@AB@%Plato%@AE@%%@BO:          24e4ff@%%@NL@%
  1066.      %@AB@%Youth%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2d110e@%%@NL@%
  1067. %@NL@%
  1068. %@2@%At twenty years of age, the will reigns; at thirty, the wit;%@EH@%
  1069. and at forty, the judgement.%@NL@%
  1070. %@CR:AGE   Grattan   @%%@NL@%
  1071.                                                  Henry Grattan (1746-1820)%@NL@%
  1072.                                                           Irish politician%@NL@%
  1073. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1074. %@NL@%
  1075. %@NL@%
  1076. %@2@%The old believe everything; the middle-aged suspect%@EH@%
  1077. everything; the young know everything.%@NL@%
  1078. %@CR:AGE   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  1079.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  1080.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  1081. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1082. %@NL@%
  1083. %@NL@%
  1084. %@2@%If youth but knew; if age but could.%@NL@%
  1085. %@CR:AGE   Estienne  @%%@NL@%
  1086.                                                 Henri Estienne (1531-1598)%@NL@%
  1087.                                                  French scholar, publisher%@NL@%
  1088. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1089. %@NL@%
  1090. %@NL@%
  1091. %@2@%What youth deemed crystal, age finds out was dew.%@NL@%
  1092. %@CR:AGE   Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  1093.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  1094.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1095. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1096. %@NL@%
  1097. %@NL@%
  1098. %@2@%Every man over forty is a scoundrel.%@NL@%
  1099. %@CR:AGE   Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  1100.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  1101.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  1102. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1103. %@NL@%
  1104. %@NL@%
  1105. %@2@%I'm 65 and I guess that puts me in with the geriatrics. But%@EH@%
  1106. if there were fifteen months in every year, I'd only be 48. That's
  1107. the trouble with us. We number everything. Take women, for example.
  1108. I think they deserve to have more than twelve years between the
  1109. ages of 28 and 40.%@NL@%
  1110. %@CR:AGE   Thurber   @%%@NL@%
  1111.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  1112.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  1113. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1114. %@NL@%
  1115. %@NL@%
  1116.      %@2@%What's a man's age? He must hurry more, that's all;%@NL@%
  1117.      Cram in a day what his youth took a year to hold.%@NL@%
  1118. %@CR:AGE   Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  1119.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  1120.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1121. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1122. %@NL@%
  1123. %@NL@%
  1124. %@2@%A man's as old as he's feeling, a woman as old as she looks.%@NL@%
  1125. %@CR:AGE   Collins3  @%%@NL@%
  1126.                                               Mortimer Collins (1827-1876)%@NL@%
  1127.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  1128. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1129. %@NL@%
  1130. %@NL@%
  1131. %@2@%When a woman tells you her age it's all right to look surprised,%@EH@%
  1132. but don't scowl.%@NL@%
  1133. %@CR:AGE   Mizner2   @%%@NL@%
  1134.                                                  Wilson Mizner (1876-1933)%@NL@%
  1135.                                                    American dramatist, wit%@NL@%
  1136. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1137. %@NL@%
  1138. %@NL@%
  1139.      %@2@%A lady of a "certain age," which means%@NL@%
  1140.      Certainly aged.%@NL@%
  1141. %@CR:AGE   Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  1142.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  1143.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1144. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1145. %@NL@%
  1146. %@NL@%
  1147. %@2@%The years that a woman subtracts from her age are not lost.%@EH@%
  1148. They are added to the ages of other women.%@NL@%
  1149. %@CR:AGE   Poitiers  @%%@NL@%
  1150.                                              Diane de Poitiers (1499-1566)%@NL@%
  1151.                                     mistress of Henri II of France, patron%@NL@%
  1152. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1153. %@NL@%
  1154. %@NL@%
  1155. %@2@%When women pass thirty, they first forget their age; when forty,%@EH@%
  1156. they forget that they ever remembered it.%@NL@%
  1157. %@CR:AGE   Lenclos   @%%@NL@%
  1158.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  1159.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  1160. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1161. %@NL@%
  1162. %@NL@%
  1163. %@2@%You are not permitted to kill a woman who has injured you,%@EH@%
  1164. but nothing forbids you to reflect that she is growing older
  1165. every minute.%@NL@%
  1166. %@CR:AGE   Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  1167.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  1168.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1169. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1170. %@NL@%
  1171. %@NL@%
  1172. %@2@%The age of a woman doesn't mean a thing.%@EH@%
  1173. The best tunes are played on the oldest fiddles.%@NL@%
  1174. %@CR:AGE   Engel     @%%@NL@%
  1175.                                                  Sigmund Z. Engel (1869-?)%@NL@%
  1176. %@AS@%                                                                       Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1177. %@NL@%
  1178. %@NL@%
  1179. %@NL@%
  1180. %@1@%%@AS@%Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1181. %@CR:OLDAGE          @%%@NL@%
  1182. %@2@%%@QR:Age: Old Age@%Have you not a moist eye? a dry hand? a yellow cheek? a white%@EH@%
  1183. beard? a decreasing leg? an increasing belly? is not your voice
  1184. broken? your wind short? your chin double? your wit single?
  1185. and every part about you blasted with antiquity?%@NL@%
  1186. %@CR:OLDAGEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1187.                                        Chief Justice, %@AI@%King Henry IV part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1188.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1189.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1190. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1191. %@NL@%
  1192. %@NL@%
  1193. %@2@%At seventy-seven it is time to be earnest.%@NL@%
  1194. %@CR:OLDAGEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  1195.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  1196.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  1197. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1198. %@NL@%
  1199. %@NL@%
  1200.      %@2@%Forty years on, growing older and older,%@NL@%
  1201.      Shorter in wind, as in memory long,%@NL@%
  1202.      Feeble of foot, and rheumatic of shoulder%@NL@%
  1203.      What will it help you that once you were strong?%@NL@%
  1204. %@CR:OLDAGEBowen1    @%%@NL@%
  1205.                                                    E. E. Bowen (1836-1901)%@NL@%
  1206.                                                       English schoolmaster%@NL@%
  1207. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1208. %@NL@%
  1209. %@NL@%
  1210. %@2@%All would live long, but none would be old.%@NL@%
  1211. %@CR:OLDAGEFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  1212.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  1213.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  1214. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1215. %@NL@%
  1216. %@NL@%
  1217. %@2@%O what a thing is age! Death without death's quiet.%@NL@%
  1218. %@CR:OLDAGELandor    @%%@NL@%
  1219.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  1220.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  1221. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1222. %@NL@%
  1223. %@NL@%
  1224.      %@2@%And we who once rang out like a bell%@NL@%
  1225.      Have nothing now to show or to sell;%@NL@%
  1226.      Old bones to carry, old stories to tell:%@NL@%
  1227.      So it is to be an Old Soldier.%@NL@%
  1228. %@CR:OLDAGEColum     @%%@NL@%
  1229.                                                  Padraic Colum (1881-1972)%@NL@%
  1230.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  1231. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1232. %@NL@%
  1233. %@NL@%
  1234. %@2@%When a man fell into his anecdotage it was a sign for him to%@EH@%
  1235. retire from the world.%@NL@%
  1236. %@CR:OLDAGEDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  1237.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  1238.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  1239. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1240. %@NL@%
  1241. %@NL@%
  1242. %@2@%Talking is the disease of age.%@NL@%
  1243. %@CR:OLDAGEJonson    @%%@NL@%
  1244.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  1245.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1246. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1247. %@NL@%
  1248. %@NL@%
  1249. %@2@%A good old man, sir, he will be talking; as they say, "when%@EH@%
  1250. the age is in, the wit is out."%@NL@%
  1251. %@CR:OLDAGEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1252.                                           Dogberry, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1253.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1254.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1255. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1256. %@NL@%
  1257. %@NL@%
  1258. %@2@%Lord, Lord, how subject we old men are to this vice of lying!%@NL@%
  1259. %@CR:OLDAGEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1260.                                             Falstaff, %@AI@%King Henry IV part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1261.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1262.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1263. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1264. %@NL@%
  1265. %@NL@%
  1266. %@2@%An old man gives good advice to console himself%@EH@%
  1267. for no longer being able to set a bad example.%@NL@%
  1268. %@CR:OLDAGELaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  1269.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  1270.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  1271. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1272. %@NL@%
  1273. %@NL@%
  1274. %@2@%Age. That period of life in which we compound for the vices%@EH@%
  1275. that remain by reviling those we have no longer the vigor to commit.%@NL@%
  1276. %@CR:OLDAGEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  1277.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  1278.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1279. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1280. %@NL@%
  1281. %@NL@%
  1282. %@2@%An old man concludeth from his knowing mankind that they know%@EH@%
  1283. him too, and that maketh him very wary.%@NL@%
  1284. %@CR:OLDAGESavile    @%%@NL@%
  1285.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  1286.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  1287. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1288. %@NL@%
  1289. %@NL@%
  1290. %@2@%As a matter of fact, elderly people are not more contemptible%@EH@%
  1291. than anyone else.%@NL@%
  1292. %@CR:OLDAGEWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  1293.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  1294.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  1295. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1296. %@NL@%
  1297. %@NL@%
  1298. %@2@%One evil in old age is that, as your time is come, you think%@EH@%
  1299. every little illness the beginning of the end. When a man expects
  1300. to be arrested, every knock at the door is an alarm.%@NL@%
  1301. %@CR:OLDAGESmith8    @%%@NL@%
  1302.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  1303.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  1304. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1305. %@NL@%
  1306. %@NL@%
  1307. %@2@%No one is so old as to think he cannot live one more year.%@NL@%
  1308. %@CR:OLDAGECicero    @%%@NL@%
  1309.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  1310.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  1311. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1312. %@NL@%
  1313. %@NL@%
  1314. %@2@%To me, old age is always fifteen years older than I am.%@NL@%
  1315. %@CR:OLDAGEBaruch    @%%@NL@%
  1316.                                                 Bernard Baruch (1870-1965)%@NL@%
  1317.                                                         American financier%@NL@%
  1318. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1319. %@NL@%
  1320. %@NL@%
  1321. %@2@%Old age is the most unexpected of all the things that happen%@EH@%
  1322. to a man.%@NL@%
  1323. %@CR:OLDAGETrotsky   @%%@NL@%
  1324.                                                   Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  1325.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  1326. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1327. %@NL@%
  1328. %@NL@%
  1329. %@2@%I advise you to go on living solely to enrage those who are%@EH@%
  1330. paying your annuities. It is the only pleasure I have left.%@NL@%
  1331. %@CR:OLDAGEVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  1332.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  1333.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  1334. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1335. %@NL@%
  1336. %@NL@%
  1337. %@2@%The mere process of growing old together will make the slightest%@EH@%
  1338. acquaintance seem a bosom friend.%@NL@%
  1339. %@CR:OLDAGESmith6    @%%@NL@%
  1340.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  1341.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  1342. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1343. %@NL@%
  1344. %@NL@%
  1345. %@2@%The tragedy of old age is not that one is old, but that one%@EH@%
  1346. is young.%@NL@%
  1347. %@CR:OLDAGETwain     @%%@NL@%
  1348.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  1349.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1350. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1351. %@NL@%
  1352. %@NL@%
  1353. %@2@%Men of age object too much, consult too long, adventure too%@EH@%
  1354. little, repent too soon.%@NL@%
  1355. %@CR:OLDAGEBacon     @%%@NL@%
  1356.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  1357.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  1358. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1359. %@NL@%
  1360. %@NL@%
  1361. %@2@%Many a man that can't direct you to a corner drugstore will%@EH@%
  1362. get a respectful hearing when age has further impaired his mind.%@NL@%
  1363. %@CR:OLDAGEDunne     @%%@NL@%
  1364.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  1365.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  1366. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1367. %@NL@%
  1368. %@NL@%
  1369.      %@2@%Young men soon give, and soon forget affronts:%@NL@%
  1370.      Old age is slow in both.%@NL@%
  1371. %@CR:OLDAGEAddison   @%%@NL@%
  1372.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  1373.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  1374. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1375. %@NL@%
  1376. %@NL@%
  1377. %@2@%Old men are testy, and will have their way.%@NL@%
  1378. %@CR:OLDAGEShelley   @%%@NL@%
  1379.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  1380.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1381. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1382. %@NL@%
  1383. %@NL@%
  1384. %@2@%Being an old maid is like death by drowning, a really delightful%@EH@%
  1385. sensation after you cease to struggle.%@NL@%
  1386. %@CR:OLDAGEFerber    @%%@NL@%
  1387.                                                    Edna Ferber (1887-1968)%@NL@%
  1388.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1389. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1390. %@NL@%
  1391. %@NL@%
  1392. %@2@%There are three classes of elderly women; first, that dear%@EH@%
  1393. old soul; second, that old woman; third, that old witch.%@NL@%
  1394. %@CR:OLDAGEColeridge @%%@NL@%
  1395.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  1396.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1397. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1398. %@NL@%
  1399. %@NL@%
  1400. %@2@%Growing old is more like a bad habit which a busy man has no%@EH@%
  1401. time to form.%@NL@%
  1402. %@CR:OLDAGEMaurois   @%%@NL@%
  1403.                                                  Andre Maurois (1885-1967)%@NL@%
  1404.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  1405. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1406. %@NL@%
  1407. %@NL@%
  1408. %@2@%I prefer old age to the alternative.%@NL@%
  1409. %@CR:OLDAGEChevalier @%%@NL@%
  1410.                                              Maurice Chevalier (1888-1972)%@NL@%
  1411.                                                       French singer, actor%@NL@%
  1412. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1413. %@NL@%
  1414. %@NL@%
  1415.      %@2@%I have lived long enough; my way of life%@NL@%
  1416.      Is fall'n into the sear, the yellow leaf;%@NL@%
  1417.      And that which should accompany old age,%@NL@%
  1418.      As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,%@NL@%
  1419.      I must not look to have.%@NL@%
  1420. %@CR:OLDAGEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1421.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1422.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1423.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1424. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1425. %@NL@%
  1426. %@NL@%
  1427.      %@2@%What is the worst of woes that wait on age?%@NL@%
  1428.      What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow?%@NL@%
  1429.      To view each loved one blotted from life's page,%@NL@%
  1430.      And be alone on earth, as I am now.%@NL@%
  1431. %@CR:OLDAGEByron2    @%%@NL@%
  1432.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  1433.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1434. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1435. %@NL@%
  1436. %@NL@%
  1437.      %@2@%They are all gone into the world of light,%@NL@%
  1438.      And I alone sit lingering here.%@NL@%
  1439. %@CR:OLDAGEVaughan   @%%@NL@%
  1440.                                                  Henry Vaughan (1622-1695)%@NL@%
  1441.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  1442. %@AS@%                                                              Age: Old Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1443. %@NL@%
  1444. %@NL@%
  1445. %@NL@%
  1446. %@1@%%@AS@%Agents%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1447. %@CR:AGENTS          @%%@NL@%
  1448. %@2@%See:%@QR:Agents@%%@NL@%
  1449.      Advertising: %@AB@%Allen%@AE@%%@BO:            a8fc@%%@NL@%
  1450. %@NL@%
  1451. %@2@%Many artists have admittedly no aptitude for merchantry.%@NL@%
  1452. %@CR:AGENTSBennett   @%%@NL@%
  1453.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  1454.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  1455. %@AS@%                                                                    Agents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1456. %@NL@%
  1457. %@NL@%
  1458. %@2@%It is well-known what a middleman is: he is a man who bamboozles%@EH@%
  1459. one party and plunders the other.%@NL@%
  1460. %@CR:AGENTSDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  1461.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  1462.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  1463. %@AS@%                                                                    Agents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1464. %@NL@%
  1465. %@NL@%
  1466. %@2@%The trouble with this business is that the stars keep ninety%@EH@%
  1467. percent of my money.%@NL@%
  1468. %@CR:AGENTSGrade     @%%@NL@%
  1469.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  1470.                                                       Lord Grade (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  1471.                                           British film and TV entrepreneur%@NL@%
  1472. %@AS@%                                                                    Agents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1473. %@NL@%
  1474. %@NL@%
  1475. %@2@%My agents get ten percent of everything I get, except my blinding%@EH@%
  1476. headaches.%@NL@%
  1477. %@CR:AGENTSAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  1478.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  1479.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  1480. %@AS@%                                                                    Agents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1481. %@NL@%
  1482. %@NL@%
  1483. %@NL@%
  1484. %@1@%%@AS@%Aggression%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1485. %@CR:AGGRESSION      @%%@NL@%
  1486. %@2@%%@QR:Aggression@%Attack is the reaction; I never think I have hit hard unless%@EH@%
  1487. it rebounds.%@NL@%
  1488. %@CR:AGGRESJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  1489.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  1490.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  1491. %@AS@%                                                                Aggression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1492. %@NL@%
  1493. %@NL@%
  1494. %@2@%To knock a thing down, especially if it is cocked at an arrogant%@EH@%
  1495. angle, is a deep delight to the blood.%@NL@%
  1496. %@CR:AGGRESSantayana @%%@NL@%
  1497.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  1498.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  1499. %@AS@%                                                                Aggression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1500. %@NL@%
  1501. %@NL@%
  1502. %@NL@%
  1503. %@1@%%@AS@%Agnostics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1504. %@CR:AGNOSTICS       @%%@NL@%
  1505. %@2@%See:%@QR:Agnostics@%%@NL@%
  1506.      Humanism: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          138b75@%%@NL@%
  1507. %@NL@%
  1508. %@2@%O Lord, if there is a Lord, save my soul, if I have a soul.%@NL@%
  1509. %@CR:AGNOSTRenan     @%%@NL@%
  1510.                                            Joseph Ernest Renan (1823-1892)%@NL@%
  1511.                                             French writer, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  1512. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1513. %@NL@%
  1514. %@NL@%
  1515. %@2@%I am an agnostic; I do not pretend to know what many ignorant%@EH@%
  1516. men are sure of.%@NL@%
  1517. %@CR:AGNOSTDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  1518.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  1519.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  1520. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1521. %@NL@%
  1522. %@NL@%
  1523. %@2@%I can't believe in the God of my Fathers. If there is one Mind%@EH@%
  1524. which understands all things, it will comprehend me in my unbelief.
  1525. I don't know whose hand hung Hesperus in the sky, and fixed the
  1526. Dog Star, and scattered the shining dust of Heaven, and fired the
  1527. sun, and froze the darkness between the lonely worlds that spin
  1528. in space.%@NL@%
  1529. %@CR:AGNOSTKersh     @%%@NL@%
  1530.                                                   Gerald Kersh (1911-1968)%@NL@%
  1531.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  1532. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1533. %@NL@%
  1534. %@NL@%
  1535. %@2@%Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because,%@EH@%
  1536. if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason,
  1537. than that of blindfolded fear.%@NL@%
  1538. %@CR:AGNOSTJefferson @%%@NL@%
  1539.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  1540.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  1541. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1542. %@NL@%
  1543. %@NL@%
  1544. %@2@%The skeptic does not mean him who doubts, but him who investigates%@EH@%
  1545. or researches, as opposed to him who asserts and thinks that he
  1546. has found.%@NL@%
  1547. %@CR:AGNOSTUnamuno   @%%@NL@%
  1548.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  1549.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  1550. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1551. %@NL@%
  1552. %@NL@%
  1553. %@2@%If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large%@EH@%
  1554. deposit in my name at a Swiss bank.%@NL@%
  1555. %@CR:AGNOSTAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  1556.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  1557.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  1558. %@AS@%                                                                 Agnostics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1559. %@NL@%
  1560. %@NL@%
  1561. %@NL@%
  1562. %@1@%%@AS@%Agreement%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1563. %@CR:AGREEMENT       @%%@NL@%
  1564. %@2@%See:%@QR:Agreement@%%@NL@%
  1565.      %@AB@%Consensus%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           7d40e@%%@NL@%
  1566.      Men and Women: %@AB@%Santayana%@AE@%%@BO:          1a4abe@%%@NL@%
  1567. %@NL@%
  1568. %@2@%It is my melancholy fate to like so many people I profoundly%@EH@%
  1569. disagree with and often heartily dislike people who agree with
  1570. me.%@NL@%
  1571. %@CR:AGREEMKingsley2 @%%@NL@%
  1572.                                                  Mary Kingsley (1862-1900)%@NL@%
  1573.                                                   British traveler, writer%@NL@%
  1574. %@AS@%                                                                 Agreement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1575. %@NL@%
  1576. %@NL@%
  1577. %@2@%My idea of an agreeable person is a person who agrees with%@EH@%
  1578. me.%@NL@%
  1579. %@CR:AGREEMDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  1580.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  1581.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  1582. %@AS@%                                                                 Agreement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1583. %@NL@%
  1584. %@NL@%
  1585. %@2@%Elinor agreed with it all, for she did not think he deserved%@EH@%
  1586. the compliment of rational opposition.%@NL@%
  1587. %@CR:AGREEMAusten    @%%@NL@%
  1588.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  1589.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  1590. %@AS@%                                                                 Agreement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1591. %@NL@%
  1592. %@NL@%
  1593. %@2@%When you say that you agree to a thing in principle you mean%@EH@%
  1594. that you have not the slightest intention of carrying it out in
  1595. practice.%@NL@%
  1596. %@CR:AGREEMBismarck  @%%@NL@%
  1597.                                       Prince Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)%@NL@%
  1598.                                                         Prussian statesman%@NL@%
  1599. %@AS@%                                                                 Agreement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1600. %@NL@%
  1601. %@NL@%
  1602. %@NL@%
  1603. %@1@%%@AS@%Aid%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1604. %@CR:AID             @%%@NL@%
  1605. %@2@%See:%@QR:Aid@%%@NL@%
  1606.      Charity: %@AB@%Huddleston%@AE@%%@BO:           5c6ef@%; %@AB@%Rockefeller%@AE@%%@BO:           5cb8d@%%@NL@%
  1607. %@NL@%
  1608. %@2@%The hands that help are holier than the lips that pray.%@NL@%
  1609. %@CR:AID   Ingersoll @%%@NL@%
  1610.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  1611.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  1612. %@AS@%                                                                       Aid%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1613. %@NL@%
  1614. %@NL@%
  1615. %@2@%Help a man against his will and you do the same as murder him.%@NL@%
  1616. %@CR:AID   Horace    @%%@NL@%
  1617.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  1618.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  1619. %@AS@%                                                                       Aid%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1620. %@NL@%
  1621. %@NL@%
  1622. %@2@%It was as helpful as throwing a drowning man both ends of a%@EH@%
  1623. rope.%@NL@%
  1624. %@CR:AID   Baer      @%%@NL@%
  1625.                                             Bugs (Arthur) Baer (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  1626.                                     American columnist, short story writer%@NL@%
  1627. %@AS@%                                                                       Aid%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1628. %@NL@%
  1629. %@NL@%
  1630. %@NL@%
  1631. %@1@%%@AS@%AIDS%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1632. %@CR:AIDS            @%%@NL@%
  1633. %@2@%%@QR:AIDS@%Any important disease whose causality is murky, and for which%@EH@%
  1634. treatment is ineffectual, tends to be awash in significance.%@NL@%
  1635. %@CR:AIDS  Sontag    @%%@NL@%
  1636.                                                     Susan Sontag (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  1637.                                                          American essayist%@NL@%
  1638. %@AS@%                                                                      AIDS%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1639. %@NL@%
  1640. %@NL@%
  1641. %@2@%I've spent fifteen years of my life fighting for our right%@EH@%
  1642. to be free and make love whenever, wherever  . . .  And you're telling
  1643. me that all those years of what being gay stood for is wrong  . . . 
  1644. and I'm a murderer. We have been so oppressed! Don't you remember
  1645. how it was? Can't you see how important it is for us to love openly,
  1646. without hiding and without guilt?%@NL@%
  1647. %@CR:AIDS  Kramer    @%%@NL@%
  1648.                                                   Mickey, %@AI@%The Normal Heart%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1649.                                                     Larry Kramer (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  1650.                                              American playwright, novelist%@NL@%
  1651. %@AS@%                                                                      AIDS%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1652. %@NL@%
  1653. %@NL@%
  1654. %@2@%Everywhere I go I see increasing evidence of people swirling%@EH@%
  1655. about in a human cesspit of their own making.%@NL@%
  1656. %@CR:AIDS  Anderton  @%%@NL@%
  1657.                                                   James Anderton (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  1658.                   British Chief Constable, Greater Manchester Police Force%@NL@%
  1659.                                                       of the AIDS epidemic%@NL@%
  1660. %@AS@%                                                                      AIDS%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1661. %@NL@%
  1662. %@NL@%
  1663. %@2@%We're all going to go crazy, living this epidemic every minute,%@EH@%
  1664. while the rest of the world goes on out there, all around us, as
  1665. if nothing is happening, going on with their own lives and not
  1666. knowing what it's like, what we're going through. We're living
  1667. through war, but where they're living it's peacetime, and we're
  1668. all in the same country.%@NL@%
  1669. %@CR:AIDS  Kramer    @%%@NL@%
  1670.                                                      Ned, %@AI@%The Normal Heart%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1671.                                                     Larry Kramer (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  1672.                                              American playwright, novelist%@NL@%
  1673. %@AS@%                                                                      AIDS%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1674. %@NL@%
  1675. %@NL@%
  1676. %@2@%The thing is evolving in front of one's eyes. One realises%@EH@%
  1677. that anything one's saying is only a snapshot in time.%@NL@%
  1678. %@CR:AIDS  Londondoct@%%@NL@%
  1679.                                                    London doctor (d. 1986)%@NL@%
  1680. %@AS@%                                                                      AIDS%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1681. %@NL@%
  1682. %@NL@%
  1683. %@NL@%
  1684. %@1@%%@AS@%Alliances%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1685. %@CR:ALLIANCES       @%%@NL@%
  1686. %@2@%%@QR:Alliances@%Peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations - entangling%@EH@%
  1687. alliance with none.%@NL@%
  1688. %@CR:ALLIANJefferson @%%@NL@%
  1689.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  1690.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  1691. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1692. %@NL@%
  1693. %@NL@%
  1694. %@2@%When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will%@EH@%
  1695. fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.%@NL@%
  1696. %@CR:ALLIANBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  1697.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  1698.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  1699. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1700. %@NL@%
  1701. %@NL@%
  1702. %@2@%Whomsoever England allies herself with, she will see her allies%@EH@%
  1703. stronger than she is herself at the end of this war.%@NL@%
  1704. %@CR:ALLIANHitler    @%%@NL@%
  1705.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  1706.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  1707.                                                             April 26, 1942%@NL@%
  1708. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1709. %@NL@%
  1710. %@NL@%
  1711. %@2@%Alliance. In international politics, the union of two thieves%@EH@%
  1712. who have their hands so deeply inserted in each other's pockets
  1713. that they cannot separately plunder a third.%@NL@%
  1714. %@CR:ALLIANBierce    @%%@NL@%
  1715.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  1716.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1717. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1718. %@NL@%
  1719. %@NL@%
  1720. %@2@%Our desire is to be friendly to every country in the world,%@EH@%
  1721. but we have no desire to have a friendly country choosing our enemies
  1722. for us.%@NL@%
  1723. %@CR:ALLIANNyerere   @%%@NL@%
  1724.                                                   Julius Nyerere (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  1725.                                   African statesman, president of Tanzania%@NL@%
  1726. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1727. %@NL@%
  1728. %@NL@%
  1729. %@2@%An ally has to be watched just like an enemy.%@NL@%
  1730. %@CR:ALLIANTrotsky   @%%@NL@%
  1731.                                                   Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  1732.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  1733. %@AS@%                                                                 Alliances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1734. %@NL@%
  1735. %@NL@%
  1736. %@NL@%
  1737. %@1@%%@AS@%Altruism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1738. %@CR:ALTRUISM        @%%@NL@%
  1739. %@2@%See:%@QR:Altruism@%%@NL@%
  1740.      %@AB@%Benefactors%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3dc19@%%@NL@%
  1741.      %@AB@%Philanthropy%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1d8291@%%@NL@%
  1742. %@NL@%
  1743. %@2@%As for doing good, that is one of the professions that are%@EH@%
  1744. full.%@NL@%
  1745. %@CR:ALTRUIThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  1746.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  1747.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  1748. %@AS@%                                                                  Altruism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1749. %@NL@%
  1750. %@NL@%
  1751. %@2@%He who would do good to another must do it in Minute Particulars.%@EH@%
  1752. General good is the plea of the scoundrel, hypocrite, and flatterer;
  1753. for art and science cannot exist but in minutely organized Particulars.%@NL@%
  1754. %@CR:ALTRUIBlake     @%%@NL@%
  1755.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  1756.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  1757. %@AS@%                                                                  Altruism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1758. %@NL@%
  1759. %@NL@%
  1760. %@2@%No people do so much harm as those who go about doing good.%@NL@%
  1761. %@CR:ALTRUICreighton @%%@NL@%
  1762.                                              Mandell Creighton (1843-1901)%@NL@%
  1763.                                                 English prelate, historian%@NL@%
  1764. %@AS@%                                                                  Altruism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1765. %@NL@%
  1766. %@NL@%
  1767. %@2@%Such a good friend that she will throw all her acquaintances%@EH@%
  1768. into the water for the pleasure of fishing them out again.%@NL@%
  1769. %@CR:ALTRUITalleyrand@%%@NL@%
  1770.                                      Charles, Count Talleyrand (1754-1838)%@NL@%
  1771.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  1772.                                                         of Madame de Stael%@NL@%
  1773. %@AS@%                                                                  Altruism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1774. %@NL@%
  1775. %@NL@%
  1776. %@NL@%
  1777. %@1@%%@AS@%Ambition%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1778. %@CR:AMBITION        @%%@NL@%
  1779. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ambition@%%@NL@%
  1780.      %@AB@%Getting Ahead%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          10b731@%%@NL@%
  1781.      Politicians: %@AB@%Jefferson%@AE@%%@BO:          1ececb@%%@NL@%
  1782.      Poverty: %@AB@%Juvenal%@AE@%%@BO:          1f46d9@%%@NL@%
  1783.      Promotion: %@AB@%Wilson%@AE@%%@BO:          20901b@%%@NL@%
  1784. %@NL@%
  1785. %@2@%Men would be angels, angels would be gods.%@NL@%
  1786. %@CR:AMBITIPope      @%%@NL@%
  1787.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  1788.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1789. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1790. %@NL@%
  1791. %@NL@%
  1792. %@2@%What parish priest would not like to be Pope?%@NL@%
  1793. %@CR:AMBITIVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  1794.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  1795.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  1796. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1797. %@NL@%
  1798. %@NL@%
  1799. %@2@%It is a strange desire to seek power and to lose liberty.%@NL@%
  1800. %@CR:AMBITIBacon     @%%@NL@%
  1801.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  1802.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  1803. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1804. %@NL@%
  1805. %@NL@%
  1806. %@2@%Ambition. An overmastering desire to be vilified%@EH@%
  1807. by enemies while living and made ridiculous by friends when dead.%@NL@%
  1808. %@CR:AMBITIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  1809.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  1810.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  1811. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1812. %@NL@%
  1813. %@NL@%
  1814. %@2@%Ambition is pitiless. Any merit that it cannot use it finds%@EH@%
  1815. despicable.%@NL@%
  1816. %@CR:AMBITIJoubert   @%%@NL@%
  1817.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  1818.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  1819. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1820. %@NL@%
  1821. %@NL@%
  1822. %@2@%As he was valiant, I honour him; but, as he was ambitious,%@EH@%
  1823. I slew him.%@NL@%
  1824. %@CR:AMBITIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  1825.                                                      Brutus, %@AI@%Julius Caesar%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1826.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  1827.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  1828. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1829. %@NL@%
  1830. %@NL@%
  1831. %@2@%Ambition can creep as well as soar.%@NL@%
  1832. %@CR:AMBITIBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  1833.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  1834.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  1835. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1836. %@NL@%
  1837. %@NL@%
  1838. %@2@%Ambition often puts Men upon doing the meanest offices; so%@EH@%
  1839. climbing is performed in the same position with creeping.%@NL@%
  1840. %@CR:AMBITISwift     @%%@NL@%
  1841.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  1842.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  1843. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1844. %@NL@%
  1845. %@NL@%
  1846.      %@2@%'Tis not what man does which exalts him,%@NL@%
  1847.      But what man would do!%@NL@%
  1848. %@CR:AMBITIBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  1849.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  1850.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  1851. %@AS@%                                                                  Ambition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1852. %@NL@%
  1853. %@NL@%
  1854. %@NL@%
  1855. %@1@%%@AS@%America%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  1856. %@CR:AMERICA         @%%@NL@%
  1857. %@2@%See:%@QR:America@%%@NL@%
  1858.      The Consumer Society: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:           8035e@%%@NL@%
  1859.      Dissent: %@AB@%Thurber%@AE@%%@BO:           af90b@%%@NL@%
  1860.      Fame: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           e107d@%%@NL@%
  1861.      Heroes: %@AB@%Sullivan%@AE@%%@BO:          12a743@%%@NL@%
  1862.      %@AB@%The New World%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1ba5e3@%%@NL@%
  1863.      %@AB@%New York%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bac0c@%%@NL@%
  1864.      Success: %@AB@%James%@AE@%%@BO:          271de1@%%@NL@%
  1865.      Technology: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:          2824d6@%%@NL@%
  1866.      %@AB@%Texas%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2867a3@%%@NL@%
  1867. %@NL@%
  1868. %@2@%Young man, there is America, which at this day serves for little%@EH@%
  1869. more than to amuse you with stories of strange men and uncouth
  1870. manners.%@NL@%
  1871. %@CR:AMERICBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  1872.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  1873.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  1874. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1875. %@NL@%
  1876. %@NL@%
  1877. %@2@%Of course, America had often been discovered before, but it%@EH@%
  1878. had always been hushed up.%@NL@%
  1879. %@CR:AMERICWilde     @%%@NL@%
  1880.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  1881.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  1882. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1883. %@NL@%
  1884. %@NL@%
  1885. %@2@%God had a divine purpose in placing this land between two great%@EH@%
  1886. oceans to be found by those who had a special love of freedom and
  1887. courage.%@NL@%
  1888. %@CR:AMERICReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  1889.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  1890.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  1891. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1892. %@NL@%
  1893. %@NL@%
  1894. %@2@%America is the only nation in history which, miraculously,%@EH@%
  1895. has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without the usual
  1896. interval of civilization%@NL@%
  1897. %@CR:AMERICClemenceau@%%@NL@%
  1898.                                             Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929)%@NL@%
  1899.                                          French politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  1900. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1901. %@NL@%
  1902. %@NL@%
  1903. %@2@%America is a mistake, a giant mistake!%@NL@%
  1904. %@CR:AMERICFreud     @%%@NL@%
  1905.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  1906.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  1907. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1908. %@NL@%
  1909. %@NL@%
  1910.      %@2@%"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she%@NL@%
  1911.      With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,%@NL@%
  1912.      Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,%@NL@%
  1913.      The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.%@NL@%
  1914.      Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me;%@NL@%
  1915.      I lift my lamp beside the golden door."%@NL@%
  1916. %@CR:AMERICLazarus   @%%@NL@%
  1917.                                                   Emma Lazarus (1849-1887)%@NL@%
  1918.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  1919.                                    %@AI@%'The New Colossus'%@AE@% - sonnet written for%@NL@%
  1920.                                       inscription on the Statue of Liberty%@NL@%
  1921. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1922. %@NL@%
  1923. %@NL@%
  1924. %@2@%Ours is the only country deliberately founded on a good idea.%@NL@%
  1925. %@CR:AMERICGunther   @%%@NL@%
  1926.                                                   John Gunther (1901-1970)%@NL@%
  1927.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  1928. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1929. %@NL@%
  1930. %@NL@%
  1931. %@2@%I believe in America because we have great dreams - and%@EH@%
  1932. because we have the opportunity to make those dreams come true.%@NL@%
  1933. %@CR:AMERICWilkie    @%%@NL@%
  1934.                                              Wendell L. Wilkie (1892-1944)%@NL@%
  1935.                                   American lawyer, businessman, politician%@NL@%
  1936. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1937. %@NL@%
  1938. %@NL@%
  1939. %@2@%Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that is the way%@EH@%
  1940. I know I am an American. America is the only idealistic nation
  1941. in the world.%@NL@%
  1942. %@CR:AMERICWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  1943.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  1944.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  1945. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1946. %@NL@%
  1947. %@NL@%
  1948. %@2@%The American ideal is, after all, that everyone should be as%@EH@%
  1949. much alike as possible.%@NL@%
  1950. %@CR:AMERICBaldwin   @%%@NL@%
  1951.                                                  James Baldwin (1924-1987)%@NL@%
  1952.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  1953. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1954. %@NL@%
  1955. %@NL@%
  1956. %@2@%America is a tune. It must be sung together.%@NL@%
  1957. %@CR:AMERICLee       @%%@NL@%
  1958.                                             Gerald Stanley Lee (1862-1944)%@NL@%
  1959.                                                          American academic%@NL@%
  1960. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1961. %@NL@%
  1962. %@NL@%
  1963. %@2@%There is nothing wrong with America that together we can't%@EH@%
  1964. fix.%@NL@%
  1965. %@CR:AMERICReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  1966.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  1967.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  1968. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1969. %@NL@%
  1970. %@NL@%
  1971. %@2@%That impersonal insensitive friendliness that takes the place%@EH@%
  1972. of ceremony in that land of waifs and strays.%@NL@%
  1973. %@CR:AMERICWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  1974.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  1975.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  1976. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1977. %@NL@%
  1978. %@NL@%
  1979. %@2@%America is a large, friendly dog in a very small room. Every%@EH@%
  1980. time it wags its tail it knocks over a chair.%@NL@%
  1981. %@CR:AMERICToynbee   @%%@NL@%
  1982.                                          Arnold Joseph Toynbee (1889-1975)%@NL@%
  1983.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  1984. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1985. %@NL@%
  1986. %@NL@%
  1987. %@2@%America  . . .  just a nation of two hundred million%@EH@%
  1988. used-car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no
  1989. qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make
  1990. us uncomfortable.%@NL@%
  1991. %@CR:AMERICThompson2 @%%@NL@%
  1992.                                               Hunter S. Thompson (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  1993.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  1994. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  1995. %@NL@%
  1996. %@NL@%
  1997. %@2@%When great nations fear to expand, shrink from expansion, it%@EH@%
  1998. is because their greatness is coming to an end. Are we, still in
  1999. the prime of our lusty youth, still at the beginning of our glorious
  2000. manhood, to sit down among the outworn people, to take our place
  2001. with the weak and the craven? A thousand times no!%@NL@%
  2002. %@CR:AMERICRoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  2003.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  2004.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2005. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2006. %@NL@%
  2007. %@NL@%
  2008. %@2@%The youth of America is their oldest tradition. It has been%@EH@%
  2009. going on now for three hundred years.%@NL@%
  2010. %@CR:AMERICWilde     @%%@NL@%
  2011.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  2012.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  2013. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2014. %@NL@%
  2015. %@NL@%
  2016. %@2@%Woman governs America because America is a land of boys who%@EH@%
  2017. refuse to grow up.%@NL@%
  2018. %@CR:AMERICdeMadariag@%%@NL@%
  2019.                                          Salvador de Madariaga (1886-1978)%@NL@%
  2020.                                           Spanish diplomat, writer, critic%@NL@%
  2021. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2022. %@NL@%
  2023. %@NL@%
  2024. %@2@%America is not a young land: it is old and dirty and evil before%@EH@%
  2025. the settlers, before the Indians. The evil is there waiting.%@NL@%
  2026. %@CR:AMERICBurroughs @%%@NL@%
  2027.                                             William S. Burroughs (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  2028.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2029. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2030. %@NL@%
  2031. %@NL@%
  2032. %@2@%The great social adventure of America is no longer the conquest%@EH@%
  2033. of the wilderness but the absorption of fifty different peoples.%@NL@%
  2034. %@CR:AMERICLippmann  @%%@NL@%
  2035.                                                Walter Lippmann (1889-1974)%@NL@%
  2036.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  2037. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2038. %@NL@%
  2039. %@NL@%
  2040. %@2@%America is God's Crucible, the great Melting-Pot where all%@EH@%
  2041. the races of Europe are melting and re-forming.%@NL@%
  2042. %@CR:AMERICZangwill  @%%@NL@%
  2043.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  2044.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  2045. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2046. %@NL@%
  2047. %@NL@%
  2048. %@2@%America, half-brother of the world!%@NL@%
  2049. %@CR:AMERICBailey3   @%%@NL@%
  2050.                                                  Philip Bailey (1816-1902)%@NL@%
  2051.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  2052. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2053. %@NL@%
  2054. %@NL@%
  2055. %@2@%America lives in the heart of every man everywhere who wishes%@EH@%
  2056. to find a region where he will be free to work out his destiny
  2057. as he chooses.%@NL@%
  2058. %@CR:AMERICWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  2059.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  2060.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2061. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2062. %@NL@%
  2063. %@NL@%
  2064. %@2@%The business of America is business.%@NL@%
  2065. %@CR:AMERICCoolidge  @%%@NL@%
  2066.                                                Calvin Coolidge (1872-1933)%@NL@%
  2067.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2068. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2069. %@NL@%
  2070. %@NL@%
  2071. %@2@%In America people never obey people, they obey justice, or%@EH@%
  2072. the law.%@NL@%
  2073. %@CR:AMERICTocquevill@%%@NL@%
  2074.                                          Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859)%@NL@%
  2075.                                               French historian, politician%@NL@%
  2076. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2077. %@NL@%
  2078. %@NL@%
  2079. %@2@%The United States has to move very fast to even stand still.%@NL@%
  2080. %@CR:AMERICKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  2081.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  2082.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2083. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2084. %@NL@%
  2085. %@NL@%
  2086. %@2@%If you think the US has stood still, who built the largest%@EH@%
  2087. shopping-center in the world?%@NL@%
  2088. %@CR:AMERICNixon     @%%@NL@%
  2089.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  2090.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2091. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2092. %@NL@%
  2093. %@NL@%
  2094. %@2@%In America you watch TV and think that's totally unreal, then%@EH@%
  2095. you step outside and it's just the same.%@NL@%
  2096. %@CR:AMERICArmatradin@%%@NL@%
  2097.                                                 Joan Armatrading (b. 1947)%@NL@%
  2098.                                                             British singer%@NL@%
  2099. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2100. %@NL@%
  2101. %@NL@%
  2102. %@2@%Your women shall scream like peacocks when they talk, and your%@EH@%
  2103. men neigh like horses when they laugh.%@NL@%
  2104. %@CR:AMERICKipling   @%%@NL@%
  2105.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  2106.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2107. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2108. %@NL@%
  2109. %@NL@%
  2110. %@2@%I have no further use for America. I wouldn't go back there%@EH@%
  2111. if Jesus Christ was President.%@NL@%
  2112. %@CR:AMERICChaplin   @%%@NL@%
  2113.                                                Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977)%@NL@%
  2114.                                              English comic actor, director%@NL@%
  2115. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2116. %@NL@%
  2117. %@NL@%
  2118. %@2@%In Boston they ask, "How much does he know?" In New York,%@EH@%
  2119. "How much is he worth?" In Philadelphia "Who were his parents?"%@NL@%
  2120. %@CR:AMERICTwain     @%%@NL@%
  2121.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  2122.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2123. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2124. %@NL@%
  2125. %@NL@%
  2126. %@2@%A Boston man is the east wind made flesh.%@NL@%
  2127. %@CR:AMERICAppleton  @%%@NL@%
  2128.                                                Thomas Appleton (1812-1884)%@NL@%
  2129.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2130. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2131. %@NL@%
  2132. %@NL@%
  2133. %@2@%Washington is a city of Southern efficiency and Northern charm.%@NL@%
  2134. %@CR:AMERICKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  2135.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  2136.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2137. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2138. %@NL@%
  2139. %@NL@%
  2140. %@2@%The people are unreal. The flowers are unreal, they don't smell.%@EH@%
  2141. The fruit is unreal, it doesn't taste of anything. The whole place
  2142. is a glaring, gaudy, nightmarish set, built upon the desert.%@NL@%
  2143. %@CR:AMERICBarrymore1@%%@NL@%
  2144.                                                Ethel Barrymore (1879-1959)%@NL@%
  2145.                                                           American actress%@NL@%
  2146.                                                             of Los Angeles%@NL@%
  2147. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2148. %@NL@%
  2149. %@NL@%
  2150. %@2@%A city with all the personality of a paper cup.%@NL@%
  2151. %@CR:AMERICChandler  @%%@NL@%
  2152.                                               Raymond Chandler (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  2153.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  2154.                                                             of Los Angeles%@NL@%
  2155. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2156. %@NL@%
  2157. %@NL@%
  2158. %@2@%California is a place where a boom mentality and%@EH@%
  2159. a sense of Chekhovian loss meet in uneasy suspension; in which
  2160. the mind is troubled by some buried but ineradicable suspicion
  2161. that things had better work here, because here, beneath that immense
  2162. bleached sky, is where we run out of continent.%@NL@%
  2163. %@CR:AMERICDidion    @%%@NL@%
  2164.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  2165.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  2166. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2167. %@NL@%
  2168. %@NL@%
  2169.      %@2@%Out where the hanclasp's a little stronger,%@NL@%
  2170.      Out where the smile dwells a little longer,%@NL@%
  2171.      That's where the West begins.%@NL@%
  2172. %@CR:AMERICChapman1  @%%@NL@%
  2173.                                                 Arthur Chapman (1873-1935)%@NL@%
  2174.                                                      American poet, author%@NL@%
  2175. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2176. %@NL@%
  2177. %@NL@%
  2178. %@2@%If you're going to America, bring your own food.%@NL@%
  2179. %@CR:AMERICLebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  2180.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  2181.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  2182. %@AS@%                                                                   America%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2183. %@NL@%
  2184. %@NL@%
  2185. %@NL@%
  2186. %@1@%%@AS@%Americans%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2187. %@CR:AMERICANS       @%%@NL@%
  2188. %@2@%See:%@QR:Americans@%%@NL@%
  2189.      Courtesy: %@AB@%Bradbury%@AE@%%@BO:           8962a@%%@NL@%
  2190.      Europe: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:           d3136@%%@NL@%
  2191.      Friendliness: %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:           fd236@%%@NL@%
  2192.      Gentlemen: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:          10ac5f@%%@NL@%
  2193.      Insults: %@AB@%Gallico%@AE@%%@BO:          1521a5@%%@NL@%
  2194.      Paris: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          1cd4ea@%%@NL@%
  2195.      Promiscuity: %@AB@%McCarthy%@AE@%%@BO:          20757e@%%@NL@%
  2196. %@NL@%
  2197. %@2@%I am willing to love all mankind, %@AI@%except an American.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2198. %@CR:AMERICJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  2199.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  2200.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  2201. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2202. %@NL@%
  2203. %@NL@%
  2204. %@2@%For other nations, utopia is a blessed past never to be recovered;%@EH@%
  2205. for Americans it is just beyond the horizon.%@NL@%
  2206. %@CR:AMERICKissinger @%%@NL@%
  2207.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  2208.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  2209. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2210. %@NL@%
  2211. %@NL@%
  2212. %@2@%There is nothing the matter with Americans except their ideals.%@EH@%
  2213. The real American is all right; it is the ideal American who is
  2214. all wrong.%@NL@%
  2215. %@CR:AMERICChesterton@%%@NL@%
  2216.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  2217.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2218. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2219. %@NL@%
  2220. %@NL@%
  2221. %@2@%People in America, of course, live in all sorts of fashions,%@EH@%
  2222. because they are foreigners, or unlucky, or depraved, or without
  2223. ambition; people live like that, but %@AI@%Americans%@AE@% live in white
  2224. detached houses with green shutters. Rigidly, blindly, the dream
  2225. takes precedence.%@NL@%
  2226. %@CR:AMERICMead      @%%@NL@%
  2227.                                                  Margaret Mead (1901-1978)%@NL@%
  2228.                                                    American anthropologist%@NL@%
  2229. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2230. %@NL@%
  2231. %@NL@%
  2232. %@2@%American women expect to find in their husbands a perfection%@EH@%
  2233. that English women only hope to find in their butlers.%@NL@%
  2234. %@CR:AMERICMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  2235.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  2236.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2237. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2238. %@NL@%
  2239. %@NL@%
  2240. %@2@%Only in America  . . .  do these peasants, our mothers, get their%@EH@%
  2241. hair dyed platinum at the age of sixty, and walk up and down Collins
  2242. Avenue in Florida in pedalpushers and mink stoles - and with
  2243. opinions on every subject under the sun.%@NL@%
  2244. %@CR:AMERICRoth      @%%@NL@%
  2245.                                                      Philip Roth (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  2246.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  2247. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2248. %@NL@%
  2249. %@NL@%
  2250. %@2@%Since the earliest days of our frontier irreverence has been%@EH@%
  2251. one of the signs of our affection.%@NL@%
  2252. %@CR:AMERICRusk      @%%@NL@%
  2253.                                                        Dean Rusk (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  2254.                                                          American diplomat%@NL@%
  2255. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2256. %@NL@%
  2257. %@NL@%
  2258. %@2@%Being American is to eat a lot of beef steak, and boy, we've%@EH@%
  2259. got a lot more beefsteak than any other country, and that's why
  2260. you ought to be glad you're an American. And people have started
  2261. looking at these big hunks of bloody meat on their plates, you
  2262. know, and wondering what on earth they think they're doing.%@NL@%
  2263. %@CR:AMERICVonnegut  @%%@NL@%
  2264.                                                    Kurt Vonnegut (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  2265.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  2266. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2267. %@NL@%
  2268. %@NL@%
  2269. %@2@%When you consider how indifferent Americans are to the quality%@EH@%
  2270. and cooking of the food they put into their insides, it cannot
  2271. but strike you as peculiar that they should take such pride in
  2272. the mechanical appliances they use for its excretion.%@NL@%
  2273. %@CR:AMERICMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  2274.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  2275.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2276. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2277. %@NL@%
  2278. %@NL@%
  2279. %@2@%Americans are rather like bad Bulgarian wine: they don't travel%@EH@%
  2280. well.%@NL@%
  2281. %@CR:AMERICFalk      @%%@NL@%
  2282.                                                   Bernard Falk (1882-1960)%@NL@%
  2283.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2284. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2285. %@NL@%
  2286. %@NL@%
  2287. %@2@%Americans are uneasy with their possessions, guilty about power,%@EH@%
  2288. all of which is difficult for Europeans to perceive because they
  2289. are themselves so truly materialistic, so versed in the uses of
  2290. power.%@NL@%
  2291. %@CR:AMERICDidion    @%%@NL@%
  2292.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  2293.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  2294. %@AS@%                                                                 Americans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2295. %@NL@%
  2296. %@NL@%
  2297. %@NL@%
  2298. %@1@%%@AS@%Amorality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2299. %@CR:AMORALITY       @%%@NL@%
  2300. %@2@%%@QR:Amorality@%It is safest to be moderately base - to be flexible in shame,%@EH@%
  2301. and to be always ready for what is generous, good and just, when
  2302. anything is to be gained by virtue.%@NL@%
  2303. %@CR:AMORALSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  2304.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  2305.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  2306. %@AS@%                                                                 Amorality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2307. %@NL@%
  2308. %@NL@%
  2309. %@2@%If he does really think that there is no distinction%@EH@%
  2310. between virtue and vice, why, Sir, when he leaves our houses let
  2311. us count our spoons.%@NL@%
  2312. %@CR:AMORALJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  2313.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  2314.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  2315. %@AS@%                                                                 Amorality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2316. %@NL@%
  2317. %@NL@%
  2318. %@NL@%
  2319. %@1@%%@AS@%Anarchism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2320. %@CR:ANARCHISM       @%%@NL@%
  2321. %@2@%See:%@QR:Anarchism@%%@NL@%
  2322.      Socialism: %@AB@%Crosland%@AE@%%@BO:          25e3fc@%%@NL@%
  2323.      The State: %@AB@%Bakunin%@AE@%%@BO:          26c85f@%; %@AB@%Kropotkin%@AE@%%@BO:          26c9dc@%%@NL@%
  2324. %@NL@%
  2325. %@2@%Our idea of anarchism is launched: nongovernment is developing%@EH@%
  2326. as non-property did before.%@NL@%
  2327. %@CR:ANARCHProudhon  @%%@NL@%
  2328.                                         Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  2329.                                                     French social theorist%@NL@%
  2330. %@AS@%                                                                 Anarchism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2331. %@NL@%
  2332. %@NL@%
  2333. %@2@%Preferring personal government, with its tact and flexibility,%@EH@%
  2334. is called royalism. Preferring impersonal government, with its
  2335. dogmas and definitions, is called republicanism. Objecting broadmindedly
  2336. both to kings and creeds is called Bosh - at least, I know no
  2337. more philosophical word for it.%@NL@%
  2338. %@CR:ANARCHChesterton@%%@NL@%
  2339.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  2340.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2341. %@AS@%                                                                 Anarchism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2342. %@NL@%
  2343. %@NL@%
  2344. %@2@%Anarchism is the only philosophy which brings to man the consciousness%@EH@%
  2345. of himself; which maintains that God, the State, and society
  2346. are non-existent, that their promises are null and void, since
  2347. they can be fulfilled only through man's subordination.%@NL@%
  2348. %@CR:ANARCHGoldman   @%%@NL@%
  2349.                                                   Emma Goldman (1869-1940)%@NL@%
  2350.                                                         American anarchist%@NL@%
  2351. %@AS@%                                                                 Anarchism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2352. %@NL@%
  2353. %@NL@%
  2354.      %@2@%%@AI@%Dame dynamite, que l'on danse vite  . . . %@AE@%%@NL@%
  2355.      %@AI@%Dansons et chansons et dynamitons!%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2356.      Lady Dynamite, let's dance quickly,%@NL@%
  2357.      Let's dance and sing and dynamite everything!%@NL@%
  2358. %@CR:ANARCHGoldman   @%%@NL@%
  2359.                                         French anarchist song of the 1880s%@NL@%
  2360. %@AS@%                                                                 Anarchism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2361. %@NL@%
  2362. %@NL@%
  2363. %@NL@%
  2364. %@1@%%@AS@%Ancestry%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2365. %@CR:ANCESTRY        @%%@NL@%
  2366. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ancestry@%%@NL@%
  2367.      The Aristocracy: %@AB@%Burton%@AE@%%@BO:           28196@%%@NL@%
  2368.      Snobbery: %@AB@%Agar%@AE@%%@BO:          25bf28@%%@NL@%
  2369.      Tradition: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          28fe3e@%; %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          28ffd0@%%@NL@%
  2370. %@NL@%
  2371. %@2@%Every man is an omnibus in which his ancestors ride.%@NL@%
  2372. %@CR:ANCESTHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  2373.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  2374.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  2375. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2376. %@NL@%
  2377. %@NL@%
  2378. %@2@%Each has his own tree of ancestors, but at the top of all sits%@EH@%
  2379. Probably Arboreal.%@NL@%
  2380. %@CR:ANCESTStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  2381.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  2382.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  2383. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2384. %@NL@%
  2385. %@NL@%
  2386. %@2@%Geneology. An account of one's descent from an ancestor who%@EH@%
  2387. did not particularly care to trace his own.%@NL@%
  2388. %@CR:ANCESTBierce    @%%@NL@%
  2389.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  2390.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2391. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2392. %@NL@%
  2393. %@NL@%
  2394. %@2@%Englishmen hate Liberty and Equality too much to understand%@EH@%
  2395. them. But every Englishman loves a pedigree.%@NL@%
  2396. %@CR:ANCESTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  2397.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  2398.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  2399. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2400. %@NL@%
  2401. %@NL@%
  2402. %@2@%It is indeed a desirable thing to be well-descended, but the%@EH@%
  2403. glory belongs to our ancestors.%@NL@%
  2404. %@CR:ANCESTPlutarch  @%%@NL@%
  2405.                                                          Plutarch (46-120)%@NL@%
  2406.                                                 Greek essayist, biographer%@NL@%
  2407. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2408. %@NL@%
  2409. %@NL@%
  2410. %@2@%Neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies.%@NL@%
  2411. %@CR:ANCESTSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  2412.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  2413.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  2414. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2415. %@NL@%
  2416. %@NL@%
  2417. %@2@%There is a certain class of people who prefer to say that their%@EH@%
  2418. fathers came down in the world through their own follies than to
  2419. boast that they rose in the world through their own industry and
  2420. talents. It is the same shabby-genteel sentiment, the same vanity
  2421. of birth which makes men prefer to believe that they are degenerated
  2422. angels rather than elevated apes.%@NL@%
  2423. %@CR:ANCESTReade2    @%%@NL@%
  2424.                                              W. Winwoode Reade (1838-1875)%@NL@%
  2425.                                                   English traveler, author%@NL@%
  2426. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2427. %@NL@%
  2428. %@NL@%
  2429. %@2@%I would rather make my name than inherit it.%@NL@%
  2430. %@CR:ANCESTThackeray @%%@NL@%
  2431.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  2432.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2433. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2434. %@NL@%
  2435. %@NL@%
  2436. %@2@%I don't know who my grandfather was; I am much more concerned%@EH@%
  2437. to know what his grandson will be.%@NL@%
  2438. %@CR:ANCESTLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  2439.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  2440.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  2441. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2442. %@NL@%
  2443. %@NL@%
  2444.      %@2@%In church your grandsire cut his throat;%@NL@%
  2445.      To do the job too long he tarried:%@NL@%
  2446.      He should have had my hearty vote%@NL@%
  2447.      To cut his throat before he married.%@NL@%
  2448. %@CR:ANCESTSwift     @%%@NL@%
  2449.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  2450.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  2451. %@AS@%                                                                  Ancestry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2452. %@NL@%
  2453. %@NL@%
  2454. %@NL@%
  2455. %@1@%%@AS@%Anecdotes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2456. %@CR:ANECDOTES       @%%@NL@%
  2457. %@2@%See:%@QR:Anecdotes@%%@NL@%
  2458.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:            f37f@%%@NL@%
  2459. %@NL@%
  2460. %@2@%With a tale, forsooth, he cometh unto you; with a tale which%@EH@%
  2461. holdeth children from play, and old men from the chimney corner.%@NL@%
  2462. %@CR:ANECDOSidney    @%%@NL@%
  2463.                                              Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)%@NL@%
  2464.                                              English poet, critic, soldier%@NL@%
  2465. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2466. %@NL@%
  2467. %@NL@%
  2468. %@2@%The history of a soldier's wound beguiles the pain of it.%@NL@%
  2469. %@CR:ANECDOSterne    @%%@NL@%
  2470.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  2471.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2472. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2473. %@NL@%
  2474. %@NL@%
  2475. %@2@%If it isn't true at least it's a happy invention.%@NL@%
  2476. %@CR:ANECDOBruno     @%%@NL@%
  2477.                                                 Giordano Bruno (1548-1600)%@NL@%
  2478.                                                        Italian philosopher%@NL@%
  2479. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2480. %@NL@%
  2481. %@NL@%
  2482. %@2@%A good storyteller is a person who has a good memory and hopes%@EH@%
  2483. other people haven't.%@NL@%
  2484. %@CR:ANECDOCobb      @%%@NL@%
  2485.                                                  Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944)%@NL@%
  2486.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  2487. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2488. %@NL@%
  2489. %@NL@%
  2490. %@2@%How is it that we remember the least triviality%@EH@%
  2491. that happens to us, and yet not remember how often we have recounted
  2492. it to the same person?%@NL@%
  2493. %@CR:ANECDOLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  2494.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  2495.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  2496. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2497. %@NL@%
  2498. %@NL@%
  2499. %@2@%We may be willing to tell a story twice, never to hear it more%@EH@%
  2500. than once.%@NL@%
  2501. %@CR:ANECDOHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  2502.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  2503.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  2504. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2505. %@NL@%
  2506. %@NL@%
  2507.      %@2@%Faith! he must make his stories shorter%@NL@%
  2508.      Or change his comrades once a quarter.%@NL@%
  2509. %@CR:ANECDOSwift     @%%@NL@%
  2510.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  2511.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  2512. %@AS@%                                                                 Anecdotes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2513. %@NL@%
  2514. %@NL@%
  2515. %@NL@%
  2516. %@1@%%@AS@%Anger%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2517. %@CR:ANGER           @%%@NL@%
  2518. %@2@%See:%@QR:Anger@%%@NL@%
  2519.      Patience: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          1d0332@%%@NL@%
  2520.      Speeches: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          266877@%%@NL@%
  2521. %@NL@%
  2522. %@2@%Anger is a kind of temporary madness.%@NL@%
  2523. %@CR:ANGER SaintBasil@%%@NL@%
  2524.                                                      Saint Basil (330-379)%@NL@%
  2525.                                                           Greek theologian%@NL@%
  2526. %@AS@%                                                                     Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2527. %@NL@%
  2528. %@NL@%
  2529. %@2@%Anger is one of the sinews of the soul; he that lacks it has%@EH@%
  2530. a maimed mind.%@NL@%
  2531. %@CR:ANGER Fuller2   @%%@NL@%
  2532.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  2533.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  2534. %@AS@%                                                                     Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2535. %@NL@%
  2536. %@NL@%
  2537.      %@2@%Heav'n has no rage like love to hatred turn'd,%@NL@%
  2538.      Nor Hell a fury like a woman scorn'd.%@NL@%
  2539. %@CR:ANGER Congreve  @%%@NL@%
  2540.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  2541.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  2542. %@AS@%                                                                     Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2543. %@NL@%
  2544. %@NL@%
  2545. %@2@%No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.%@NL@%
  2546. %@CR:ANGER Nathan    @%%@NL@%
  2547.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  2548.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  2549. %@AS@%                                                                     Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2550. %@NL@%
  2551. %@NL@%
  2552. %@NL@%
  2553. %@1@%%@AS@%Angling%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2554. %@CR:ANGLING         @%%@NL@%
  2555. %@2@%%@QR:Angling@%The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive%@EH@%
  2556. but obtainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope.%@NL@%
  2557. %@CR:ANGLINBuchan    @%%@NL@%
  2558.                                                    John Buchan (1875-1940)%@NL@%
  2559.                                                  British author, statesman%@NL@%
  2560. %@AS@%                                                                   Angling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2561. %@NL@%
  2562. %@NL@%
  2563. %@2@%We may say of angling as Dr. Boteler said of strawberries,%@EH@%
  2564. "Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God
  2565. never did"; and so, if I might be judge, "God never did make
  2566. a more calm, quiet, innocent recreation than angling."%@NL@%
  2567. %@CR:ANGLINWalton    @%%@NL@%
  2568.                                                   Izaak Walton (1593-1683)%@NL@%
  2569.                                                 English author, biographer%@NL@%
  2570. %@AS@%                                                                   Angling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2571. %@NL@%
  2572. %@NL@%
  2573. %@2@%Fly fishing may be a very pleasant amusement; but angling or%@EH@%
  2574. float fishing I can only compare to a stick and a string, with
  2575. a worm at one end and a fool at the other.%@NL@%
  2576. %@CR:ANGLINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  2577.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  2578.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  2579. %@AS@%                                                                   Angling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2580. %@NL@%
  2581. %@NL@%
  2582. %@NL@%
  2583. %@1@%%@AS@%Animals%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2584. %@CR:ANIMALS         @%%@NL@%
  2585. %@2@%See:%@QR:Animals@%%@NL@%
  2586.      %@AB@%Dogs%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b30e0@%%@NL@%
  2587.      %@AB@%Horses%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          13578d@%%@NL@%
  2588. %@NL@%
  2589. %@2@%Nothing to be done really about animals. Anything you do looks%@EH@%
  2590. foolish. The answer isn't in us. It's almost as if we're put here
  2591. on earth to show how silly they aren't.%@NL@%
  2592. %@CR:ANIMALHoban     @%%@NL@%
  2593.                                                    Russell Hoban (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  2594.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2595. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2596. %@NL@%
  2597. %@NL@%
  2598.      %@2@%They do not sweat and whine about their condition,%@NL@%
  2599.      They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,%@NL@%
  2600.      They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,%@NL@%
  2601.      Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania%@NL@%
  2602.      of owning things, Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind%@NL@%
  2603.      that lived thousands of years ago.%@NL@%
  2604. %@CR:ANIMALWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  2605.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  2606.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  2607. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2608. %@NL@%
  2609. %@NL@%
  2610. %@2@%We know what animals do and what beaver and bears and salmon%@EH@%
  2611. and other creatures need, because once our men were married to
  2612. them and they acquired this knowledge from their animal wives.%@NL@%
  2613. %@CR:ANIMALWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  2614.                 native Hawaiians quoted by Levi-Strauss in %@AI@%The Savage Mind%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2615. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2616. %@NL@%
  2617. %@NL@%
  2618. %@2@%A peasant becomes fond of his pig and is glad to salt away%@EH@%
  2619. its pork. What is significant, and is so difficult for the urban
  2620. stranger to understand, is that the two statements are connected
  2621. by an %@AI@%and%@AE@% and not by a %@AI@%but.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2622. %@CR:ANIMALBerger    @%%@NL@%
  2623.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  2624.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  2625. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2626. %@NL@%
  2627. %@NL@%
  2628. %@2@%Of all God's creatures there is only one that cannot be made%@EH@%
  2629. the slave of the lash. That one is the cat. If man could be crossed
  2630. with the cat it would improve man, but it would deteriorate the
  2631. cat.%@NL@%
  2632. %@CR:ANIMALTwain     @%%@NL@%
  2633.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  2634.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2635. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2636. %@NL@%
  2637. %@NL@%
  2638. %@2@%The zoo cannot but disappoint. The public purpose of zoos is%@EH@%
  2639. to offer visitors the opportunity of looking at animals. Yet nowhere
  2640. in a zoo can a stranger encounter the look of an animal. At the
  2641. most, the animal's gaze flickers and passes on. They look sideways.
  2642. They look blindly beyond.%@NL@%
  2643. %@CR:ANIMALBerger    @%%@NL@%
  2644.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  2645.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  2646. %@AS@%                                                                   Animals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2647. %@NL@%
  2648. %@NL@%
  2649. %@NL@%
  2650. %@1@%%@AS@%Anniversaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2651. %@CR:ANNIVERSARIES   @%%@NL@%
  2652. %@2@%%@QR:Anniversaries@%Let us love nobly, and live, and add again%@NL@%
  2653.      Years and years unto years, till we attain%@NL@%
  2654.      To write threescore: this is the second of our reign.%@NL@%
  2655. %@CR:ANNIVEDonne     @%%@NL@%
  2656.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  2657.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  2658. %@AS@%                                                             Anniversaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2659. %@NL@%
  2660. %@NL@%
  2661. %@2@%The secret anniversaries of the heart.%@NL@%
  2662. %@CR:ANNIVELongfellow@%%@NL@%
  2663.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  2664.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  2665. %@AS@%                                                             Anniversaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2666. %@NL@%
  2667. %@NL@%
  2668. %@NL@%
  2669. %@1@%%@AS@%Anthologies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2670. %@CR:ANTHOLOGIES     @%%@NL@%
  2671. %@2@%%@QR:Anthologies@%It might well be said of me that here I have merely made up%@EH@%
  2672. a bunch of other people's flowers, and provided nothing of my own
  2673. but the string to bind them.%@NL@%
  2674. %@CR:ANTHOLMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  2675.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  2676.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  2677. %@AS@%                                                               Anthologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2678. %@NL@%
  2679. %@NL@%
  2680. %@2@%A well-chosen anthology is a complete dispensary of medicine%@EH@%
  2681. for the more common mental disorders, and may be used as much for
  2682. prevention as cure.%@NL@%
  2683. %@CR:ANTHOLGraves    @%%@NL@%
  2684.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  2685.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  2686. %@AS@%                                                               Anthologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2687. %@NL@%
  2688. %@NL@%
  2689. %@2@%Lexicographer: a writer of dictionaries, a harmless drudge.%@NL@%
  2690. %@CR:ANTHOLJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  2691.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  2692.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  2693. %@AS@%                                                               Anthologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2694. %@NL@%
  2695. %@NL@%
  2696. %@NL@%
  2697. %@1@%%@AS@%Antipathy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2698. %@CR:ANTIPATHY       @%%@NL@%
  2699. %@2@%%@QR:Antipathy@%They exchanged the quick, brilliant smile of women who dislike%@EH@%
  2700. each other on sight.%@NL@%
  2701. %@CR:ANTIPAPugh      @%%@NL@%
  2702.                                                    Marshall Pugh (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  2703.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  2704. %@AS@%                                                                 Antipathy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2705. %@NL@%
  2706. %@NL@%
  2707. %@2@%Violent antipathies are always suspicious, and betray a secret%@EH@%
  2708. affinity.%@NL@%
  2709. %@CR:ANTIPAHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  2710.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  2711.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  2712. %@AS@%                                                                 Antipathy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2713. %@NL@%
  2714. %@NL@%
  2715. %@NL@%
  2716. %@1@%%@AS@%Anxiety%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2717. %@CR:ANXIETY         @%%@NL@%
  2718. %@2@%%@QR:Anxiety@%But Jesus, when you don't have any money, the problem is food.%@EH@%
  2719. When you have money, it's sex. When you have both, it's health,
  2720. you worry about getting ruptured or something. If everything is
  2721. simply jake then you're frightened of death.%@NL@%
  2722. %@CR:ANXIETDonleavy  @%%@NL@%
  2723.                                                   J. P. Donleavy (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  2724.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2725. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2726. %@NL@%
  2727. %@NL@%
  2728. %@2@%When you suffer an attack of nerves you're being attacked by%@EH@%
  2729. the nervous system. What chance has a man got against a system?%@NL@%
  2730. %@CR:ANXIETHoban     @%%@NL@%
  2731.                                                    Russell Hoban (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  2732.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2733. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2734. %@NL@%
  2735. %@NL@%
  2736. %@2@%Worry is interest paid on trouble before it falls due.%@NL@%
  2737. %@CR:ANXIETInge      @%%@NL@%
  2738.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  2739.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  2740. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2741. %@NL@%
  2742. %@NL@%
  2743. %@2@%Women like to sit down with trouble as if it were knitting.%@NL@%
  2744. %@CR:ANXIETGlasgow   @%%@NL@%
  2745.                                                  Ellen Glasgow (1874-1945)%@NL@%
  2746.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  2747. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2748. %@NL@%
  2749. %@NL@%
  2750.      %@2@%My apprehensions come in crowds;%@NL@%
  2751.      I dread the rustling of the grass;%@NL@%
  2752.      The very shadows of the clouds%@NL@%
  2753.      Have power to shake me as they pass:%@NL@%
  2754.      I question things and do not find%@NL@%
  2755.      One that will answer to my mind;%@NL@%
  2756.      And all the world appears unkind.%@NL@%
  2757. %@CR:ANXIETWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  2758.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  2759.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  2760. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2761. %@NL@%
  2762. %@NL@%
  2763. %@2@%Probably the only place where a man can feel really secure%@EH@%
  2764. is in a maximum security prison, except for the imminent threat
  2765. of release.%@NL@%
  2766. %@CR:ANXIETGreer     @%%@NL@%
  2767.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  2768.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  2769. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2770. %@NL@%
  2771. %@NL@%
  2772. %@2@%I've never met a healthy person who worried much about his%@EH@%
  2773. health, or a good person who worried about his soul.%@NL@%
  2774. %@CR:ANXIETHaldane   @%%@NL@%
  2775.                                               J. B. S. Haldane (1892-1964)%@NL@%
  2776.                                                          British scientist%@NL@%
  2777. %@AS@%                                                                   Anxiety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2778. %@NL@%
  2779. %@NL@%
  2780. %@NL@%
  2781. %@1@%%@AS@%Apathy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2782. %@CR:APATHY          @%%@NL@%
  2783. %@2@%See:%@QR:Apathy@%%@NL@%
  2784.      %@AB@%Indifference%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          14a630@%%@NL@%
  2785. %@NL@%
  2786. %@2@%The difference between our decadence and the Russians' is that%@EH@%
  2787. while theirs is brutal, ours is apathetic.%@NL@%
  2788. %@CR:APATHYThurber   @%%@NL@%
  2789.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  2790.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  2791. %@AS@%                                                                    Apathy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2792. %@NL@%
  2793. %@NL@%
  2794. %@2@%Science may have found a cure for most evils; but it has found%@EH@%
  2795. no remedy for the worst of them all - the apathy of human beings.%@NL@%
  2796. %@CR:APATHYKeller    @%%@NL@%
  2797.                                                   Helen Keller (1880-1968)%@NL@%
  2798.                                                  American author, lecturer%@NL@%
  2799. %@AS@%                                                                    Apathy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2800. %@NL@%
  2801. %@NL@%
  2802. %@NL@%
  2803. %@1@%%@AS@%Apocalypse%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2804. %@CR:APOCALYPSE      @%%@NL@%
  2805. %@2@%%@QR:Apocalypse@%God seems to have left the receiver off the hook, and time%@EH@%
  2806. is running out.%@NL@%
  2807. %@CR:APOCALKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  2808.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  2809.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  2810. %@AS@%                                                                Apocalypse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2811. %@NL@%
  2812. %@NL@%
  2813.      %@2@%This is the way the world ends%@NL@%
  2814.      This is the way the world ends%@NL@%
  2815.      This is the way the world ends%@NL@%
  2816.      Not with a bang but a whimper.%@NL@%
  2817. %@CR:APOCALEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  2818.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  2819.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  2820. %@AS@%                                                                Apocalypse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2821. %@NL@%
  2822. %@NL@%
  2823. %@2@%Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.%@NL@%
  2824. %@CR:APOCALJohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  2825.                                        John the Divine (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  2826.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  2827. %@AS@%                                                                Apocalypse%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2828. %@NL@%
  2829. %@NL@%
  2830. %@NL@%
  2831. %@1@%%@AS@%Apologies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2832. %@CR:APOLOGIES       @%%@NL@%
  2833. %@2@%%@QR:Apologies@%Never make a defence or apology before you be accused.%@NL@%
  2834. %@CR:APOLOGCharlesI  @%%@NL@%
  2835.                                King Charles I of Great Britain (1600-1649)%@NL@%
  2836. %@AS@%                                                                 Apologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2837. %@NL@%
  2838. %@NL@%
  2839. %@2@%To apologize is to lay the foundation for a future offense.%@NL@%
  2840. %@CR:APOLOGBierce    @%%@NL@%
  2841.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  2842.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2843. %@AS@%                                                                 Apologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2844. %@NL@%
  2845. %@NL@%
  2846. %@2@%A stiff apology is a second insult.%@NL@%
  2847. %@CR:APOLOGChesterton@%%@NL@%
  2848.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  2849.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2850. %@AS@%                                                                 Apologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2851. %@NL@%
  2852. %@NL@%
  2853. %@2@%It is a good rule in life never to apologise. The right%@EH@%
  2854. sort of people do not want apologies, and the wrong sort take a
  2855. mean advantage of them.%@NL@%
  2856. %@CR:APOLOGWodehouse @%%@NL@%
  2857.                                                P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975)%@NL@%
  2858.                                                 British novelist, humorist%@NL@%
  2859. %@AS@%                                                                 Apologies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2860. %@NL@%
  2861. %@NL@%
  2862. %@NL@%
  2863. %@1@%%@AS@%Appearances%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2864. %@CR:APPEARANCES     @%%@NL@%
  2865. %@2@%See:%@QR:Appearances@%%@NL@%
  2866.      The Commonplace: %@AB@%Lincoln%@AE@%%@BO:           755a9@%%@NL@%
  2867.      %@AB@%Dress%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b572c@%%@NL@%
  2868.      %@AB@%Faces%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           db3b4@%%@NL@%
  2869.      Vanity: %@AB@%de Unamuno%@AE@%%@BO:          29fab5@%%@NL@%
  2870.      Women: %@AB@%Tertullian%@AE@%%@BO:          2bbcf9@%%@NL@%
  2871. %@NL@%
  2872. %@2@%To see ourselves as others see us is a most salutary gift.%@EH@%
  2873. Hardly less important is the capacity to see others as they see
  2874. themselves.%@NL@%
  2875. %@CR:APPEARHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  2876.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  2877.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2878. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2879. %@NL@%
  2880. %@NL@%
  2881. %@2@%Barring that natural expression of villainy which we all have,%@EH@%
  2882. the man looked honest enough.%@NL@%
  2883. %@CR:APPEARTwain     @%%@NL@%
  2884.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  2885.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  2886. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2887. %@NL@%
  2888. %@NL@%
  2889. %@2@%I'm not a dictator. It's just that I have a grumpy face.%@NL@%
  2890. %@CR:APPEARPinochet  @%%@NL@%
  2891.                                                 General Pinochet (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  2892.                                                         President of Chile%@NL@%
  2893. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2894. %@NL@%
  2895. %@NL@%
  2896. %@2@%Straight trees have crooked roots.%@NL@%
  2897. %@CR:APPEARPinochet  @%%@NL@%
  2898.                                                       16th-century proverb%@NL@%
  2899. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2900. %@NL@%
  2901. %@NL@%
  2902. %@2@%A good man often appears %@AI@%gauche%@AE@% simply because he does not%@EH@%
  2903. take advantage of the myriad mean little chances of making himself
  2904. look stylish. Preferring truth to form, he is not constantly at
  2905. work upon the facade of his appearance.%@NL@%
  2906. %@CR:APPEARMurdoch   @%%@NL@%
  2907.                                                     Iris Murdoch (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  2908.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  2909. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2910. %@NL@%
  2911. %@NL@%
  2912. %@2@%He looked as inconspicuous as a tarantula on a slice of angel%@EH@%
  2913. food.%@NL@%
  2914. %@CR:APPEARChandler  @%%@NL@%
  2915.                                               Raymond Chandler (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  2916.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  2917. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2918. %@NL@%
  2919. %@NL@%
  2920. %@2@%She got her good looks from her father - he's a plastic%@EH@%
  2921. surgeon.%@NL@%
  2922. %@CR:APPEARMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  2923.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  2924.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  2925. %@AS@%                                                               Appearances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2926. %@NL@%
  2927. %@NL@%
  2928. %@NL@%
  2929. %@1@%%@AS@%Appeasement%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2930. %@CR:APPEASEMENT     @%%@NL@%
  2931. %@2@%%@QR:Appeasement@%And that is called paying the Dane-geld;%@NL@%
  2932.      But we've proved it again and again,%@NL@%
  2933.      That if once you have paid him the%@NL@%
  2934.      Dane-geld%@NL@%
  2935.      You never get rid of the Dane.%@NL@%
  2936. %@CR:APPEASKipling   @%%@NL@%
  2937.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  2938.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  2939. %@AS@%                                                               Appeasement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2940. %@NL@%
  2941. %@NL@%
  2942.      %@2@%Thus Belial, with words clothed in reason's garb,%@NL@%
  2943.      Counselled ignoble ease, and peaceful sloth,%@NL@%
  2944.      Not peace.%@NL@%
  2945. %@CR:APPEASMilton    @%%@NL@%
  2946.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  2947.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  2948. %@AS@%                                                               Appeasement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2949. %@NL@%
  2950. %@NL@%
  2951. %@2@%An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile,%@EH@%
  2952. hoping it will eat him last.%@NL@%
  2953. %@CR:APPEASChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  2954.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  2955.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  2956. %@AS@%                                                               Appeasement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2957. %@NL@%
  2958. %@NL@%
  2959. %@2@%Appeasers believe that if you keep on throwing steaks to a%@EH@%
  2960. tiger, the tiger will turn vegetarian.%@NL@%
  2961. %@CR:APPEASBroun     @%%@NL@%
  2962.                                                  Heywood Broun (1888-1939)%@NL@%
  2963.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  2964. %@AS@%                                                               Appeasement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2965. %@NL@%
  2966. %@NL@%
  2967. %@NL@%
  2968. %@1@%%@AS@%Applause%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  2969. %@CR:APPLAUSE        @%%@NL@%
  2970. %@2@%%@QR:Applause@%They named it Ovation from the Latin %@AI@%ovis%@AE@%, a sheep.%@NL@%
  2971. %@CR:APPLAUPlutarch  @%%@NL@%
  2972.                                                          Plutarch (46-120)%@NL@%
  2973.                                                 Greek essayist, biographer%@NL@%
  2974. %@AS@%                                                                  Applause%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2975. %@NL@%
  2976. %@NL@%
  2977. %@2@%I want to thank you for stopping the applause. It is impossible%@EH@%
  2978. for me to look humble for any period of time.%@NL@%
  2979. %@CR:APPLAUKissinger @%%@NL@%
  2980.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  2981.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  2982. %@AS@%                                                                  Applause%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2983. %@NL@%
  2984. %@NL@%
  2985. %@2@%Do not trust to the cheering, for those very persons would%@EH@%
  2986. shout as much if you and I were going to be hanged.%@NL@%
  2987. %@CR:APPLAUCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  2988.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  2989.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  2990. %@AS@%                                                                  Applause%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2991. %@NL@%
  2992. %@NL@%
  2993. %@2@%The silence that accepts merit as the most natural thing in%@EH@%
  2994. the world is the highest applause.%@NL@%
  2995. %@CR:APPLAUEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  2996.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  2997.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  2998. %@AS@%                                                                  Applause%@AE@%%@NL@%
  2999. %@NL@%
  3000. %@NL@%
  3001. %@NL@%
  3002. %@1@%%@AS@%Architecture%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3003. %@CR:ARCHITECTURE    @%%@NL@%
  3004. %@2@%%@QR:Architecture@%What has happened to architecture since the second world war%@EH@%
  3005. that the only passers-by who can contemplate it without pain are
  3006. those equipped with a white stick and a dog?%@NL@%
  3007. %@CR:ARCHITLevin     @%%@NL@%
  3008.                                                    Bernard Levin (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  3009.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  3010. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3011. %@NL@%
  3012. %@NL@%
  3013. %@2@%A large number of us have developed a feeling that architects%@EH@%
  3014. tend to design houses for the approval of fellow architects and
  3015. critics - not for the tenants.%@NL@%
  3016. %@CR:ARCHITPrinceOfWa@%%@NL@%
  3017.                                         Charles, Prince of Wales (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  3018. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3019. %@NL@%
  3020. %@NL@%
  3021. %@2@%Architecture is the art of how to waste space.%@NL@%
  3022. %@CR:ARCHITJohnson6  @%%@NL@%
  3023.                                                   Philip Johnson (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  3024.                                                         American architect%@NL@%
  3025. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3026. %@NL@%
  3027. %@NL@%
  3028. %@2@%Light, God's eldest daughter, is a principal beauty in a building.%@NL@%
  3029. %@CR:ARCHITFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  3030.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  3031.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  3032. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3033. %@NL@%
  3034. %@NL@%
  3035. %@2@%No person who is not a great sculptor or painter%@EH@%
  3036. can be an architect. If he is not a sculptor or painter, he can
  3037. only be a builder.%@NL@%
  3038. %@CR:ARCHITRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  3039.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  3040.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  3041. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3042. %@NL@%
  3043. %@NL@%
  3044. %@2@%Why can't we have those curves and arches that express feeling%@EH@%
  3045. in design? What is wrong with them? Why has everything got to be
  3046. vertical, straight, unbending, only at right angles - and functional?%@NL@%
  3047. %@CR:ARCHITPrinceOfWa@%%@NL@%
  3048.                                         Charles, Prince of Wales (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  3049. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3050. %@NL@%
  3051. %@NL@%
  3052. %@2@%No architecture is so haughty as that which is simple.%@NL@%
  3053. %@CR:ARCHITRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  3054.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  3055.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  3056. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3057. %@NL@%
  3058. %@NL@%
  3059. %@2@%%@AI@%Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3060. If you would see his monument, look around.%@NL@%
  3061. %@CR:ARCHITRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  3062.                                        of Sir Christopher Wren, by his son%@NL@%
  3063. %@AS@%                                                              Architecture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3064. %@NL@%
  3065. %@NL@%
  3066. %@NL@%
  3067. %@1@%%@AS@%Argument%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3068. %@CR:ARGUMENT        @%%@NL@%
  3069. %@2@%See:%@QR:Argument@%%@NL@%
  3070.      Agreement: %@AB@%Austen%@AE@%%@BO:           138cf@%%@NL@%
  3071.      %@AB@%Persuasion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1d6a3f@%%@NL@%
  3072. %@NL@%
  3073.      %@2@%Myself when young did eagerly frequent%@NL@%
  3074.      Doctor and Saint, and heard great Argument%@NL@%
  3075.      About it and about: but evermore%@NL@%
  3076.      Came out by the same Door wherein I went.%@NL@%
  3077. %@CR:ARGUMEFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  3078.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3079.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  3080. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3081. %@NL@%
  3082. %@NL@%
  3083. %@2@%A man never tells you anything until you contradict him.%@NL@%
  3084. %@CR:ARGUMEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  3085.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  3086.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  3087. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3088. %@NL@%
  3089. %@NL@%
  3090. %@2@%One often contradicts an opinion when what is uncongenial is%@EH@%
  3091. really the tone in which it was conveyed.%@NL@%
  3092. %@CR:ARGUMENietzsche @%%@NL@%
  3093.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  3094.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  3095. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3096. %@NL@%
  3097. %@NL@%
  3098. %@2@%You raise your voice when you should reinforce your argument.%@NL@%
  3099. %@CR:ARGUMEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  3100.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  3101.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  3102. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3103. %@NL@%
  3104. %@NL@%
  3105. %@2@%You have not converted a man because you have silenced him.%@NL@%
  3106. %@CR:ARGUMEMorley2   @%%@NL@%
  3107.                                              John, Lord Morley (1838-1923)%@NL@%
  3108.                                         English writer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  3109. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3110. %@NL@%
  3111. %@NL@%
  3112. %@2@%Arguments are to be avoided: they are always vulgar and often%@EH@%
  3113. convincing.%@NL@%
  3114. %@CR:ARGUMEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  3115.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  3116.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  3117. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3118. %@NL@%
  3119. %@NL@%
  3120. %@2@%To gain one's way is no escape from the responsibility for%@EH@%
  3121. an inferior solution.%@NL@%
  3122. %@CR:ARGUMEChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  3123.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  3124.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  3125. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3126. %@NL@%
  3127. %@NL@%
  3128. %@2@%Persons of good sense, I have since observed, seldom fall into%@EH@%
  3129. disputation, except lawyers, university men, and men of all sorts
  3130. that have been bred at Edinburgh.%@NL@%
  3131. %@CR:ARGUMEFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  3132.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  3133.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  3134. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3135. %@NL@%
  3136. %@NL@%
  3137. %@2@%The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.%@NL@%
  3138. %@CR:ARGUMEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  3139.                                            Antonio, %@AI@%The Merchant of Venice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3140.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  3141.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  3142. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3143. %@NL@%
  3144. %@NL@%
  3145. %@2@%Arguments out of a pretty mouth are unanswerable.%@NL@%
  3146. %@CR:ARGUMEAddison   @%%@NL@%
  3147.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  3148.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  3149. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3150. %@NL@%
  3151. %@NL@%
  3152. %@2@%If you wish to win a man's heart, allow him to confute you.%@NL@%
  3153. %@CR:ARGUMEDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  3154.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  3155.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  3156. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3157. %@NL@%
  3158. %@NL@%
  3159. %@2@%A woman who is confuted is never convinced.%@NL@%
  3160. %@CR:ARGUMECollins1  @%%@NL@%
  3161.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  3162.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  3163. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3164. %@NL@%
  3165. %@NL@%
  3166. %@2@%The only argument available with an east wind is to put on%@EH@%
  3167. your overcoat.%@NL@%
  3168. %@CR:ARGUMELowell2   @%%@NL@%
  3169.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  3170.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  3171. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3172. %@NL@%
  3173. %@NL@%
  3174. %@2@%Between friends differences in taste or opinion are irritating%@EH@%
  3175. in direct proportion to their triviality.%@NL@%
  3176. %@CR:ARGUMEAuden     @%%@NL@%
  3177.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  3178.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  3179. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3180. %@NL@%
  3181. %@NL@%
  3182. %@2@%There are three sides to every question: your side, his side,%@EH@%
  3183. and to hell with it.%@NL@%
  3184. %@CR:ARGUMEAuden     @%%@NL@%
  3185.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  3186. %@AS@%                                                                  Argument%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3187. %@NL@%
  3188. %@NL@%
  3189. %@NL@%
  3190. %@1@%%@AS@%The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3191. %@CR:ARISTOCRACY     @%%@NL@%
  3192. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Aristocracy@%%@NL@%
  3193.      The English: %@AB@%Arnold%@AE@%%@BO:           cc92d@%%@NL@%
  3194.      The House of Lords: %@AB@%Winster%@AE@%%@BO:          137387@%%@NL@%
  3195.      Idleness: %@AB@%Burton%@AE@%%@BO:          14356a@%%@NL@%
  3196. %@NL@%
  3197. %@2@%We, my lords, may thank Heaven that we have something better%@EH@%
  3198. than our brains to depend on.%@NL@%
  3199. %@CR:ARISTOChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  3200.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  3201.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  3202. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3203. %@NL@%
  3204. %@NL@%
  3205. %@2@%There are bad manners everywhere, but an aristocracy is bad%@EH@%
  3206. manners organized.%@NL@%
  3207. %@CR:ARISTOJames2    @%%@NL@%
  3208.                                                    Henry James (1843-1916)%@NL@%
  3209.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  3210. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3211. %@NL@%
  3212. %@NL@%
  3213.      %@2@%For what were all these country patriots born?%@NL@%
  3214.      To hunt, and vote, and raise the price of corn?%@NL@%
  3215. %@CR:ARISTOByron2    @%%@NL@%
  3216.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  3217.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  3218. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3219. %@NL@%
  3220. %@NL@%
  3221. %@2@%We may talk what we please of lilies and lions%@EH@%
  3222. rampant, and spread eagles in fields %@AI@%d'or%@AE@% or %@AI@%d'argent%@AE@%; but
  3223. if heraldry were guided by reason, a plough in a field arable would
  3224. be the most noble and ancient of arms.%@NL@%
  3225. %@CR:ARISTOCowley    @%%@NL@%
  3226.                                                 Abraham Cowley (1618-1667)%@NL@%
  3227.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  3228. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3229. %@NL@%
  3230. %@NL@%
  3231. %@2@%A fully equipped Duke costs as much to keep up as two Dreadnoughts,%@EH@%
  3232. and they are just as great a terror - and they last longer.%@NL@%
  3233. %@CR:ARISTOLloydGeorg@%%@NL@%
  3234.                                             David Lloyd George (1863-1945)%@NL@%
  3235.                                   Welsh Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  3236. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3237. %@NL@%
  3238. %@NL@%
  3239. %@2@%Almost in every kingdom the most ancient families have been%@EH@%
  3240. at first princes' bastards.%@NL@%
  3241. %@CR:ARISTOBurton2   @%%@NL@%
  3242.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  3243.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  3244. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3245. %@NL@%
  3246. %@NL@%
  3247. %@2@%I have known a German Prince with more titles than subjects,%@EH@%
  3248. and a Spanish nobleman with more names than shirts.%@NL@%
  3249. %@CR:ARISTOGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  3250.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  3251.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  3252. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3253. %@NL@%
  3254. %@NL@%
  3255. %@2@%There is no stronger craving in the world than that of the%@EH@%
  3256. rich for titles, except that of the titled for riches.%@NL@%
  3257. %@CR:ARISTOPearson   @%%@NL@%
  3258.                                                Hesketh Pearson (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  3259.                                                         British biographer%@NL@%
  3260. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3261. %@NL@%
  3262. %@NL@%
  3263. %@2@%Lords are lordliest in their wine.%@NL@%
  3264. %@CR:ARISTOMilton    @%%@NL@%
  3265.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  3266.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  3267. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3268. %@NL@%
  3269. %@NL@%
  3270. %@2@%A degenerate nobleman is like a turnip. There is nothing good%@EH@%
  3271. of him but that which is underground.%@NL@%
  3272. %@CR:ARISTOMilton    @%%@NL@%
  3273.                                                17th-century English saying%@NL@%
  3274. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3275. %@NL@%
  3276. %@NL@%
  3277. %@2@%Those comfortably padded lunatic asylums which are known, euphemistically,%@EH@%
  3278. as the stately homes of England.%@NL@%
  3279. %@CR:ARISTOWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  3280.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  3281.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  3282. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3283. %@NL@%
  3284. %@NL@%
  3285. %@2@%%@AI@%Stemmata quid faciunt?%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3286.  is the use of your pedigrees?%@NL@%
  3287. %@CR:ARISTOJuvenal   @%%@NL@%
  3288.                                                        Juvenal (c. 40-130)%@NL@%
  3289.                                                         Roman satiric poet%@NL@%
  3290. %@AS@%                                                           The Aristocracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3291. %@NL@%
  3292. %@NL@%
  3293. %@NL@%
  3294. %@1@%%@AS@%The Arms Race%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3295. %@CR:THEARMSRACE     @%%@NL@%
  3296. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Arms Race@%%@NL@%
  3297.      The Nuclear Age: %@AB@%Einstein%@AE@%%@BO:          1c05a2@%; %@AB@%de Gaulle%@AE@%%@BO:          1c08ef@%; %@AB@%White%@AE@%%@BO:          1c0765@%%@NL@%
  3298. %@NL@%
  3299. %@2@%Let him who desires peace prepare for war.%@NL@%
  3300. %@CR:THEARMVegetius  @%%@NL@%
  3301.                                               Vegetius (b. 4th century AD)%@NL@%
  3302.                                                  Roman military strategist%@NL@%
  3303. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3304. %@NL@%
  3305. %@NL@%
  3306. %@2@%The ability to get to the verge without getting into the war%@EH@%
  3307. is the necessary art.%@NL@%
  3308. %@CR:THEARMDulles    @%%@NL@%
  3309.                                             John Foster Dulles (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  3310.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  3311. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3312. %@NL@%
  3313. %@NL@%
  3314. %@2@%If this phrase of the "balance of power" is to be always%@EH@%
  3315. an argument for war, the pretence for war will never be wanting,
  3316. and peace can never be secure.%@NL@%
  3317. %@CR:THEARMBright    @%%@NL@%
  3318.                                                    John Bright (1811-1889)%@NL@%
  3319.                                                 English radical politician%@NL@%
  3320. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3321. %@NL@%
  3322. %@NL@%
  3323. %@2@%Security is a game in which the final goal is never quite in%@EH@%
  3324. reach.%@NL@%
  3325. %@CR:THEARMMartin3   @%%@NL@%
  3326.                                                  Laurence Martin (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  3327.                                                   British author, academic%@NL@%
  3328. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3329. %@NL@%
  3330. %@NL@%
  3331. %@2@%Nothing could have been more obvious to the people of the early%@EH@%
  3332. twentieth century than the rapidity with which war was becoming
  3333. impossible. And as certainly they did not see it. They did not
  3334. see it until the atomic bombs burst in their fumbling hands.%@NL@%
  3335. %@CR:THEARMWells     @%%@NL@%
  3336.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  3337.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  3338.                                                            written in 1914%@NL@%
  3339. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3340. %@NL@%
  3341. %@NL@%
  3342. %@2@%The world knows, and above all the Soviets know, that no American%@EH@%
  3343. President will sacrifice New York or Washington to save Berlin.%@NL@%
  3344. %@CR:THEARMNixon     @%%@NL@%
  3345.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  3346.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  3347. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3348. %@NL@%
  3349. %@NL@%
  3350. %@2@%One cannot fashion a credible deterrent out of an incredible%@EH@%
  3351. action.%@NL@%
  3352. %@CR:THEARMMcNamara  @%%@NL@%
  3353.                                                  Robert McNamara (b. 1916)%@NL@%
  3354.                              American industrialist, politician, financier%@NL@%
  3355. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3356. %@NL@%
  3357. %@NL@%
  3358. %@2@%Every gun that is fired, every warship launched, every rocket%@EH@%
  3359. fired, signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger
  3360. and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. The world
  3361. in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of
  3362. its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.%@NL@%
  3363. %@CR:THEARMEisenhower@%%@NL@%
  3364.                                           Dwight D. Eisenhower (1890-1969)%@NL@%
  3365.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  3366. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3367. %@NL@%
  3368. %@NL@%
  3369. %@2@%The emotional security and political stability in this country%@EH@%
  3370. entitle us to be a nuclear power.%@NL@%
  3371. %@CR:THEARMMason     @%%@NL@%
  3372.                                                 Sir Ronald Mason (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  3373.                                                  Chief Scientific Adviser,%@NL@%
  3374.                                                  Ministry of Defence, %@AB@%1983%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3375. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3376. %@NL@%
  3377. %@NL@%
  3378. %@2@%The superpowers often behave like two heavily-armed blind men%@EH@%
  3379. feeling their way around a room, each believing himself in mortal
  3380. peril from the other, whom he assumes to have perfect vision.%@NL@%
  3381. %@CR:THEARMKissinger @%%@NL@%
  3382.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  3383.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  3384. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3385. %@NL@%
  3386. %@NL@%
  3387. %@2@%Nuclear weapons are not in my line; unfortunately I am in their%@EH@%
  3388. line.%@NL@%
  3389. %@CR:THEARMForster   @%%@NL@%
  3390.                                                  E. M. Forster (1879-1970)%@NL@%
  3391.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  3392. %@AS@%                                                             The Arms Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3393. %@NL@%
  3394. %@NL@%
  3395. %@NL@%
  3396. %@1@%%@AS@%The Army%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3397. %@CR:THEARMY         @%%@NL@%
  3398. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Army@%%@NL@%
  3399.      %@AB@%Generals%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          104b2e@%%@NL@%
  3400.      Patriotism: %@AB@%Roosevelt%@AE@%%@BO:          1d1025@%%@NL@%
  3401.      Uniforms: %@AB@%Lawrence%@AE@%%@BO:          29caa4@%%@NL@%
  3402.      War: %@AB@%Stalin%@AE@%%@BO:          2a9075@%%@NL@%
  3403. %@NL@%
  3404. %@2@%The professional military mind is by necessity an inferior%@EH@%
  3405. and unimaginative mind; no man of high intellectual quality would
  3406. willingly imprison his gifts in such a calling.%@NL@%
  3407. %@CR:THEARMWells     @%%@NL@%
  3408.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  3409.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  3410. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3411. %@NL@%
  3412. %@NL@%
  3413. %@2@%It has been calculated by the ablest politicians that no State,%@EH@%
  3414. without being soon exhausted, can maintain above the hundredth
  3415. part of its members in arms and idleness.%@NL@%
  3416. %@CR:THEARMGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  3417.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  3418.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  3419. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3420. %@NL@%
  3421. %@NL@%
  3422. %@2@%The chief attraction of military service has consisted and%@EH@%
  3423. will consist in this compulsory and irreproachable idleness.%@NL@%
  3424. %@CR:THEARMTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  3425.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  3426.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  3427. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3428. %@NL@%
  3429. %@NL@%
  3430. %@2@%Soldiers in peace are like chimneys in summer.%@NL@%
  3431. %@CR:THEARMBurghley  @%%@NL@%
  3432.                                                  Lord Burghley (1520-1598)%@NL@%
  3433.                                                          English statesman%@NL@%
  3434. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3435. %@NL@%
  3436. %@NL@%
  3437. %@2@%Now, you mummy's darlings, get a rift on them boots. Definitely%@EH@%
  3438. shine 'em, my little curly-headed lambs, for in our mob war or
  3439. no war, you die with clean boots on.%@NL@%
  3440. %@CR:THEARMKersh     @%%@NL@%
  3441.                                                   Gerald Kersh (1911-1968)%@NL@%
  3442.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  3443. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3444. %@NL@%
  3445. %@NL@%
  3446. %@2@%National Service did the country a lot of good but it darned%@EH@%
  3447. near killed the army.%@NL@%
  3448. %@CR:THEARMHull      @%%@NL@%
  3449.                                         General Sir Richard Hull (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  3450.                                        Chief of the Imperial General Staff%@NL@%
  3451. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3452. %@NL@%
  3453. %@NL@%
  3454.      %@2@%He learned the arts of riding, fencing, gunnery,%@NL@%
  3455.      And how to scale a fortress - or a nunnery.%@NL@%
  3456. %@CR:THEARMByron2    @%%@NL@%
  3457.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  3458.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  3459. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3460. %@NL@%
  3461. %@NL@%
  3462. %@2@%The uncontrolled licentiousness of a brutal and insolent soldiery.%@NL@%
  3463. %@CR:THEARMErskine1  @%%@NL@%
  3464.                                                  Baron Erskine (1750-1823)%@NL@%
  3465.                                                             English jurist%@NL@%
  3466. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3467. %@NL@%
  3468. %@NL@%
  3469. %@2@%Drinking is the soldier's pleasure.%@NL@%
  3470. %@CR:THEARMDryden    @%%@NL@%
  3471.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  3472.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  3473. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3474. %@NL@%
  3475. %@NL@%
  3476. %@2@%The mere scum of the earth.%@NL@%
  3477. %@CR:THEARMDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  3478.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  3479.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  3480.                                                                 of his men%@NL@%
  3481. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3482. %@NL@%
  3483. %@NL@%
  3484.      %@2@%We aren't no thin red 'eroes, nor we aren't no blackguards too.%@NL@%
  3485.      But single men in barracks, most remarkable like you;%@NL@%
  3486.      And if sometimes our conduck isn't all your fancy paints,%@NL@%
  3487.      Why, single men in barracks don't grow into plaster saints.%@NL@%
  3488. %@CR:THEARMKipling   @%%@NL@%
  3489.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  3490.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  3491. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3492. %@NL@%
  3493. %@NL@%
  3494. %@2@%I had rather have a plain, russet-coated Captain, that knows%@EH@%
  3495. what he fights for, and loves what he knows, than that which you
  3496. call a Gentleman and is nothing else.%@NL@%
  3497. %@CR:THEARMCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  3498.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  3499.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  3500. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3501. %@NL@%
  3502. %@NL@%
  3503. %@2@%On becoming soldiers we have not ceased to be citizens.%@NL@%
  3504. %@CR:THEARMCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  3505.                                    spokesman for Cromwell's soldiers, 1647%@NL@%
  3506. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3507. %@NL@%
  3508. %@NL@%
  3509.      %@2@%Soldiers are dreamers; when the guns begin%@NL@%
  3510.      They think of firelit homes, clean beds, and wives.%@NL@%
  3511. %@CR:THEARMSassoon   @%%@NL@%
  3512.                                              Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967)%@NL@%
  3513.                                                       British poet, author%@NL@%
  3514. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3515. %@NL@%
  3516. %@NL@%
  3517. %@2@%Come on you sons of bitches! Do you want to live for ever?%@NL@%
  3518. %@CR:THEARMDaly      @%%@NL@%
  3519.                                                    Daniel Daly (1874-1937)%@NL@%
  3520.                                          Gunnery Sergeant, US Marine Corps%@NL@%
  3521. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3522. %@NL@%
  3523. %@NL@%
  3524. %@2@%I don't know what effect these men will have upon the enemy,%@EH@%
  3525. but, by God, they terrify me.%@NL@%
  3526. %@CR:THEARMDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  3527.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  3528.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  3529. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3530. %@NL@%
  3531. %@NL@%
  3532. %@2@%Horribly stuffed with epithets of war.%@NL@%
  3533. %@CR:THEARMShakespear@%%@NL@%
  3534.                                                              Iago, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3535.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  3536.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  3537. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3538. %@NL@%
  3539. %@NL@%
  3540.      %@2@%Theirs not to make reply,%@NL@%
  3541.      Theirs not to reason why,%@NL@%
  3542.      Theirs but to do and die.%@NL@%
  3543. %@CR:THEARMTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  3544.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  3545.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  3546. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3547. %@NL@%
  3548. %@NL@%
  3549. %@2@%Soldiers are citizens of death's grey land.%@NL@%
  3550. %@CR:THEARMSassoon   @%%@NL@%
  3551.                                              Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967)%@NL@%
  3552.                                                       British poet, author%@NL@%
  3553. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3554. %@NL@%
  3555. %@NL@%
  3556. %@2@%The third part of an army must be destroyed, before a good%@EH@%
  3557. one can be made out of it.%@NL@%
  3558. %@CR:THEARMSavile    @%%@NL@%
  3559.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  3560.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  3561. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3562. %@NL@%
  3563. %@NL@%
  3564.      %@2@%We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;%@NL@%
  3565.      For he today that sheds his blood with me%@NL@%
  3566.      Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile%@NL@%
  3567.      This day shall gentle his condition:%@NL@%
  3568.      And gentlemen in England now a-bed%@NL@%
  3569.      Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,%@NL@%
  3570.      And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks%@NL@%
  3571.      That fought with us upon Saint%@NL@%
  3572.      Crispin's day.%@NL@%
  3573. %@CR:THEARMShakespear@%%@NL@%
  3574.                                                   King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry V%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3575.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  3576.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  3577. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3578. %@NL@%
  3579. %@NL@%
  3580.      %@2@%Soldiers who wish to be a hero%@NL@%
  3581.      Are practically zero,%@NL@%
  3582.      But those who wish to be civilians,%@NL@%
  3583.      Jesus, they run into the millions.%@NL@%
  3584. %@CR:THEARMShakespear@%%@NL@%
  3585.                                        graffito collected by Norman Rosten%@NL@%
  3586. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3587. %@NL@%
  3588. %@NL@%
  3589. %@2@%The feeling about a soldier is, when all is said and done,%@EH@%
  3590. he wasn't really going to do very much with his life anyway. The
  3591. example usually is: "he wasn't going to compose Beethoven's Fifth."%@NL@%
  3592. %@CR:THEARMVonnegut  @%%@NL@%
  3593.                                                    Kurt Vonnegut (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  3594.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  3595. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3596. %@NL@%
  3597. %@NL@%
  3598.      %@2@%If I should die, think only this of me,%@NL@%
  3599.      That there's some corner of a foreign field%@NL@%
  3600.      That is for ever England.%@NL@%
  3601. %@CR:THEARMBrooke    @%%@NL@%
  3602.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  3603.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  3604. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3605. %@NL@%
  3606. %@NL@%
  3607.      %@2@%When you're wounded and left on%@NL@%
  3608.      Afghanistan's plains,%@NL@%
  3609.      An' the women come out to cut up what remains,%@NL@%
  3610.      Jest roll to your rifle an' blow out your brains%@NL@%
  3611.      An' go to your Gawd like a soldier.%@NL@%
  3612. %@CR:THEARMKipling   @%%@NL@%
  3613.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  3614.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  3615. %@AS@%                                                                  The Army%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3616. %@NL@%
  3617. %@NL@%
  3618. %@NL@%
  3619. %@1@%%@AS@%Arrogance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3620. %@CR:ARROGANCE       @%%@NL@%
  3621. %@2@%%@QR:Arrogance@%How haughtily he cocks his nose,%@NL@%
  3622.      To tell what every schoolboy knows.%@NL@%
  3623. %@CR:ARROGASwift     @%%@NL@%
  3624.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  3625.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  3626. %@AS@%                                                                 Arrogance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3627. %@NL@%
  3628. %@NL@%
  3629. %@2@%Nobody can be so amusingly arrogant as a young man who has%@EH@%
  3630. just discovered an old idea and thinks it is his own.%@NL@%
  3631. %@CR:ARROGAHarris    @%%@NL@%
  3632.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  3633.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  3634. %@AS@%                                                                 Arrogance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3635. %@NL@%
  3636. %@NL@%
  3637. %@2@%If I cannot brag of knowing something, then I brag of not knowing%@EH@%
  3638. it; at any rate, brag.%@NL@%
  3639. %@CR:ARROGAEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  3640.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  3641.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  3642. %@AS@%                                                                 Arrogance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3643. %@NL@%
  3644. %@NL@%
  3645. %@2@%The arrogance of age must submit to be taught by youth.%@NL@%
  3646. %@CR:ARROGABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  3647.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  3648.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  3649. %@AS@%                                                                 Arrogance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3650. %@NL@%
  3651. %@NL@%
  3652. %@NL@%
  3653. %@1@%%@AS@%Art%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3654. %@CR:ART             @%%@NL@%
  3655. %@2@%See:%@QR:Art@%%@NL@%
  3656.      Competition: %@AB@%Morris%@AE@%%@BO:           78412@%%@NL@%
  3657.      Creeds: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           8c7fe@%%@NL@%
  3658.      %@AB@%Portraits%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1f3163@%%@NL@%
  3659. %@NL@%
  3660. %@2@%Art is man added to nature.%@NL@%
  3661. %@CR:ART   Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  3662.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  3663.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  3664. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3665. %@NL@%
  3666. %@NL@%
  3667.      %@2@%And the first rude sketch that the world had seen was joy%@NL@%
  3668.      to his* mighty heart%@NL@%
  3669.      Till the Devil whispered behind the leaves "It's pretty,%@NL@%
  3670.      but is it art?" *(%@AI@%Adam's%@AE@%)%@NL@%
  3671. %@CR:ART   Kipling   @%%@NL@%
  3672.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  3673.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  3674. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3675. %@NL@%
  3676. %@NL@%
  3677. %@2@%There are painters who transform the sun into a yellow spot,%@EH@%
  3678. but there are others who, thanks to their art and intelligence,
  3679. transform a yellow spot into the sun.%@NL@%
  3680. %@CR:ART   Picasso   @%%@NL@%
  3681.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  3682.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  3683. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3684. %@NL@%
  3685. %@NL@%
  3686. %@2@%What is a work of art? A word made flesh  . . .  a thing seen,%@EH@%
  3687. a thing known, the immeasurable translated into terms of the measurable.%@NL@%
  3688. %@CR:ART   Gill      @%%@NL@%
  3689.                                                      Eric Gill (1882-1940)%@NL@%
  3690.                                                           British sculptor%@NL@%
  3691. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3692. %@NL@%
  3693. %@NL@%
  3694. %@2@%Art is the imposing of a pattern on experience, and our aesthetic%@EH@%
  3695. enjoyment in recognition of the pattern.%@NL@%
  3696. %@CR:ART   Whitehead @%%@NL@%
  3697.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  3698.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  3699. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3700. %@NL@%
  3701. %@NL@%
  3702. %@2@%Art is I; Science is We.%@NL@%
  3703. %@CR:ART   Bernard1  @%%@NL@%
  3704.                                                 Claude Bernard (1813-1878)%@NL@%
  3705.                                                        French physiologist%@NL@%
  3706. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3707. %@NL@%
  3708. %@NL@%
  3709. %@2@%If only we could pull out our brain and use only our eyes.%@NL@%
  3710. %@CR:ART   Picasso   @%%@NL@%
  3711.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  3712.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  3713. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3714. %@NL@%
  3715. %@NL@%
  3716. %@2@%Great art is as irrational as great music. It is mad with its%@EH@%
  3717. own loveliness.%@NL@%
  3718. %@CR:ART   Nathan    @%%@NL@%
  3719.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  3720.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  3721. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3722. %@NL@%
  3723. %@NL@%
  3724. %@2@%What garlic is to salad, insanity is to art.%@NL@%
  3725. %@CR:ART   SaintGaude@%%@NL@%
  3726.                                         Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907)%@NL@%
  3727.                                                          American sculptor%@NL@%
  3728. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3729. %@NL@%
  3730. %@NL@%
  3731. %@2@%Art resides in the resolution of inner and outer%@EH@%
  3732. conflict.%@NL@%
  3733. %@CR:ART   SaintGaude@%%@NL@%
  3734.                Belfast art lecturer, explaining his appearance in the nude%@NL@%
  3735. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3736. %@NL@%
  3737. %@NL@%
  3738. %@2@%A work of art that contains theories is like an object on which%@EH@%
  3739. the price tag has been left.%@NL@%
  3740. %@CR:ART   Proust    @%%@NL@%
  3741.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  3742.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  3743. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3744. %@NL@%
  3745. %@NL@%
  3746. %@2@%To say that a work of art is good, but incomprehensible to%@EH@%
  3747. the majority of men, is the same as saying of some kind of food
  3748. that it is very good but that most people can't eat it.%@NL@%
  3749. %@CR:ART   Tolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  3750.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  3751.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  3752. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3753. %@NL@%
  3754. %@NL@%
  3755. %@2@%If there were no other proof of the infinite patience of God%@EH@%
  3756. with men, a very good one could be found in His toleration of the
  3757. pictures that are painted of Him.%@NL@%
  3758. %@CR:ART   Merton    @%%@NL@%
  3759.                                                  Thomas Merton (1915-1968)%@NL@%
  3760.                                                 American author, clergyman%@NL@%
  3761. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3762. %@NL@%
  3763. %@NL@%
  3764. %@2@%I would rather see the portrait of a dog that I know, than%@EH@%
  3765. all the allegorical paintings they can shew me in the world.%@NL@%
  3766. %@CR:ART   Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  3767.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  3768.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  3769. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3770. %@NL@%
  3771. %@NL@%
  3772. %@2@%They are good furniture pictures, unworthy of praise, and undeserving%@EH@%
  3773. of blame.%@NL@%
  3774. %@CR:ART   Ruskin    @%%@NL@%
  3775.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  3776.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  3777. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3778. %@NL@%
  3779. %@NL@%
  3780. %@2@%If Botticelli were alive today he'd be working for %@AI@%Vogue%@AE@%.%@NL@%
  3781. %@CR:ART   Ustinov   @%%@NL@%
  3782.                                                    Peter Ustinov (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  3783.                                                 British author, actor, wit%@NL@%
  3784. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3785. %@NL@%
  3786. %@NL@%
  3787. %@2@%Art is skill, that is the first meaning of the word.%@NL@%
  3788. %@CR:ART   Gill      @%%@NL@%
  3789.                                                      Eric Gill (1882-1940)%@NL@%
  3790.                                                           British sculptor%@NL@%
  3791. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3792. %@NL@%
  3793. %@NL@%
  3794. %@2@%There has never been a boy painter, nor can there be. The art%@EH@%
  3795. requires a long apprenticeship, being %@AI@%mechanical%@AE@% as well as intellectual.%@NL@%
  3796. %@CR:ART   Constable @%%@NL@%
  3797.                                                 John Constable (1776-1837)%@NL@%
  3798.                                                  English landscape painter%@NL@%
  3799. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3800. %@NL@%
  3801. %@NL@%
  3802. %@2@%Painting consumes labour not disproportionate to its effect;%@EH@%
  3803. but a fellow will hack half a year at a block of marble to make
  3804. something in stone that hardly resembles a man. The value of statuary
  3805. is owing to its difficulty. You would not value the finest head
  3806. cut upon a carrot.%@NL@%
  3807. %@CR:ART   Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  3808.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  3809.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  3810. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3811. %@NL@%
  3812. %@NL@%
  3813. %@2@%To say of a picture, as is often said in its praise, that it%@EH@%
  3814. shows great and earnest labor, is to say that it is incomplete
  3815. and unfit for view.%@NL@%
  3816. %@CR:ART   Whistler  @%%@NL@%
  3817.                                         James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)%@NL@%
  3818.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  3819. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3820. %@NL@%
  3821. %@NL@%
  3822. %@2@%Art consists of limitation. The most beautiful part of every%@EH@%
  3823. picture is the frame.%@NL@%
  3824. %@CR:ART   Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  3825.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  3826.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  3827. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3828. %@NL@%
  3829. %@NL@%
  3830. %@2@%Art is either plagiarism or revolution.%@NL@%
  3831. %@CR:ART   Gauguin   @%%@NL@%
  3832.                                                   Paul Gauguin (1838-1903)%@NL@%
  3833.                                                              French artist%@NL@%
  3834. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3835. %@NL@%
  3836. %@NL@%
  3837. %@2@%Without tradition, art is a flock of sheep without a shepherd.%@EH@%
  3838. Without innovation, it is a corpse.%@NL@%
  3839. %@CR:ART   Churchill3@%%@NL@%
  3840.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  3841.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  3842. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3843. %@NL@%
  3844. %@NL@%
  3845. %@2@%Art is dangerous. It is one of the attractions, when it ceases%@EH@%
  3846. to be dangerous you don't want it.%@NL@%
  3847. %@CR:ART   Burgess1  @%%@NL@%
  3848.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  3849.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  3850. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3851. %@NL@%
  3852. %@NL@%
  3853. %@2@%The English public takes no interest in a work of art until%@EH@%
  3854. it is told that the work in question is immoral.%@NL@%
  3855. %@CR:ART   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  3856.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  3857.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  3858. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3859. %@NL@%
  3860. %@NL@%
  3861. %@2@%Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.%@NL@%
  3862. %@CR:ART   Klee      @%%@NL@%
  3863.                                                      Paul Klee (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  3864.                                                              Swiss painter%@NL@%
  3865. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3866. %@NL@%
  3867. %@NL@%
  3868. %@2@%Art is a lie that makes us realize the truth.%@NL@%
  3869. %@CR:ART   Picasso   @%%@NL@%
  3870.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  3871.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  3872. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3873. %@NL@%
  3874. %@NL@%
  3875. %@2@%There is nothing more difficult for a truly creative painter%@EH@%
  3876. than to paint a rose, because before he can do so he has first
  3877. to forget all the roses that were ever painted.%@NL@%
  3878. %@CR:ART   Matisse   @%%@NL@%
  3879.                                                  Henri Matisse (1869-1954)%@NL@%
  3880.                                                              French artist%@NL@%
  3881. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3882. %@NL@%
  3883. %@NL@%
  3884. %@2@%When I am finishing a picture I hold some God-made object up%@EH@%
  3885. to it - a rock, a flower, the branch of a tree or my hand - as
  3886. a kind of final test. If the painting stands up beside a thing
  3887. man cannot make, the painting is authentic. If there's a clash
  3888. between the two, it is bad art.%@NL@%
  3889. %@CR:ART   Chagall   @%%@NL@%
  3890.                                                   Marc Chagall (1889-1985)%@NL@%
  3891.                                                            Russian painter%@NL@%
  3892. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3893. %@NL@%
  3894. %@NL@%
  3895. %@2@%Yes, madam, Nature is creeping up.%@NL@%
  3896. %@CR:ART   Whistler  @%%@NL@%
  3897.                                         James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)%@NL@%
  3898.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  3899.               to a lady who said a landscape view reminded her of his work%@NL@%
  3900. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3901. %@NL@%
  3902. %@NL@%
  3903. %@2@%I have seen, and heard, much of Cockney impudence before now;%@EH@%
  3904. but never expected to hear a coxcomb ask two hundred guineas for
  3905. flinging a pot of paint in the public's face.%@NL@%
  3906. %@CR:ART   Ruskin    @%%@NL@%
  3907.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  3908.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  3909.                                 of Whistler's %@AI@%'Nocturne in Black and Gold'%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3910. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3911. %@NL@%
  3912. %@NL@%
  3913. %@2@%Painting can do for the illiterate what writing%@EH@%
  3914. does for those who can read.%@NL@%
  3915. %@CR:ART   PopeGregor@%%@NL@%
  3916.                                        Pope Gregory the Great (c. 540-604)%@NL@%
  3917. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3918. %@NL@%
  3919. %@NL@%
  3920. %@2@%Art for art's sake is a philosophy of the well-fed.%@NL@%
  3921. %@CR:ART   CaoYu     @%%@NL@%
  3922.                                                           Cao Yu (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  3923.                                                          Chinese dramatist%@NL@%
  3924. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3925. %@NL@%
  3926. %@NL@%
  3927. %@2@%All art is quite useless.%@NL@%
  3928. %@CR:ART   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  3929.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  3930.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  3931. %@AS@%                                                                       Art%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3932. %@NL@%
  3933. %@NL@%
  3934. %@NL@%
  3935. %@1@%%@AS@%Artists%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  3936. %@CR:ARTISTS         @%%@NL@%
  3937. %@2@%See:%@QR:Artists@%%@NL@%
  3938.      %@AB@%Bohemia%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           453b9@%%@NL@%
  3939.      Nudity: %@AB@%Hawthorne%@AE@%%@BO:          1c1134@%%@NL@%
  3940.      Paris: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:          1cce77@%%@NL@%
  3941.      Portraits: %@AB@%Sargent%@AE@%%@BO:          1f31cb@%%@NL@%
  3942. %@NL@%
  3943. %@2@%You say you are incapable of expressing your thought. How then%@EH@%
  3944. do you explain the lucidity and brilliance with which you are expressing
  3945. the thought that you are incapable of thought?%@NL@%
  3946. %@CR:ARTISTRiviere   @%%@NL@%
  3947.                                                            Jacques Riviere%@NL@%
  3948.                                                          surrealist artist%@NL@%
  3949.                                          letter to Antonin Artaud, 1923/24%@NL@%
  3950. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3951. %@NL@%
  3952. %@NL@%
  3953. %@2@%There is only one difference between a madman and me. I am%@EH@%
  3954. not mad.%@NL@%
  3955. %@CR:ARTISTDali      @%%@NL@%
  3956.                                                  Salvador Dali (1904-1989)%@NL@%
  3957.                                                            Spanish painter%@NL@%
  3958. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3959. %@NL@%
  3960. %@NL@%
  3961. %@2@%Before I was shot I always thought that I was more half-there%@EH@%
  3962. than all-there.%@NL@%
  3963. %@CR:ARTISTWarhol    @%%@NL@%
  3964.                                                    Andy Warhol (1930-1987)%@NL@%
  3965.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  3966. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3967. %@NL@%
  3968. %@NL@%
  3969. %@2@%What the public criticizes in you, cultivate. It is you.%@NL@%
  3970. %@CR:ARTISTCocteau   @%%@NL@%
  3971.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  3972.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  3973. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3974. %@NL@%
  3975. %@NL@%
  3976. %@2@%Every artist writes his own autobiography.%@NL@%
  3977. %@CR:ARTISTEllis     @%%@NL@%
  3978.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  3979.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  3980. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3981. %@NL@%
  3982. %@NL@%
  3983. %@2@%The artist, like the God of creation, remains within or behind%@EH@%
  3984. or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence,
  3985. indifferent, paring his fingernails.%@NL@%
  3986. %@CR:ARTISTJoyce     @%%@NL@%
  3987.                                                    James Joyce (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  3988.                                                             Irish novelist%@NL@%
  3989. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3990. %@NL@%
  3991. %@NL@%
  3992. %@2@%Artists do not prove things. They do not need to. They know%@EH@%
  3993. them.%@NL@%
  3994. %@CR:ARTISTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  3995.                                Kneller, %@AI@%In Good King Charles's Golden Days%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3996.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  3997.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  3998. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  3999. %@NL@%
  4000. %@NL@%
  4001. %@2@%An artist must know how to convince others of the truth of%@EH@%
  4002. his lies.%@NL@%
  4003. %@CR:ARTISTPicasso   @%%@NL@%
  4004.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  4005.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  4006. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4007. %@NL@%
  4008. %@NL@%
  4009. %@2@%The artist's work is to shew us ourselves as we really are.%@EH@%
  4010. Our minds are nothing but this knowledge of ourselves; and he who
  4011. adds a jot to such knowledge creates new mind as surely as any
  4012. woman creates new men.%@NL@%
  4013. %@CR:ARTISTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  4014.                                                   Tanner, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4015.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  4016.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  4017. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4018. %@NL@%
  4019. %@NL@%
  4020. %@2@%If they have not opened the eyes of the blind, they have at%@EH@%
  4021. least given great encouragement to the short-sighted, and while
  4022. their leaders may have all the inexperience of old age, their young
  4023. men are far too wise ever to be sensible.%@NL@%
  4024. %@CR:ARTISTWilde     @%%@NL@%
  4025.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  4026.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  4027.                                                      of the Impressionists%@NL@%
  4028. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4029. %@NL@%
  4030. %@NL@%
  4031. %@2@%When he painted a road, the roadmakers were there in his imagination,%@EH@%
  4032. when he painted the turned earth of a ploughed field, the gesture
  4033. of the blade turning the earth was included in his own act. Wherever
  4034. he looked he saw the labour of existence; and this labour, recognised
  4035. as such, was what constituted reality for him.%@NL@%
  4036. %@CR:ARTISTBerger    @%%@NL@%
  4037.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  4038.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  4039.                                                                of Van Gogh%@NL@%
  4040. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4041. %@NL@%
  4042. %@NL@%
  4043. %@2@%The true function of art is to criticize, embellish and edit%@EH@%
  4044. nature  . . .  The artist is a sort of impassioned proof-reader,
  4045. blue-pencilling the bad spelling of God.%@NL@%
  4046. %@CR:ARTISTMencken   @%%@NL@%
  4047.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  4048.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  4049. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4050. %@NL@%
  4051. %@NL@%
  4052. %@2@%Good painters imitate nature, but bad ones spew it up.%@NL@%
  4053. %@CR:ARTISTCervantes @%%@NL@%
  4054.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  4055.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  4056. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4057. %@NL@%
  4058. %@NL@%
  4059. %@2@%The artist  . . .  is in the painful situation of having to choose%@EH@%
  4060. between being despised and being despicable. If his powers are
  4061. of the first order he must incur one or the other of these misfortunes -
  4062. the former if he uses his powers, the latter if he does not.%@NL@%
  4063. %@CR:ARTISTRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  4064.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  4065.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  4066. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4067. %@NL@%
  4068. %@NL@%
  4069. %@2@%The soul, too, has her virginity and must bleed a little before%@EH@%
  4070. bearing fruit.%@NL@%
  4071. %@CR:ARTISTSantayana @%%@NL@%
  4072.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  4073.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  4074. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4075. %@NL@%
  4076. %@NL@%
  4077. %@2@%The artistic temperament is a disease that affects%@EH@%
  4078. amateurs  . . .  Artists of a large and wholesome vitality get rid
  4079. of their art easily, as they breathe easily or perspire easily.
  4080. But in artists of less force, the thing becomes a pressure, and
  4081. produces a definite pain, which is called the artistic temperament.%@NL@%
  4082. %@CR:ARTISTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  4083.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  4084.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4085. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4086. %@NL@%
  4087. %@NL@%
  4088. %@2@%Many excellent cooks are spoilt by going into the arts.%@NL@%
  4089. %@CR:ARTISTGauguin   @%%@NL@%
  4090.                                                   Paul Gauguin (1838-1903)%@NL@%
  4091.                                                              French artist%@NL@%
  4092. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4093. %@NL@%
  4094. %@NL@%
  4095. %@2@%Art is a jealous mistress, and if a man have a genius for painting,%@EH@%
  4096. poetry, music, architecture or philosophy, he makes a bad husband
  4097. and an ill provider.%@NL@%
  4098. %@CR:ARTISTEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  4099.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  4100.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  4101. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4102. %@NL@%
  4103. %@NL@%
  4104. %@2@%A woman is fascinated not by art, but by the noise made by%@EH@%
  4105. those who are in the art field.%@NL@%
  4106. %@CR:ARTISTChekhov   @%%@NL@%
  4107.                                                  Anton Chekhov (1860-1904)%@NL@%
  4108.                                                  Russian writer, physician%@NL@%
  4109. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4110. %@NL@%
  4111. %@NL@%
  4112. %@2@%I should hardly think it is sensible to suffer the pains of%@EH@%
  4113. creation just for money or the mild pleasures of praise.%@NL@%
  4114. %@CR:ARTISTBolitho   @%%@NL@%
  4115.                                                William Bolitho (1890-1930)%@NL@%
  4116.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  4117. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4118. %@NL@%
  4119. %@NL@%
  4120. %@2@%The notion of making money by popular work, and then retiring%@EH@%
  4121. to do good work on the proceeds, is the most familiar of all the
  4122. devil's traps for artists.%@NL@%
  4123. %@CR:ARTISTSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  4124.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  4125.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  4126. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4127. %@NL@%
  4128. %@NL@%
  4129. %@2@%The artist who always paints the same scene pleases the public%@EH@%
  4130. for the sole reason that it recognises him with ease and thinks
  4131. itself a connoisseur.%@NL@%
  4132. %@CR:ARTISTStevens2  @%%@NL@%
  4133.                                                 Alfred Stevens (1818-1875)%@NL@%
  4134.                                                             British artist%@NL@%
  4135. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4136. %@NL@%
  4137. %@NL@%
  4138. %@2@%Ruskin's counsel: For two days' work you ask two hundred guineas?%@EH@%
  4139. Whistler: No, I ask it for the knowledge of a lifetime.%@NL@%
  4140. %@CR:ARTISTStevens2  @%%@NL@%
  4141.                       altercation during Ruskin's lawsuit against Whistler%@NL@%
  4142. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4143. %@NL@%
  4144. %@NL@%
  4145. %@2@%Artists, as a rule, do not live in the purple; they live mainly%@EH@%
  4146. in the red.%@NL@%
  4147. %@CR:ARTISTPearce    @%%@NL@%
  4148.                                       Mr. Justice, Lord Pearce (1901-1985)%@NL@%
  4149.                                                              British judge%@NL@%
  4150. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4151. %@NL@%
  4152. %@NL@%
  4153. %@2@%It is very good advice to believe only what an artist does,%@EH@%
  4154. rather than what he says about his work.%@NL@%
  4155. %@CR:ARTISTHockney   @%%@NL@%
  4156.                                                    David Hockney (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  4157.                                                            British painter%@NL@%
  4158. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4159. %@NL@%
  4160. %@NL@%
  4161. %@2@%His work was that curious mixture of bad painting and good%@EH@%
  4162. intentions that always entitles a man to be called a representative
  4163. British artist.%@NL@%
  4164. %@CR:ARTISTWilde     @%%@NL@%
  4165.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  4166.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  4167. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4168. %@NL@%
  4169. %@NL@%
  4170. %@2@%Great artists have no country.%@NL@%
  4171. %@CR:ARTISTMusset    @%%@NL@%
  4172.                                               Alfred de Musset (1810-1857)%@NL@%
  4173.                                          French poet, novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  4174. %@AS@%                                                                   Artists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4175. %@NL@%
  4176. %@NL@%
  4177. %@NL@%
  4178. %@1@%%@AS@%The Arts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4179. %@CR:THEARTS         @%%@NL@%
  4180. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Arts@%%@NL@%
  4181.      Patronage: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          1d3016@%%@NL@%
  4182. %@NL@%
  4183. %@2@%When politicians and civil servants hear the word "culture"%@EH@%
  4184. they feel for their blue pencil.%@NL@%
  4185. %@CR:THEARTViscountEs@%%@NL@%
  4186.                                                   Viscount Esher (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  4187.                                                          British architect%@NL@%
  4188. %@AS@%                                                                  The Arts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4189. %@NL@%
  4190. %@NL@%
  4191. %@2@%All the arts in America are a gigantic racket run by unscrupulous%@EH@%
  4192. men for unhealthy women.%@NL@%
  4193. %@CR:THEARTBeecham   @%%@NL@%
  4194.                                             Sir Thomas Beecham (1879-1961)%@NL@%
  4195.                                                          British conductor%@NL@%
  4196. %@AS@%                                                                  The Arts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4197. %@NL@%
  4198. %@NL@%
  4199. %@2@%There is a great deal to be said for the Arts. For one thing%@EH@%
  4200. they offer the only career in which commercial failure is not necessarily
  4201. discreditable.%@NL@%
  4202. %@CR:THEARTWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  4203.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  4204.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  4205. %@AS@%                                                                  The Arts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4206. %@NL@%
  4207. %@NL@%
  4208. %@2@%[He] believes in the fine arts with all the earnestness of%@EH@%
  4209. a man who does not understand them.%@NL@%
  4210. %@CR:THEARTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  4211.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  4212.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  4213. %@AS@%                                                                  The Arts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4214. %@NL@%
  4215. %@NL@%
  4216. %@NL@%
  4217. %@1@%%@AS@%Asia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4218. %@CR:ASIA            @%%@NL@%
  4219. %@2@%See:%@QR:Asia@%%@NL@%
  4220.      Empire: %@AB@%Kipling%@AE@%%@BO:           c7542@%%@NL@%
  4221. %@NL@%
  4222. %@2@%The mysterious East, perfumed like a flower, silent like death,%@EH@%
  4223. dark like a grave.%@NL@%
  4224. %@CR:ASIA  Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  4225.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  4226.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  4227. %@AS@%                                                                      Asia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4228. %@NL@%
  4229. %@NL@%
  4230. %@2@%Asia is not going to be civilized after the methods of the%@EH@%
  4231. West. There is too much Asia and she is too old.%@NL@%
  4232. %@CR:ASIA  Kipling   @%%@NL@%
  4233.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  4234.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4235. %@AS@%                                                                      Asia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4236. %@NL@%
  4237. %@NL@%
  4238. %@2@%Because the European does not know his own unconscious, he%@EH@%
  4239. does not understand the East and projects into it everything he
  4240. fears and despises in himself.%@NL@%
  4241. %@CR:ASIA  Jung      @%%@NL@%
  4242.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  4243.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  4244. %@AS@%                                                                      Asia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4245. %@NL@%
  4246. %@NL@%
  4247. %@NL@%
  4248. %@1@%%@AS@%Assassination%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4249. %@CR:ASSASSINATION   @%%@NL@%
  4250. %@2@%See:%@QR:Assassination@%%@NL@%
  4251.      Biography: %@AB@%Dennis%@AE@%%@BO:           4081b@%%@NL@%
  4252.      Politicians: %@AB@%Layton%@AE@%%@BO:          1edf79@%%@NL@%
  4253.      Royalty: %@AB@%King Edward VII%@AE@%%@BO:          232cbc@%%@NL@%
  4254.      Television: %@AB@%Newsweek%@AE@%%@BO:          283576@%%@NL@%
  4255. %@NL@%
  4256. %@2@%Assassination's the fastest way.%@NL@%
  4257. %@CR:ASSASSMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  4258.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  4259.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  4260. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4261. %@NL@%
  4262. %@NL@%
  4263. %@2@%Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.%@NL@%
  4264. %@CR:ASSASSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  4265.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  4266.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  4267. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4268. %@NL@%
  4269. %@NL@%
  4270. %@2@%It is one of the incidents of the profession.%@NL@%
  4271. %@CR:ASSASSUmberto   @%%@NL@%
  4272.                                        King Umberto I of Italy (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  4273.                                               after an attempt on his life%@NL@%
  4274. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4275. %@NL@%
  4276. %@NL@%
  4277. %@2@%Assassination is the perquisite of princes.%@NL@%
  4278. %@CR:ASSASSUmberto   @%%@NL@%
  4279.                                                      European court cliche%@NL@%
  4280. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4281. %@NL@%
  4282. %@NL@%
  4283. %@2@%My family has learned a very cruel lesson of both history and%@EH@%
  4284. fate.%@NL@%
  4285. %@CR:ASSASSKennedy3  @%%@NL@%
  4286.                                           Senator Edward Kennedy (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  4287.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  4288. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4289. %@NL@%
  4290. %@NL@%
  4291. %@2@%The American public would forgive me anything except running%@EH@%
  4292. off with Eddie Fisher.%@NL@%
  4293. %@CR:ASSASSOnassis   @%%@NL@%
  4294.                  Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Jacqueline  Kennedy (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  4295.                                                 American former First Lady%@NL@%
  4296.                                 after the assassination of John F. Kennedy%@NL@%
  4297. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4298. %@NL@%
  4299. %@NL@%
  4300. %@2@%Tell my mother I died for my country. I thought I did for the%@EH@%
  4301. best. Useless! Useless!%@NL@%
  4302. %@CR:ASSASSBooth     @%%@NL@%
  4303.                                              John Wilkes Booth (1838-1865)%@NL@%
  4304.                                                             American actor%@NL@%
  4305.                                 after his assassination of Abraham Lincoln%@NL@%
  4306. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4307. %@NL@%
  4308. %@NL@%
  4309. %@2@%A desperate disease requires a dangerous remedy.%@NL@%
  4310. %@CR:ASSASSFawkes    @%%@NL@%
  4311.                                                     Guy Fawkes (1570-1606)%@NL@%
  4312.                                                       Catholic conspirator%@NL@%
  4313. on the gunpowder plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament (after 
  4314. Hippocrates)%@NL@%
  4315. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4316. %@NL@%
  4317. %@NL@%
  4318. %@2@%Assassination has never changed the history of the world.%@NL@%
  4319. %@CR:ASSASSDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  4320.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  4321.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  4322. %@AS@%                                                             Assassination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4323. %@NL@%
  4324. %@NL@%
  4325. %@NL@%
  4326. %@1@%%@AS@%Astrology%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4327. %@CR:ASTROLOGY       @%%@NL@%
  4328. %@2@%%@QR:Astrology@%This is the excellent foppery of the world, that, when we are%@EH@%
  4329. sick in fortune, often the surfeits of our own behaviour, we make
  4330. guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and stars.%@NL@%
  4331. %@CR:ASTROLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  4332.                                                          Edmund, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4333.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  4334.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  4335. %@AS@%                                                                 Astrology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4336. %@NL@%
  4337. %@NL@%
  4338. %@NL@%
  4339. %@1@%%@AS@%Atheism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4340. %@CR:ATHEISM         @%%@NL@%
  4341. %@2@%See:%@QR:Atheism@%%@NL@%
  4342.      Humanism: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          138b75@%%@NL@%
  4343. %@NL@%
  4344. %@2@%Here we are, we're alone in the universe, there's no God, it%@EH@%
  4345. just seems that it all began by something as simple as sunlight
  4346. striking on a piece of rock. And here we are. We've only got ourselves.
  4347. Somehow, we've just got to make a go of it. %@AI@%We've only ourselves.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4348. %@CR:ATHEISOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  4349.                                                      Jean, %@AI@%The Entertainer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4350.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  4351.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  4352. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4353. %@NL@%
  4354. %@NL@%
  4355. %@2@%Absolute atheism starts in an act of faith in reverse gear%@EH@%
  4356. and is a full-blown religious commitment.%@NL@%
  4357. %@CR:ATHEISMaritain  @%%@NL@%
  4358.                                               Jacques Maritain (1882-1973)%@NL@%
  4359.                                                         French philosopher%@NL@%
  4360. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4361. %@NL@%
  4362. %@NL@%
  4363. %@2@%Nobody talks so constantly about God as those who insist that%@EH@%
  4364. there is no God.%@NL@%
  4365. %@CR:ATHEISBroun     @%%@NL@%
  4366.                                                  Heywood Broun (1888-1939)%@NL@%
  4367.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  4368. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4369. %@NL@%
  4370. %@NL@%
  4371. %@2@%An atheist is a man who has no invisible means of support.%@NL@%
  4372. %@CR:ATHEISBuchan    @%%@NL@%
  4373.                                                    John Buchan (1875-1940)%@NL@%
  4374.                                                  British author, statesman%@NL@%
  4375. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4376. %@NL@%
  4377. %@NL@%
  4378. %@2@%No one can be an unbeliever nowadays. The Christian apologists%@EH@%
  4379. have left one nothing to disbelieve.%@NL@%
  4380. %@CR:ATHEISMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  4381.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  4382.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  4383. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4384. %@NL@%
  4385. %@NL@%
  4386.      %@2@%And that inverted Bowl we call The Sky,%@NL@%
  4387.      Whereunder crawling coop't we live and die,%@NL@%
  4388.      Lift not thy hands to %@AI@%It%@AE@% for help -  for It%@NL@%
  4389.      Rolls impotently on as Thou or I.%@NL@%
  4390. %@CR:ATHEISFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  4391.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4392.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  4393. %@AS@%                                                                   Atheism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4394. %@NL@%
  4395. %@NL@%
  4396. %@NL@%
  4397. %@1@%%@AS@%Authenticity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4398. %@CR:AUTHENTICITY    @%%@NL@%
  4399. %@2@%%@QR:Authenticity@%About as genuine as tea made from a bit of paper which once%@EH@%
  4400. lay in a drawer beside another bit of paper which had been used
  4401. to wrap up a few tea-leaves from which tea had already been made
  4402. three times.%@NL@%
  4403. %@CR:AUTHENKierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  4404.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  4405.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  4406. %@AS@%                                                              Authenticity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4407. %@NL@%
  4408. %@NL@%
  4409. %@NL@%
  4410. %@1@%%@AS@%Autobiography%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4411. %@CR:AUTOBIOGRAPHY   @%%@NL@%
  4412. %@2@%See:%@QR:Autobiography@%%@NL@%
  4413.      Artists: %@AB@%Ellis%@AE@%%@BO:           315a7@%%@NL@%
  4414.      %@AB@%Biography%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           40549@%%@NL@%
  4415.      Confessions: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:           7aeeb@%%@NL@%
  4416. %@NL@%
  4417. %@2@%Autobiography is now as common as adultery and hardly less%@EH@%
  4418. reprehensible.%@NL@%
  4419. %@CR:AUTOBIGrigg     @%%@NL@%
  4420.                                                       John Grigg (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  4421.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  4422. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4423. %@NL@%
  4424. %@NL@%
  4425. %@2@%Memoirs: The backstairs of history.%@NL@%
  4426. %@CR:AUTOBIMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  4427.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  4428.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4429. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4430. %@NL@%
  4431. %@NL@%
  4432. %@2@%The man who writes about himself and his own time is the only%@EH@%
  4433. man who writes about all people and about all time.%@NL@%
  4434. %@CR:AUTOBIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  4435.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  4436.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  4437. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4438. %@NL@%
  4439. %@NL@%
  4440. %@2@%A writer is rarely so well inspired as when he talks about%@EH@%
  4441. himself.%@NL@%
  4442. %@CR:AUTOBIFrance    @%%@NL@%
  4443.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  4444.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  4445. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4446. %@NL@%
  4447. %@NL@%
  4448. %@2@%All those writers who write about their childhood!%@EH@%
  4449. Gentle God, if I wrote about mine you wouldn't sit in the same
  4450. room with me.%@NL@%
  4451. %@CR:AUTOBIParker1   @%%@NL@%
  4452.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  4453.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  4454. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4455. %@NL@%
  4456. %@NL@%
  4457. %@2@%I am being frank about myself in this book. I tell of my first%@EH@%
  4458. mistake on page 850.%@NL@%
  4459. %@CR:AUTOBIKissinger @%%@NL@%
  4460.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  4461.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  4462. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4463. %@NL@%
  4464. %@NL@%
  4465. %@2@%Autobiography is an unrivalled vehicle for telling the truth%@EH@%
  4466. about other people.%@NL@%
  4467. %@CR:AUTOBIGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  4468.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  4469.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  4470. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4471. %@NL@%
  4472. %@NL@%
  4473. %@2@%When my journal appears, many statues must come down.%@NL@%
  4474. %@CR:AUTOBIDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  4475.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  4476.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  4477. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4478. %@NL@%
  4479. %@NL@%
  4480. %@2@%I dislike modern memoirs. They are generally written by people%@EH@%
  4481. who have either entirely lost their memories, or have never done
  4482. anything worth remembering.%@NL@%
  4483. %@CR:AUTOBIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  4484.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  4485.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  4486. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4487. %@NL@%
  4488. %@NL@%
  4489. %@2@%Autobiographies ought to begin with Chapter Two.%@NL@%
  4490. %@CR:AUTOBISedgwick  @%%@NL@%
  4491.                                                Ellery Sedgwick (1872-1960)%@NL@%
  4492.                                                            American editor%@NL@%
  4493. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4494. %@NL@%
  4495. %@NL@%
  4496. %@2@%If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you'll%@EH@%
  4497. probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood
  4498. was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they
  4499. had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don't
  4500. feel like going into it.%@NL@%
  4501. %@CR:AUTOBISalinger  @%%@NL@%
  4502.                                                   J. D. Salinger (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  4503.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  4504.                                        opening words of %@AI@%Catcher in the Rye%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4505. %@AS@%                                                             Autobiography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4506. %@NL@%
  4507. %@NL@%
  4508. %@NL@%
  4509. %@1@%%@AS@%Awards%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4510. %@CR:AWARDS          @%%@NL@%
  4511. %@2@%See:%@QR:Awards@%%@NL@%
  4512.      Literature: %@AB@%Bennett%@AE@%%@BO:          179e3d@%%@NL@%
  4513. %@NL@%
  4514. %@2@%He got the peace prize; we got the problem. If I'm following%@EH@%
  4515. a general, and the enemy gives him rewards, I tend to get suspicious.
  4516. Especially if he gets a peace award before the war is over.%@NL@%
  4517. %@CR:AWARDSMalcomX   @%%@NL@%
  4518.                                                      Malcolm X (1925-1965)%@NL@%
  4519.                                                    American radical leader%@NL@%
  4520.                                                      of Martin Luther King%@NL@%
  4521. %@AS@%                                                                    Awards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4522. %@NL@%
  4523. %@NL@%
  4524. %@2@%Lots of people who complained about us receiving the MBE received%@EH@%
  4525. theirs for heroism in the war - for killing people. We received
  4526. ours for entertaining other people. I'd say we deserve ours more.%@NL@%
  4527. %@CR:AWARDSLennon    @%%@NL@%
  4528.                                                    John Lennon (1940-1980)%@NL@%
  4529.                                            English rock singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  4530. %@AS@%                                                                    Awards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4531. %@NL@%
  4532. %@NL@%
  4533. %@2@%The cross of the Legion of Honour has been conferred on me.%@EH@%
  4534. However, few escape that distinction.%@NL@%
  4535. %@CR:AWARDSTwain     @%%@NL@%
  4536.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  4537.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  4538. %@AS@%                                                                    Awards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4539. %@NL@%
  4540. %@NL@%
  4541. %@2@%Members rise from CMG (known sometimes in Whitehall as Call%@EH@%
  4542. Me God) to KCMG (Kindly Call Me God) to GCMG (God Calls Me God).%@NL@%
  4543. %@CR:AWARDSSampson   @%%@NL@%
  4544.                                                  Anthony Sampson (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  4545.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  4546. %@AS@%                                                                    Awards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4547. %@NL@%
  4548. %@NL@%
  4549. %@NL@%
  4550. %@1@%%@AS@%Babies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4551. %@CR:BABIES          @%%@NL@%
  4552. %@2@%See:%@QR:Babies@%%@NL@%
  4553.      Investment: %@AB@%Churchill%@AE@%%@BO:          158de1@%%@NL@%
  4554. %@NL@%
  4555. %@2@%A loud noise at one end and no sense of responsibility at the%@EH@%
  4556. other.%@NL@%
  4557. %@CR:BABIESKnox1     @%%@NL@%
  4558.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  4559.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  4560. %@AS@%                                                                    Babies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4561. %@NL@%
  4562. %@NL@%
  4563. %@2@%Every baby born into the world is a finer one than the last.%@NL@%
  4564. %@CR:BABIESDickens   @%%@NL@%
  4565.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  4566.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  4567. %@AS@%                                                                    Babies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4568. %@NL@%
  4569. %@NL@%
  4570. %@2@%From the moment of birth, when the Stone Age baby confronts%@EH@%
  4571. the twentieth-century mother, the baby is subjected to these forces
  4572. of violence, called love, as its father and mother and their parents
  4573. and their parents before them, have been. These forces are mainly
  4574. concerned with destroying most of its potential.%@NL@%
  4575. %@CR:BABIESLaing     @%%@NL@%
  4576.                                                    R. D. Laing (1927-1989)%@NL@%
  4577.                                                       British psychiatrist%@NL@%
  4578. %@AS@%                                                                    Babies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4579. %@NL@%
  4580. %@NL@%
  4581. %@2@%Babies are the enemies of the human race.%@NL@%
  4582. %@CR:BABIESAsimov    @%%@NL@%
  4583.                                                     Isaac Asimov (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  4584.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  4585. %@AS@%                                                                    Babies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4586. %@NL@%
  4587. %@NL@%
  4588. %@NL@%
  4589. %@1@%%@AS@%Bachelors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4590. %@CR:BACHELORS       @%%@NL@%
  4591. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bachelors@%%@NL@%
  4592.      Marriage: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          192a00@%%@NL@%
  4593.      Reform: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          21f33b@%%@NL@%
  4594. %@NL@%
  4595. %@2@%It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in%@EH@%
  4596. possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.%@NL@%
  4597. %@CR:BACHELAusten    @%%@NL@%
  4598.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  4599.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  4600. %@AS@%                                                                 Bachelors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4601. %@NL@%
  4602. %@NL@%
  4603. %@2@%A bachelor never quite gets over the idea that he is a thing%@EH@%
  4604. of beauty and a boy for ever.%@NL@%
  4605. %@CR:BACHELRowland1  @%%@NL@%
  4606.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  4607.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  4608. %@AS@%                                                                 Bachelors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4609. %@NL@%
  4610. %@NL@%
  4611. %@2@%Bachelors know more about women than married men; if they didn't,%@EH@%
  4612. they'd be married too.%@NL@%
  4613. %@CR:BACHELMencken   @%%@NL@%
  4614.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  4615.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  4616. %@AS@%                                                                 Bachelors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4617. %@NL@%
  4618. %@NL@%
  4619.      %@2@%"Come, come," said Tom's father, "at your time of life,%@NL@%
  4620.      There's no longer excuse for thus playing the rake -%@NL@%
  4621.      It is time you should think, boy, of taking a wife."%@NL@%
  4622.      "Why, so it is father - whose wife shall I take?"%@NL@%
  4623. %@CR:BACHELMoore5    @%%@NL@%
  4624.                                                   Thomas Moore (1779-1852)%@NL@%
  4625.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  4626. %@AS@%                                                                 Bachelors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4627. %@NL@%
  4628. %@NL@%
  4629. %@NL@%
  4630. %@1@%%@AS@%Baldness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4631. %@CR:BALDNESS        @%%@NL@%
  4632. %@2@%%@QR:Baldness@%Bald as the bare mountain tops are bald, with a baldness full%@EH@%
  4633. of grandeur.%@NL@%
  4634. %@CR:BALDNEArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  4635.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  4636.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  4637. %@AS@%                                                                  Baldness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4638. %@NL@%
  4639. %@NL@%
  4640. %@2@%There's one thing about baldness; it's neat.%@NL@%
  4641. %@CR:BALDNEHerold    @%%@NL@%
  4642.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  4643.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  4644. %@AS@%                                                                  Baldness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4645. %@NL@%
  4646. %@NL@%
  4647. %@NL@%
  4648. %@1@%%@AS@%Banality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4649. %@CR:BANALITY        @%%@NL@%
  4650. %@2@%See:%@QR:Banality@%%@NL@%
  4651.      The Commonplace: %@AB@%Ortega y Gasset%@AE@%%@BO:           75105@%%@NL@%
  4652. %@NL@%
  4653. %@2@%There is only one thing it requires real courage to say, and%@EH@%
  4654. that is a truism.%@NL@%
  4655. %@CR:BANALIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  4656.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  4657.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4658. %@AS@%                                                                  Banality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4659. %@NL@%
  4660. %@NL@%
  4661. %@2@%Men are seldom more commonplace than on supreme occasions.%@NL@%
  4662. %@CR:BANALIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  4663.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  4664.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4665. %@AS@%                                                                  Banality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4666. %@NL@%
  4667. %@NL@%
  4668. %@NL@%
  4669. %@1@%%@AS@%Banks%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4670. %@CR:BANKS           @%%@NL@%
  4671. %@2@%%@QR:Banks@%Put not your trust in money, but put your money in trust.%@NL@%
  4672. %@CR:BANKS Holmes1   @%%@NL@%
  4673.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  4674.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  4675. %@AS@%                                                                     Banks%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4676. %@NL@%
  4677. %@NL@%
  4678. %@2@%A banker is a fellow who lends his umbrella when the sun is%@EH@%
  4679. shining and wants it back the minute it begins to rain.%@NL@%
  4680. %@CR:BANKS Twain     @%%@NL@%
  4681.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  4682.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  4683. %@AS@%                                                                     Banks%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4684. %@NL@%
  4685. %@NL@%
  4686. %@2@%It is easier to rob by setting up a Bank than by holding%@EH@%
  4687. up a Bank Clerk.%@NL@%
  4688. %@CR:BANKS Brecht    @%%@NL@%
  4689.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  4690.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  4691. %@AS@%                                                                     Banks%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4692. %@NL@%
  4693. %@NL@%
  4694. %@NL@%
  4695. %@1@%%@AS@%Bargaining%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4696. %@CR:BARGAINING      @%%@NL@%
  4697. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bargaining@%%@NL@%
  4698.      Hope: %@AB@%da Vinci%@AE@%%@BO:          1354e5@%%@NL@%
  4699. %@NL@%
  4700. %@2@%There are very honest people who do not think that they have%@EH@%
  4701. had a bargain unless they have cheated a merchant.%@NL@%
  4702. %@CR:BARGAIFrance    @%%@NL@%
  4703.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  4704.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  4705. %@AS@%                                                                Bargaining%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4706. %@NL@%
  4707. %@NL@%
  4708. %@2@%Here's the rule for bargains: "Do other men, for they would%@EH@%
  4709. do you." That's the true business precept.%@NL@%
  4710. %@CR:BARGAIDickens   @%%@NL@%
  4711.                                        Jonas Chuzzlewit, %@AI@%Martin Chuzzlewit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4712.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  4713.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  4714. %@AS@%                                                                Bargaining%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4715. %@NL@%
  4716. %@NL@%
  4717. %@2@%It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer; but when he is%@EH@%
  4718. gone his way, then he boasteth.%@NL@%
  4719. %@CR:BARGAIBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  4720.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  4721. %@AS@%                                                                Bargaining%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4722. %@NL@%
  4723. %@NL@%
  4724. %@2@%Necessity never made a good bargain.%@NL@%
  4725. %@CR:BARGAIFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  4726.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  4727.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  4728. %@AS@%                                                                Bargaining%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4729. %@NL@%
  4730. %@NL@%
  4731. %@NL@%
  4732. %@1@%%@AS@%Beards%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4733. %@CR:BEARDS          @%%@NL@%
  4734. %@2@%%@QR:Beards@%That ornamental excrement which groweth beneath the chin.%@NL@%
  4735. %@CR:BEARDSFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  4736.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  4737.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  4738. %@AS@%                                                                    Beards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4739. %@NL@%
  4740. %@NL@%
  4741. %@2@%The hoary head is a crown of glory if it be found in the way%@EH@%
  4742. of righteousness.%@NL@%
  4743. %@CR:BEARDSBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  4744.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  4745. %@AS@%                                                                    Beards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4746. %@NL@%
  4747. %@NL@%
  4748. %@2@%A beard signifies lice, not brains.%@NL@%
  4749. %@CR:BEARDSBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  4750.                                                              Greek proverb%@NL@%
  4751. %@AS@%                                                                    Beards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4752. %@NL@%
  4753. %@NL@%
  4754. %@NL@%
  4755. %@1@%%@AS@%The Beatles%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4756. %@CR:THEBEATLES      @%%@NL@%
  4757. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Beatles@%%@NL@%
  4758.      Awards: %@AB@%Lennon%@AE@%%@BO:           3837b@%%@NL@%
  4759.      Getting Ahead: %@AB@%Lennon%@AE@%%@BO:          10bdc6@%%@NL@%
  4760. %@NL@%
  4761. %@2@%Christianity will go. We're more popular than Jesus now.%@NL@%
  4762. %@CR:THEBEALennon    @%%@NL@%
  4763.                                                    John Lennon (1940-1980)%@NL@%
  4764.                                            English rock singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  4765. %@AS@%                                                               The Beatles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4766. %@NL@%
  4767. %@NL@%
  4768. %@NL@%
  4769. %@1@%%@AS@%Beauty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4770. %@CR:BEAUTY          @%%@NL@%
  4771. %@2@%See:%@QR:Beauty@%%@NL@%
  4772.      Inheritance: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          14e57f@%%@NL@%
  4773.      Religion: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          2246a5@%%@NL@%
  4774.      Sex: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          24cd30@%%@NL@%
  4775.      Women: %@AB@%Wollstonecraft%@AE@%%@BO:          2bc042@%%@NL@%
  4776. %@NL@%
  4777. %@2@%O Beauty, so ancient and so new!%@NL@%
  4778. %@CR:BEAUTYSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  4779.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  4780.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  4781. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4782. %@NL@%
  4783. %@NL@%
  4784. %@2@%The ideal has many names, and Beauty is but one of them.%@NL@%
  4785. %@CR:BEAUTYMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  4786.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  4787.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  4788. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4789. %@NL@%
  4790. %@NL@%
  4791.      %@2@%Beauty for some provides escape.%@NL@%
  4792.      Who gain a happiness in eyeing%@NL@%
  4793.      The gorgeous buttocks of the ape%@NL@%
  4794.      Or Autumn sunsets exquisitely dying.%@NL@%
  4795. %@CR:BEAUTYHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  4796.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  4797.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  4798. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4799. %@NL@%
  4800. %@NL@%
  4801. %@2@%The epithet beautiful is used by surgeons to describe operations%@EH@%
  4802. which their patients describe as ghastly, by physicists to describe
  4803. methods of measurement which leave sentimentalists cold, by lawyers
  4804. to describe cases which ruin all the parties to them, and by lovers
  4805. to describe the objects of their infatuation, however unattractive
  4806. they may appear to the unaffected spectators.%@NL@%
  4807. %@CR:BEAUTYShaw      @%%@NL@%
  4808.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  4809.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  4810. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4811. %@NL@%
  4812. %@NL@%
  4813. %@2@%Beauty in distress is much the most affecting beauty.%@NL@%
  4814. %@CR:BEAUTYBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  4815.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  4816.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  4817. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4818. %@NL@%
  4819. %@NL@%
  4820. %@2@%It is better to be beautiful than to be good. But it is better%@EH@%
  4821. to be good than to be ugly.%@NL@%
  4822. %@CR:BEAUTYWilde     @%%@NL@%
  4823.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  4824.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  4825. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4826. %@NL@%
  4827. %@NL@%
  4828. %@2@%Beauty is indeed a good gift of God; but that the good may%@EH@%
  4829. not think it a great good, God dispenses it even to the wicked.%@NL@%
  4830. %@CR:BEAUTYSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  4831.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  4832.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  4833. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4834. %@NL@%
  4835. %@NL@%
  4836. %@2@%Beauty. The power by which a woman charms a lover and terrifies%@EH@%
  4837. a husband.%@NL@%
  4838. %@CR:BEAUTYBierce    @%%@NL@%
  4839.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  4840.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  4841. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4842. %@NL@%
  4843. %@NL@%
  4844.      %@2@%To me, fair friend, you never can be old%@NL@%
  4845.      For as you were when first your eye%@NL@%
  4846.      I eyed,%@NL@%
  4847.      Such seems your beauty still.%@NL@%
  4848. %@CR:BEAUTYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  4849.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  4850.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  4851. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4852. %@NL@%
  4853. %@NL@%
  4854.      %@2@%The flowers anew, returning seasons bring!%@NL@%
  4855.      But beauty faded has no second spring.%@NL@%
  4856. %@CR:BEAUTYPhilips   @%%@NL@%
  4857.                                                Ambrose Philips (1674-1749)%@NL@%
  4858.                                                   English poet, politician%@NL@%
  4859. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4860. %@NL@%
  4861. %@NL@%
  4862. %@2@%If beauty isn't genius it usually signals at least a high level%@EH@%
  4863. of animal cunning.%@NL@%
  4864. %@CR:BEAUTYYork      @%%@NL@%
  4865.                                                       Peter York (b. 1950)%@NL@%
  4866.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  4867. %@AS@%                                                                    Beauty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4868. %@NL@%
  4869. %@NL@%
  4870. %@NL@%
  4871. %@1@%%@AS@%Bed%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4872. %@CR:BED             @%%@NL@%
  4873. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bed@%%@NL@%
  4874.      Lovers: %@AB@%proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          1876c2@%%@NL@%
  4875. %@NL@%
  4876. %@2@%The happiest part of a man's life is what he passes lying awake%@EH@%
  4877. in bed in the morning.%@NL@%
  4878. %@CR:BED   Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  4879.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  4880.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  4881. %@AS@%                                                                       Bed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4882. %@NL@%
  4883. %@NL@%
  4884.      %@2@%The cool kindliness of sheets, that soon%@NL@%
  4885.      Smooth away trouble; and the rough male kiss%@NL@%
  4886.      Of blankets.%@NL@%
  4887. %@CR:BED   Brooke    @%%@NL@%
  4888.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  4889.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  4890. %@AS@%                                                                       Bed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4891. %@NL@%
  4892. %@NL@%
  4893. %@2@%To bedward be you merry or have merry company about you, so%@EH@%
  4894. that to bedward no anger nor heaviness, sorrow nor pensifulness
  4895. do trouble or disquiet you.%@NL@%
  4896. %@CR:BED   Borde     @%%@NL@%
  4897.                                                   Andrew Borde (1490-1549)%@NL@%
  4898.                                                English traveler, physician%@NL@%
  4899. %@AS@%                                                                       Bed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4900. %@NL@%
  4901. %@NL@%
  4902. %@2@%Whoever thinks of going to bed before twelve o'clock is a scoundrel.%@NL@%
  4903. %@CR:BED   Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  4904.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  4905.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  4906. %@AS@%                                                                       Bed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4907. %@NL@%
  4908. %@NL@%
  4909.      %@2@%For I've been born and I've been wed -%@NL@%
  4910.      All of man's peril comes of bed.%@NL@%
  4911. %@CR:BED   Webb2     @%%@NL@%
  4912.                                                     C. H. Webb (1834-1905)%@NL@%
  4913.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  4914. %@AS@%                                                                       Bed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4915. %@NL@%
  4916. %@NL@%
  4917. %@NL@%
  4918. %@1@%%@AS@%Belief%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4919. %@CR:BELIEF          @%%@NL@%
  4920. %@2@%See:%@QR:Belief@%%@NL@%
  4921.      %@AB@%Creeds%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           8bea1@%%@NL@%
  4922. %@NL@%
  4923. %@2@%With most men, unbelief in one thing springs from blind belief%@EH@%
  4924. in another.%@NL@%
  4925. %@CR:BELIEFLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  4926.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  4927.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  4928. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4929. %@NL@%
  4930. %@NL@%
  4931. %@2@%When once a man is determined to believe, the very absurdity%@EH@%
  4932. of the doctrine does but confirm him in his faith.%@NL@%
  4933. %@CR:BELIEFJunius    @%%@NL@%
  4934.                                                   Junius (b. 18th century)%@NL@%
  4935.                                     pseudonym of a writer never identified%@NL@%
  4936. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4937. %@NL@%
  4938. %@NL@%
  4939. %@2@%The word 'belief' is a difficult thing for me. I don't%@EH@%
  4940. %@AI@%believe.%@AE@% I must have a reason for a certain hypothesis. Either
  4941. I %@AI@%know%@AE@% a thing, and then I know it - I don't need to believe
  4942. it.%@NL@%
  4943. %@CR:BELIEFJung      @%%@NL@%
  4944.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  4945.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  4946. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4947. %@NL@%
  4948. %@NL@%
  4949. %@2@%There are those who feel an imperative need to believe, for%@EH@%
  4950. whom the values of a belief are proportionate, not to its truth,
  4951. but to its definiteness. Incapable of either admitting the existence
  4952. of contrary judgements or of suspending their own, they supply
  4953. the place of knowledge by turning other men's conjectures into
  4954. dogmas.%@NL@%
  4955. %@CR:BELIEFJoad      @%%@NL@%
  4956.                                                  C. E. M. Joad (1891-1953)%@NL@%
  4957.                                                   British author, academic%@NL@%
  4958. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4959. %@NL@%
  4960. %@NL@%
  4961. %@2@%"One %@AI@%can't%@AE@% believe impossible things."%@EH@%
  4962. "I daresay you haven't had much practice," said the Queen.
  4963. "When I was your age, I always did it for a half-an-hour a day.
  4964. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before
  4965. breakfast."%@NL@%
  4966. %@CR:BELIEFCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  4967.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  4968.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  4969. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4970. %@NL@%
  4971. %@NL@%
  4972. %@2@%The most positive men are the most credulous.%@NL@%
  4973. %@CR:BELIEFSwift     @%%@NL@%
  4974.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  4975.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  4976. %@AS@%                                                                    Belief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4977. %@NL@%
  4978. %@NL@%
  4979. %@NL@%
  4980. %@1@%%@AS@%Bella Figura%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4981. %@CR:BELLAFIGURA     @%%@NL@%
  4982. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bella Figura@%%@NL@%
  4983.      Hypocrisy: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:          140292@%%@NL@%
  4984. %@NL@%
  4985.      %@2@%Let them cant about decorum%@NL@%
  4986.      Who have characters to lose.%@NL@%
  4987. %@CR:BELLAFBurns     @%%@NL@%
  4988.                                                   Robert Burns (1759-1796)%@NL@%
  4989.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  4990. %@AS@%                                                              Bella Figura%@AE@%%@NL@%
  4991. %@NL@%
  4992. %@NL@%
  4993. %@NL@%
  4994. %@1@%%@AS@%Benefactors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  4995. %@CR:BENEFACTORS     @%%@NL@%
  4996. %@2@%See:%@QR:Benefactors@%%@NL@%
  4997.      %@AB@%Altruism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           1573d@%%@NL@%
  4998.      Death: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           99c62@%%@NL@%
  4999.      Good Deeds: %@AB@%Gay%@AE@%%@BO:          111f82@%%@NL@%
  5000.      %@AB@%Philanthropy%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1d8291@%%@NL@%
  5001. %@NL@%
  5002.      %@2@%I love my fellow creatures - I do all the good I can -%@NL@%
  5003.      Yet everybody says I'm such a disagreeable man!%@NL@%
  5004. %@CR:BENEFAGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  5005.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  5006.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  5007. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5008. %@NL@%
  5009. %@NL@%
  5010. %@2@%Take Egotism out, and you would castrate the benefactors.%@NL@%
  5011. %@CR:BENEFAEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  5012.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  5013.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  5014. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5015. %@NL@%
  5016. %@NL@%
  5017. %@2@%We do not love people so much for the good they have done us,%@EH@%
  5018. as for the good we have done them.%@NL@%
  5019. %@CR:BENEFATolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  5020.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  5021.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  5022. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5023. %@NL@%
  5024. %@NL@%
  5025. %@2@%He who wishes to secure the good of others has already secured%@EH@%
  5026. his own.%@NL@%
  5027. %@CR:BENEFAConfucius @%%@NL@%
  5028.                                                     Confucius (551-478 BC)%@NL@%
  5029.                                                               Chinese sage%@NL@%
  5030. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5031. %@NL@%
  5032. %@NL@%
  5033. %@2@%And learn the luxury of doing good.%@NL@%
  5034. %@CR:BENEFAGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  5035.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  5036.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  5037. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5038. %@NL@%
  5039. %@NL@%
  5040. %@2@%Nobody shoots at Santa Claus.%@NL@%
  5041. %@CR:BENEFASmith5    @%%@NL@%
  5042.                                               Governor AlSmith (1873-1944)%@NL@%
  5043.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  5044. %@AS@%                                                               Benefactors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5045. %@NL@%
  5046. %@NL@%
  5047. %@NL@%
  5048. %@1@%%@AS@%Bestiality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5049. %@CR:BESTIALITY      @%%@NL@%
  5050. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bestiality@%%@NL@%
  5051.      Drink: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           b8d33@%%@NL@%
  5052. %@NL@%
  5053. %@2@%When someone behaves like a beast, he says: "After all, one%@EH@%
  5054. is only human." But when he is treated like a beast, he says:
  5055. "After all, one is human."%@NL@%
  5056. %@CR:BESTIAKraus     @%%@NL@%
  5057.                                                     Karl Kraus (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  5058.                                                  Austrian poet, journalist%@NL@%
  5059. %@AS@%                                                                Bestiality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5060. %@NL@%
  5061. %@NL@%
  5062. %@NL@%
  5063. %@1@%%@AS@%The Bible%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5064. %@CR:THEBIBLE        @%%@NL@%
  5065. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Bible@%%@NL@%
  5066.      Censorship: %@AB@%Paget%@AE@%%@BO:           55e96@%%@NL@%
  5067.      Faith: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:           df60b@%%@NL@%
  5068.      Intelligence: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          1554e4@%%@NL@%
  5069. %@NL@%
  5070. %@2@%The Bible is literature, not dogma.%@NL@%
  5071. %@CR:THEBIBSantayana @%%@NL@%
  5072.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  5073.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  5074. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5075. %@NL@%
  5076. %@NL@%
  5077. %@2@%The Bible is for the Government of the People, by the People,%@EH@%
  5078. and for the People.%@NL@%
  5079. %@CR:THEBIBSantayana @%%@NL@%
  5080.            general prologue to the Wycliffe translation of the Bible, 1384%@NL@%
  5081. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5082. %@NL@%
  5083. %@NL@%
  5084. %@2@%No public man in these islands ever believes that the Bible%@EH@%
  5085. means what it says; he is always convinced that it says what he
  5086. means.%@NL@%
  5087. %@CR:THEBIBShaw      @%%@NL@%
  5088.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  5089.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  5090. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5091. %@NL@%
  5092. %@NL@%
  5093.      %@2@%Both read the Bible day and night,%@NL@%
  5094.      But thou read'st black where I read white.%@NL@%
  5095. %@CR:THEBIBBlake     @%%@NL@%
  5096.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  5097.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  5098. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5099. %@NL@%
  5100. %@NL@%
  5101. %@2@%We must be on guard against giving interpretations of scripture%@EH@%
  5102. that are far-fetched or opposed to science, and so exposing the
  5103. word of God to the ridicule of unbelievers.%@NL@%
  5104. %@CR:THEBIBSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  5105.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  5106.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  5107. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5108. %@NL@%
  5109. %@NL@%
  5110. %@2@%The pencil of the Holy Ghost hath laboured more in describing%@EH@%
  5111. the afflictions of Job than the felicities of Solomon.%@NL@%
  5112. %@CR:THEBIBBacon     @%%@NL@%
  5113.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  5114.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  5115. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5116. %@NL@%
  5117. %@NL@%
  5118. %@2@%Fear is the denomination of the Old Testament; belief is the%@EH@%
  5119. denomination of the New.%@NL@%
  5120. %@CR:THEBIBWhichcote @%%@NL@%
  5121.                                             Benjamin Whichcote (1609-1683)%@NL@%
  5122.                                       Provost of King's College, Cambridge%@NL@%
  5123. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5124. %@NL@%
  5125. %@NL@%
  5126. %@2@%Prosperity is the Blessing of the Old Testament; adversity%@EH@%
  5127. is the blessing of the New.%@NL@%
  5128. %@CR:THEBIBBacon     @%%@NL@%
  5129.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  5130.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  5131. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5132. %@NL@%
  5133. %@NL@%
  5134. %@2@%It gives me a deep, comforting sense that "things seen are%@EH@%
  5135. temporal and things unseen are eternal."%@NL@%
  5136. %@CR:THEBIBKeller    @%%@NL@%
  5137.                                                   Helen Keller (1880-1968)%@NL@%
  5138.                                                  American author, lecturer%@NL@%
  5139. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5140. %@NL@%
  5141. %@NL@%
  5142. %@2@%I never had any doubt about it being of divine origin  . . . %@EH@%
  5143. point out to me any similar collection of writings that has lasted
  5144. for as many thousands of years and is still a best-seller, world-wide.
  5145. It had to be of divine origin.%@NL@%
  5146. %@CR:THEBIBReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  5147.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  5148.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  5149. %@AS@%                                                                 The Bible%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5150. %@NL@%
  5151. %@NL@%
  5152. %@NL@%
  5153. %@1@%%@AS@%Bigotry%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5154. %@CR:BIGOTRY         @%%@NL@%
  5155. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bigotry@%%@NL@%
  5156.      Faith: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:           df60b@%%@NL@%
  5157. %@NL@%
  5158. %@2@%Bigotry tries to keep truth safe in its hand with a grip that%@EH@%
  5159. kills it.%@NL@%
  5160. %@CR:BIGOTRTagore    @%%@NL@%
  5161.                                            Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)%@NL@%
  5162.                                                 Indian author, philosopher%@NL@%
  5163. %@AS@%                                                                   Bigotry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5164. %@NL@%
  5165. %@NL@%
  5166. %@2@%Defoe says that there were a hundred thousand country fellows%@EH@%
  5167. in his time ready to fight to the death against popery, without
  5168. knowing whether popery was a man or a horse.%@NL@%
  5169. %@CR:BIGOTRHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  5170.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  5171.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  5172. %@AS@%                                                                   Bigotry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5173. %@NL@%
  5174. %@NL@%
  5175. %@2@%We call a man a bigot or a slave of dogma because he is a thinker%@EH@%
  5176. who has thought thoroughly and to a definite end.%@NL@%
  5177. %@CR:BIGOTRChesterton@%%@NL@%
  5178.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  5179.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  5180. %@AS@%                                                                   Bigotry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5181. %@NL@%
  5182. %@NL@%
  5183. %@2@%I will look at any additional evidence to confirm the opinion%@EH@%
  5184. to which I have already come.%@NL@%
  5185. %@CR:BIGOTRMolson    @%%@NL@%
  5186.                                                Hugh, Lord Molson (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  5187.                                                         British politician%@NL@%
  5188. %@AS@%                                                                   Bigotry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5189. %@NL@%
  5190. %@NL@%
  5191. %@NL@%
  5192. %@1@%%@AS@%Bills%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5193. %@CR:BILLS           @%%@NL@%
  5194. %@2@%%@QR:Bills@%Alas! how deeply painful is all payment!%@NL@%
  5195. %@CR:BILLS Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  5196.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  5197.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5198. %@AS@%                                                                     Bills%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5199. %@NL@%
  5200. %@NL@%
  5201. %@2@%It is only by not paying one's bills that one can hope to live%@EH@%
  5202. in the memory of the commercial classes.%@NL@%
  5203. %@CR:BILLS Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  5204.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  5205.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  5206. %@AS@%                                                                     Bills%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5207. %@NL@%
  5208. %@NL@%
  5209. %@NL@%
  5210. %@1@%%@AS@%Biography%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5211. %@CR:BIOGRAPHY       @%%@NL@%
  5212. %@2@%See:%@QR:Biography@%%@NL@%
  5213.      %@AB@%Autobiography%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           36c5e@%%@NL@%
  5214.      Dr. Johnson: %@AB@%Guardian%@AE@%%@BO:          15f99b@%%@NL@%
  5215. %@NL@%
  5216. %@2@%One of the new terrors of death.%@NL@%
  5217. %@CR:BIOGRAArbuthnot @%%@NL@%
  5218.                                                 John Arbuthnot (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  5219.                                                  English writer, physician%@NL@%
  5220. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5221. %@NL@%
  5222. %@NL@%
  5223. %@2@%A great American need not fear the hand of his assassin; his%@EH@%
  5224. real demise begins only when a friend like Mr Sorensen closes the
  5225. mouth of his tomb with a stone.%@NL@%
  5226. %@CR:BIOGRADennis    @%%@NL@%
  5227.                                                     Nigel Dennis (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  5228.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  5229.                                  reviewing %@AI@%Kennedy%@AE@% by Theodore C. Sorensen%@NL@%
  5230. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5231. %@NL@%
  5232. %@NL@%
  5233. %@2@%Every great man now has his disciples, and it is always Judas%@EH@%
  5234. who writes the biography.%@NL@%
  5235. %@CR:BIOGRAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  5236.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  5237.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  5238. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5239. %@NL@%
  5240. %@NL@%
  5241. %@2@%Biography should be written by an acute enemy.%@NL@%
  5242. %@CR:BIOGRABalfour   @%%@NL@%
  5243.                                           Arthur James Balfour (1848-1930)%@NL@%
  5244.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  5245. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5246. %@NL@%
  5247. %@NL@%
  5248. %@2@%The first thing to be done by a biographer in estimating character%@EH@%
  5249. is to examine the stubs of the victim's cheque-books.%@NL@%
  5250. %@CR:BIOGRAMitchell3 @%%@NL@%
  5251.                                              Silas W. Mitchell (1829-1914)%@NL@%
  5252.                                                 American physician, author%@NL@%
  5253. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5254. %@NL@%
  5255. %@NL@%
  5256. %@2@%Just how difficult it is to write biography can be reckoned%@EH@%
  5257. by anybody who sits down and considers just how many people know
  5258. the real truth about his or her love affairs.%@NL@%
  5259. %@CR:BIOGRAWest2     @%%@NL@%
  5260.                                                   Rebecca West (1892-1983)%@NL@%
  5261.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  5262. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5263. %@NL@%
  5264. %@NL@%
  5265. %@2@%A well-written Life is almost as rare as a well-spent one.%@NL@%
  5266. %@CR:BIOGRACarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  5267.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  5268.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  5269. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5270. %@NL@%
  5271. %@NL@%
  5272. %@2@%Read no history; nothing but biography, for that is life without%@EH@%
  5273. theory.%@NL@%
  5274. %@CR:BIOGRADisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  5275.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  5276.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  5277. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5278. %@NL@%
  5279. %@NL@%
  5280. %@2@%Biography is to give a man some kind of shape after his death.%@NL@%
  5281. %@CR:BIOGRAWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  5282.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  5283.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  5284. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5285. %@NL@%
  5286. %@NL@%
  5287. %@2@%Biography is a region bounded on the north by history, on the%@EH@%
  5288. south by fiction, on the east by obituary, and on the west by tedium.%@NL@%
  5289. %@CR:BIOGRAGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  5290.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  5291.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  5292. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5293. %@NL@%
  5294. %@NL@%
  5295. %@2@%Many heroes lived before Agamemnon; but all are unknown and%@EH@%
  5296. unwept, extinguished in everlasting night, because they have no
  5297. spirited chronicler.%@NL@%
  5298. %@CR:BIOGRAHorace    @%%@NL@%
  5299.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  5300.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  5301. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5302. %@NL@%
  5303. %@NL@%
  5304.      %@2@%You still shall live (such virtue hath my pen)%@NL@%
  5305.      Where breath most breathes, - even in the mouths of men.%@NL@%
  5306. %@CR:BIOGRAShakespear@%%@NL@%
  5307.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  5308.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  5309. %@AS@%                                                                 Biography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5310. %@NL@%
  5311. %@NL@%
  5312. %@NL@%
  5313. %@1@%%@AS@%Birth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5314. %@CR:BIRTH           @%%@NL@%
  5315. %@2@%%@QR:Birth@%My mother groan'd, my father wept,%@NL@%
  5316.      Into the dangerous world I leapt.%@NL@%
  5317. %@CR:BIRTH Blake     @%%@NL@%
  5318.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  5319.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  5320. %@AS@%                                                                     Birth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5321. %@NL@%
  5322. %@NL@%
  5323. %@2@%If new-borns could remember and speak, they would emerge from%@EH@%
  5324. the womb carrying tales as wondrous as Homer's.%@NL@%
  5325. %@CR:BIRTH Blake     @%%@NL@%
  5326.                                                          %@AI@%Newsweek%@AE@% magazine%@NL@%
  5327. %@AS@%                                                                     Birth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5328. %@NL@%
  5329. %@NL@%
  5330. %@NL@%
  5331. %@1@%%@AS@%Birth Control%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5332. %@CR:BIRTHCONTROL    @%%@NL@%
  5333. %@2@%%@QR:Birth Control@%No woman can call herself free who does not own and control%@EH@%
  5334. her body. No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously
  5335. whether she will or will not be a mother.%@NL@%
  5336. %@CR:BIRTHCSanger    @%%@NL@%
  5337.                                                Margaret Sanger (1883-1966)%@NL@%
  5338.                                 pioneer of American birth control movement%@NL@%
  5339. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5340. %@NL@%
  5341. %@NL@%
  5342. %@2@%We want far better reasons for having children than not knowing%@EH@%
  5343. how to prevent them.%@NL@%
  5344. %@CR:BIRTHCRussell2  @%%@NL@%
  5345.                                                   Dora Russell (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  5346.                                                 British author, campaigner%@NL@%
  5347. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5348. %@NL@%
  5349. %@NL@%
  5350. %@2@%Contraceptives should be used on all conceivable occasions.%@NL@%
  5351. %@CR:BIRTHCMilligan  @%%@NL@%
  5352.                                                   Spike Milligan (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  5353.                                          British comedian, humorous writer%@NL@%
  5354. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5355. %@NL@%
  5356. %@NL@%
  5357. %@2@%The best contraceptive is a glass of cold water: not before%@EH@%
  5358. or after, but instead.%@NL@%
  5359. %@CR:BIRTHCMilligan  @%%@NL@%
  5360.                                        Pakistani delegate at International%@NL@%
  5361.                                   Planned Parenthood Federation Conference%@NL@%
  5362. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5363. %@NL@%
  5364. %@NL@%
  5365. %@2@%I want to tell you a terrific story about oral contraception.%@EH@%
  5366. I asked this girl to sleep with me and she said "no."%@NL@%
  5367. %@CR:BIRTHCAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  5368.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  5369.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  5370. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5371. %@NL@%
  5372. %@NL@%
  5373. %@2@%If Nature had arranged that husbands and wives should have%@EH@%
  5374. children alternately there would never be more than three in a
  5375. family.%@NL@%
  5376. %@CR:BIRTHCHousman2  @%%@NL@%
  5377.                                               Lawrence Housman (1865-1959)%@NL@%
  5378.                                                      British actor, artist%@NL@%
  5379. %@AS@%                                                             Birth Control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5380. %@NL@%
  5381. %@NL@%
  5382. %@NL@%
  5383. %@1@%%@AS@%Blindness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5384. %@CR:BLINDNESS       @%%@NL@%
  5385. %@2@%%@QR:Blindness@%O loss of sight, of thee I most complain!%@NL@%
  5386.      Blind among enemies! O worse than chains,%@NL@%
  5387.      Dungeon, or beggary, or decrepit age!%@NL@%
  5388.      Light, the prime work of God, to me is extinct,%@NL@%
  5389.      And all her various objects of delight%@NL@%
  5390.      Annulled, which might in part my grief have eased.%@NL@%
  5391.      Inferior to the vilest now become%@NL@%
  5392.      Of man or worm, the vilest here excel me:%@NL@%
  5393.      They creep, yet see; I, dark in light, exposed%@NL@%
  5394.      To daily fraud, contempt, abuse, and wrong,%@NL@%
  5395.      Within doors, or without, still as a fool,%@NL@%
  5396.      In power of others, never in my own -%@NL@%
  5397.      Scarce half I seem to live, dead more than half . . . %@NL@%
  5398. %@CR:BLINDNMilton    @%%@NL@%
  5399.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  5400.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5401. %@AS@%                                                                 Blindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5402. %@NL@%
  5403. %@NL@%
  5404. %@2@%But who would rush at a benighted man%@EH@%
  5405. And give him two black eyes for being
  5406. blind?%@NL@%
  5407. %@CR:BLINDNHood      @%%@NL@%
  5408.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  5409.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5410. %@AS@%                                                                 Blindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5411. %@NL@%
  5412. %@NL@%
  5413. %@2@%If the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch.%@NL@%
  5414. %@CR:BLINDNJesus     @%%@NL@%
  5415.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  5416.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  5417. %@AS@%                                                                 Blindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5418. %@NL@%
  5419. %@NL@%
  5420. %@2@%The very limit of human blindness is to glory in being blind.%@NL@%
  5421. %@CR:BLINDNSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  5422.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  5423.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  5424. %@AS@%                                                                 Blindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5425. %@NL@%
  5426. %@NL@%
  5427. %@2@%It is not miserable to be blind; it is miserable to be incapable%@EH@%
  5428. of enduring blindness.%@NL@%
  5429. %@CR:BLINDNMilton    @%%@NL@%
  5430.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  5431.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5432. %@AS@%                                                                 Blindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5433. %@NL@%
  5434. %@NL@%
  5435. %@NL@%
  5436. %@1@%%@AS@%Bloodsports%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5437. %@CR:BLOODSPORTS     @%%@NL@%
  5438. %@2@%%@QR:Bloodsports@%When a man wantonly destroys one of the works of man we call%@EH@%
  5439. him a vandal. When he destroys one of the works of God we call
  5440. him a sportsman.%@NL@%
  5441. %@CR:BLOODSKrutch    @%%@NL@%
  5442.                                             Joseph Wood Krutch (1893-1970)%@NL@%
  5443.                                                          American essayist%@NL@%
  5444. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5445. %@NL@%
  5446. %@NL@%
  5447. %@2@%Hunting was the labour of the savages of North America, but%@EH@%
  5448. the amusement of the gentlemen of England.%@NL@%
  5449. %@CR:BLOODSJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  5450.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  5451.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  5452. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5453. %@NL@%
  5454. %@NL@%
  5455. %@2@%It is the sport of kings, the image of war without its guilt,%@EH@%
  5456. and only five-and-twenty percent of its danger.%@NL@%
  5457. %@CR:BLOODSSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  5458.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  5459.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  5460. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5461. %@NL@%
  5462. %@NL@%
  5463. %@2@%There is a passion for %@AI@%hunting something%@AE@% deep implanted%@EH@%
  5464. in the human breast.%@NL@%
  5465. %@CR:BLOODSDickens   @%%@NL@%
  5466.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  5467.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  5468. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5469. %@NL@%
  5470. %@NL@%
  5471. %@2@%It is chiefly through the instinct to kill that man achieves%@EH@%
  5472. intimacy with the life of nature.%@NL@%
  5473. %@CR:BLOODSClark1    @%%@NL@%
  5474.                                       Lord (Sir Kenneth) Clark (1903-1973)%@NL@%
  5475.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  5476. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5477. %@NL@%
  5478. %@NL@%
  5479. %@2@%One knows so well the popular idea of health. The English country%@EH@%
  5480. gentleman galloping after a fox - the unspeakable in full pursuit
  5481. of the uneatable.%@NL@%
  5482. %@CR:BLOODSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  5483.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  5484.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  5485. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5486. %@NL@%
  5487. %@NL@%
  5488. %@2@%Women never look so well as when one comes in wet and dirty%@EH@%
  5489. from hunting.%@NL@%
  5490. %@CR:BLOODSSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  5491.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  5492.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  5493. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5494. %@NL@%
  5495. %@NL@%
  5496. %@2@%It is very strange, and very melancholy, that the paucity of%@EH@%
  5497. human pleasures should persuade us ever to call hunting one of
  5498. them.%@NL@%
  5499. %@CR:BLOODSJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  5500.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  5501.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  5502. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5503. %@NL@%
  5504. %@NL@%
  5505. %@2@%When a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport; when%@EH@%
  5506. a tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity.%@NL@%
  5507. %@CR:BLOODSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  5508.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  5509.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  5510. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5511. %@NL@%
  5512. %@NL@%
  5513. %@2@%The birds seem to consider the muzzle of my gun as their safest%@EH@%
  5514. position.%@NL@%
  5515. %@CR:BLOODSSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  5516.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  5517.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  5518. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5519. %@NL@%
  5520. %@NL@%
  5521. %@2@%A gun gives you the body, not the bird.%@NL@%
  5522. %@CR:BLOODSThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  5523.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  5524.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  5525. %@AS@%                                                               Bloodsports%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5526. %@NL@%
  5527. %@NL@%
  5528. %@NL@%
  5529. %@1@%%@AS@%Bloody-mindedness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5530. %@CR:BLOODYMINDEDNESS@%%@NL@%
  5531. %@2@%%@QR:Bloody-mindedness@%A state of mind halfway between anger and cruelty.%@NL@%
  5532. %@CR:BLOODYYoung4    @%%@NL@%
  5533.                                                   George Younger (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  5534.                                           Scottish Conservative politician%@NL@%
  5535. %@AS@%                                                         Bloody-mindedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5536. %@NL@%
  5537. %@NL@%
  5538. %@2@%Why be disagreeable, when with a little effort you can be impossible?%@NL@%
  5539. %@CR:BLOODYWoodruff  @%%@NL@%
  5540.                                               Douglas Woodruff (1897-1978)%@NL@%
  5541.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  5542. %@AS@%                                                         Bloody-mindedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5543. %@NL@%
  5544. %@NL@%
  5545. %@2@%Some folks are so contrary that if they fell in a river, they'd%@EH@%
  5546. insist on floating upstream.%@NL@%
  5547. %@CR:BLOODYBillings  @%%@NL@%
  5548.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  5549.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  5550. %@AS@%                                                         Bloody-mindedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5551. %@NL@%
  5552. %@NL@%
  5553. %@2@%Well, if I called the wrong number why did you answer the phone?%@NL@%
  5554. %@CR:BLOODYThurber   @%%@NL@%
  5555.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  5556.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  5557. %@AS@%                                                         Bloody-mindedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5558. %@NL@%
  5559. %@NL@%
  5560. %@NL@%
  5561. %@1@%%@AS@%The Blues%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5562. %@CR:THEBLUES        @%%@NL@%
  5563. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Blues@%%@NL@%
  5564.      %@AB@%Jazz%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          15cd8f@%%@NL@%
  5565. %@NL@%
  5566.      %@2@%Sweet bird, that shunn'st the noise of folly,%@NL@%
  5567.      Most musical, most melancholy.%@NL@%
  5568. %@CR:THEBLUMilton    @%%@NL@%
  5569.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  5570.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5571. %@AS@%                                                                 The Blues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5572. %@NL@%
  5573. %@NL@%
  5574. %@2@%I've been told that nobody sings the word 'hunger' like I do.%@NL@%
  5575. %@CR:THEBLUHoliday   @%%@NL@%
  5576.                                                 Billie Holiday (1915-1959)%@NL@%
  5577.                                                       American jazz singer%@NL@%
  5578. %@AS@%                                                                 The Blues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5579. %@NL@%
  5580. %@NL@%
  5581. %@2@%Anybody singing the blues is in a deep pit yelling for help.%@NL@%
  5582. %@CR:THEBLUJackson5  @%%@NL@%
  5583.                                                Mahalia Jackson (1911-1972)%@NL@%
  5584.                                           American blues and gospel singer%@NL@%
  5585. %@AS@%                                                                 The Blues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5586. %@NL@%
  5587. %@NL@%
  5588. %@2@%It is only in his music, which Americans are able to admire%@EH@%
  5589. because a protective sentimentality limits their understanding
  5590. of it, that the Negro in America has been able to tell his story.%@NL@%
  5591. %@CR:THEBLUBaldwin   @%%@NL@%
  5592.                                                  James Baldwin (1924-1987)%@NL@%
  5593.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  5594. %@AS@%                                                                 The Blues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5595. %@NL@%
  5596. %@NL@%
  5597. %@2@%The blues was like that problem child that you may have had%@EH@%
  5598. in the family. You was a little bit ashamed to let anybody see
  5599. him, but you loved him. You just didn't know how other people
  5600. would take it.%@NL@%
  5601. %@CR:THEBLUKing1     @%%@NL@%
  5602.                                                       B. B. King (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  5603.                                                   American blues guitarist%@NL@%
  5604. %@AS@%                                                                 The Blues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5605. %@NL@%
  5606. %@NL@%
  5607. %@NL@%
  5608. %@1@%%@AS@%Bohemia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5609. %@CR:BOHEMIA         @%%@NL@%
  5610. %@2@%%@QR:Bohemia@%I'd like to live like a poor man with lots of money.%@NL@%
  5611. %@CR:BOHEMIPicasso   @%%@NL@%
  5612.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  5613.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  5614. %@AS@%                                                                   Bohemia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5615. %@NL@%
  5616. %@NL@%
  5617. %@2@%The true artist will let his wife starve, his children go barefoot,%@EH@%
  5618. his mother drudge for his living at seventy, sooner than work at
  5619. anything but his art.%@NL@%
  5620. %@CR:BOHEMIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  5621.                                                   Tanner, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5622.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  5623.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  5624. %@AS@%                                                                   Bohemia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5625. %@NL@%
  5626. %@NL@%
  5627. %@NL@%
  5628. %@1@%%@AS@%Books%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5629. %@CR:BOOKS           @%%@NL@%
  5630. %@2@%See:%@QR:Books@%%@NL@%
  5631.      Censorship: %@AB@%Milton%@AE@%%@BO:           56cbd@%%@NL@%
  5632.      Learning: %@AB@%Shenstone%@AE@%%@BO:          17146c@%%@NL@%
  5633.      %@AB@%Literature%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          17934a@%%@NL@%
  5634.      %@AB@%Reading%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2190a3@%%@NL@%
  5635.      Writing: %@AB@%Whitman%@AE@%%@BO:          2d0b14@%%@NL@%
  5636. %@NL@%
  5637. %@2@%Immortal sons deifying their sires.%@NL@%
  5638. %@CR:BOOKS Plato     @%%@NL@%
  5639.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  5640.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  5641. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5642. %@NL@%
  5643. %@NL@%
  5644. %@2@%If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead, either%@EH@%
  5645. write things worth reading or do things worth writing.%@NL@%
  5646. %@CR:BOOKS Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  5647.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  5648.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  5649. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5650. %@NL@%
  5651. %@NL@%
  5652.      %@2@%O, let my books be then the eloquence%@NL@%
  5653.      And dumb presagers of my speaking breast.%@NL@%
  5654. %@CR:BOOKS Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  5655.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  5656.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  5657. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5658. %@NL@%
  5659. %@NL@%
  5660. %@2@%Here, my dear Lucy, hide these books. Quick, quick. Fling
  5661. %@AI@%Peregrine Pickle%@AE@% under the toilet - throw
  5662. %@AI@%Roderick Random%@AE@% into the closet - put %@AI@%The Innocent Adultery%@AE@%
  5663. into %@AI@%The Whole Duty of Man%@AE@% . . . and leave%@AI@% Fordyce's Sermons%@AE@%
  5664. open on the table.%@NL@%
  5665. %@CR:BOOKS Sheridan  @%%@NL@%
  5666.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  5667.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  5668. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5669. %@NL@%
  5670. %@NL@%
  5671. %@2@%A man's library is a sort of harem.%@NL@%
  5672. %@CR:BOOKS Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  5673.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  5674.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  5675. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5676. %@NL@%
  5677. %@NL@%
  5678. %@2@%A room without books is as a body without a soul.%@NL@%
  5679. %@CR:BOOKS Lubbock   @%%@NL@%
  5680.                                 Sir John Lubbock, Lord Avebury (1834-1915)%@NL@%
  5681.                                          British banker, scientist, author%@NL@%
  5682. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5683. %@NL@%
  5684. %@NL@%
  5685. %@2@%No furniture is as charming as books, even if you never open%@EH@%
  5686. them.%@NL@%
  5687. %@CR:BOOKS Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  5688.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  5689.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  5690. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5691. %@NL@%
  5692. %@NL@%
  5693. %@2@%A book that is shut is but a block.%@NL@%
  5694. %@CR:BOOKS Fuller3   @%%@NL@%
  5695.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  5696.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  5697. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5698. %@NL@%
  5699. %@NL@%
  5700. %@2@%From the moment I picked up your book until I laid it down%@EH@%
  5701. I was convulsed with laughter. Some day I intend reading it.%@NL@%
  5702. %@CR:BOOKS Marx1     @%%@NL@%
  5703.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  5704.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  5705. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5706. %@NL@%
  5707. %@NL@%
  5708. %@2@%Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some%@EH@%
  5709. few to be chewed and digested.%@NL@%
  5710. %@CR:BOOKS Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  5711.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  5712.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  5713. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5714. %@NL@%
  5715. %@NL@%
  5716. %@2@%The oldest books are only just out to those who have not read%@EH@%
  5717. them.%@NL@%
  5718. %@CR:BOOKS Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  5719.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  5720.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  5721. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5722. %@NL@%
  5723. %@NL@%
  5724. %@2@%Every condensation of a good book is a foolish mutilation.%@NL@%
  5725. %@CR:BOOKS Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  5726.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  5727.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  5728. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5729. %@NL@%
  5730. %@NL@%
  5731. %@2@%It was a book to kill time for those who like it better dead.%@NL@%
  5732. %@CR:BOOKS Macaulay2 @%%@NL@%
  5733.                                                  Rose Macaulay (1889-1958)%@NL@%
  5734.                                                 British novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  5735. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5736. %@NL@%
  5737. %@NL@%
  5738. %@2@%Books are good enough in their own way, but they are a mighty%@EH@%
  5739. bloodless substitute for life.%@NL@%
  5740. %@CR:BOOKS Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  5741.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  5742.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  5743. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5744. %@NL@%
  5745. %@NL@%
  5746. %@2@%What is written is merely the dregs of experience.%@NL@%
  5747. %@CR:BOOKS Kafka     @%%@NL@%
  5748.                                                    Franz Kafka (1883-1924)%@NL@%
  5749.                                        German novelist, short story writer%@NL@%
  5750. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5751. %@NL@%
  5752. %@NL@%
  5753. %@2@%Books are fatal: they are the curse of the human race. Nine-tenths%@EH@%
  5754. of existing books are nonsense, and the clever books are the refutation
  5755. of that nonsense. The greatest misfortune that ever befell man
  5756. was the invention of printing.%@NL@%
  5757. %@CR:BOOKS Disraeli  @%%@NL@%
  5758.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  5759.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  5760. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5761. %@NL@%
  5762. %@NL@%
  5763. %@2@%What do we, as a nation, care about books? How much do you%@EH@%
  5764. think we spend altogether on our libraries, public or private,
  5765. as compared with what we spend on our horses?%@NL@%
  5766. %@CR:BOOKS Ruskin    @%%@NL@%
  5767.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  5768.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  5769. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5770. %@NL@%
  5771. %@NL@%
  5772. %@2@%A good book is the best of friends, the same today as forever.%@NL@%
  5773. %@CR:BOOKS Tupper    @%%@NL@%
  5774.                                                  Martin Tupper (1810-1889)%@NL@%
  5775.                                             English author, poet, inventor%@NL@%
  5776. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5777. %@NL@%
  5778. %@NL@%
  5779. %@2@%Everywhere I have sought rest and not found it, except sitting%@EH@%
  5780. in a corner by myself with a little book.%@NL@%
  5781. %@CR:BOOKS Kempis    @%%@NL@%
  5782.                                                Thomas a Kempis (1380-1471)%@NL@%
  5783.                                                        German monk, mystic%@NL@%
  5784. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5785. %@NL@%
  5786. %@NL@%
  5787. %@2@%Books and marriage go ill together.%@NL@%
  5788. %@CR:BOOKS Moliere   @%%@NL@%
  5789.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  5790.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  5791. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5792. %@NL@%
  5793. %@NL@%
  5794. %@2@%Without books God is silent.%@NL@%
  5795. %@CR:BOOKS Bartholin @%%@NL@%
  5796.                                               Thomas Bartholin (1616-1680)%@NL@%
  5797.                                                           Danish physician%@NL@%
  5798. %@AS@%                                                                     Books%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5799. %@NL@%
  5800. %@NL@%
  5801. %@NL@%
  5802. %@1@%%@AS@%Boredom%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5803. %@CR:BOREDOM         @%%@NL@%
  5804. %@2@%See:%@QR:Boredom@%%@NL@%
  5805.      %@AB@%Ennui%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           cf85b@%%@NL@%
  5806. %@NL@%
  5807. %@2@%Boredom is  . . .  a vital consideration for the moralist, since%@EH@%
  5808. at least half the sins of mankind are caused by the fear of it.%@NL@%
  5809. %@CR:BOREDORussell1  @%%@NL@%
  5810.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  5811.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  5812. %@AS@%                                                                   Boredom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5813. %@NL@%
  5814. %@NL@%
  5815. %@2@%No society seems ever to have succumbed to boredom. Man has%@EH@%
  5816. developed an obvious capacity for surviving the pompous reiteration
  5817. of the commonplace.%@NL@%
  5818. %@CR:BOREDOGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  5819.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  5820.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  5821. %@AS@%                                                                   Boredom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5822. %@NL@%
  5823. %@NL@%
  5824. %@2@%Only the finest and most active animals are capable of boredom.%@EH@%
  5825. A subject for a great poet - God's boredom on the seventh day
  5826. of creation.%@NL@%
  5827. %@CR:BOREDONietzsche @%%@NL@%
  5828.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  5829.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  5830. %@AS@%                                                                   Boredom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5831. %@NL@%
  5832. %@NL@%
  5833. %@2@%A yawn is a silent shout.%@NL@%
  5834. %@CR:BOREDOChesterton@%%@NL@%
  5835.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  5836.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  5837. %@AS@%                                                                   Boredom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5838. %@NL@%
  5839. %@NL@%
  5840. %@NL@%
  5841. %@1@%%@AS@%Bores%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5842. %@CR:BORES           @%%@NL@%
  5843. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bores@%%@NL@%
  5844.      Anecdotes: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           1efda@%%@NL@%
  5845.      Conversation: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           82dfd@%%@NL@%
  5846.      %@AB@%Dullness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           bc3a6@%%@NL@%
  5847.      Fanatics: %@AB@%Churchill%@AE@%%@BO:           e53ab@%%@NL@%
  5848.      Heroes: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          128f75@%%@NL@%
  5849. %@NL@%
  5850. %@2@%Bore. A person who talks when you wish him to listen.%@NL@%
  5851. %@CR:BORES Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  5852.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  5853.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  5854. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5855. %@NL@%
  5856. %@NL@%
  5857. %@2@%A bore is a man who, when you ask him how he is, tells you.%@NL@%
  5858. %@CR:BORES Taylor2   @%%@NL@%
  5859.                                             Bert Leston Taylor (1866-1921)%@NL@%
  5860.                             American humorist, pioneer newspaper columnist%@NL@%
  5861. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5862. %@NL@%
  5863. %@NL@%
  5864.      %@2@%I have neither wit, nor words, nor worth,%@NL@%
  5865.      Action, nor utterance, nor the power of speech%@NL@%
  5866.      To stir men's blood; I only speak right on.%@NL@%
  5867. %@CR:BORES Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  5868.                                                 Mark Antony, %@AI@%Julius Caesar%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5869.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  5870.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  5871. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5872. %@NL@%
  5873. %@NL@%
  5874. %@2@%A bore is a man who spends so much time talking about himself%@EH@%
  5875. that you can't talk about yourself.%@NL@%
  5876. %@CR:BORES Landon    @%%@NL@%
  5877.                                             Melville D. Landon (1839-1910)%@NL@%
  5878.                                                     American lecturer, wit%@NL@%
  5879. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5880. %@NL@%
  5881. %@NL@%
  5882.      %@2@%And 'tis remarkable that they%@NL@%
  5883.      Talk most who have the least to say.%@NL@%
  5884. %@CR:BORES Prior     @%%@NL@%
  5885.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  5886.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  5887. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5888. %@NL@%
  5889. %@NL@%
  5890. %@2@%The age of chivalry is past. Bores have succeeded to dragons.%@NL@%
  5891. %@CR:BORES Disraeli  @%%@NL@%
  5892.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  5893.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  5894. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5895. %@NL@%
  5896. %@NL@%
  5897.      %@2@%Society is now one polished horde,%@NL@%
  5898.      Formed of two mighty tribes, the %@AI@%Bores%@AE@% and%@AI@% Bored.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5899. %@CR:BORES Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  5900.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  5901.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  5902. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5903. %@NL@%
  5904. %@NL@%
  5905. %@2@%A healthy male adult bore consumes each year one and a half%@EH@%
  5906. times his own weight in other people's patience.%@NL@%
  5907. %@CR:BORES Updike    @%%@NL@%
  5908.                                                      John Updike (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  5909.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  5910. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5911. %@NL@%
  5912. %@NL@%
  5913. %@2@%You must be careful about giving any drink whatsoever to a%@EH@%
  5914. bore. A lit-up bore is the worst in the world.%@NL@%
  5915. %@CR:BORES Cecil     @%%@NL@%
  5916.                                               Lord David Cecil (1902-1986)%@NL@%
  5917.                                               British biographer, essayist%@NL@%
  5918. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5919. %@NL@%
  5920. %@NL@%
  5921. %@2@%Make not thy own person, family, relations or affairs the frequent%@EH@%
  5922. subject of thy tattle. Say not, My manner and custom is to do thus.
  5923. I neither eat nor drink in a morning. I am apt to be troubled
  5924. with corns. My child said such a witty thing last night.%@NL@%
  5925. %@CR:BORES Fuller2   @%%@NL@%
  5926.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  5927.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  5928. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5929. %@NL@%
  5930. %@NL@%
  5931. %@2@%If you are a bore, strive to be a rascal also so that you may%@EH@%
  5932. not discredit virtue.%@NL@%
  5933. %@CR:BORES Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  5934.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  5935.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  5936. %@AS@%                                                                     Bores%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5937. %@NL@%
  5938. %@NL@%
  5939. %@NL@%
  5940. %@1@%%@AS@%Borrowing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5941. %@CR:BORROWING       @%%@NL@%
  5942. %@2@%%@QR:Borrowing@%The human species, according to the best theory I can form%@EH@%
  5943. of it, is composed of two distinct races, the men who borrow, and
  5944. the men who lend.%@NL@%
  5945. %@CR:BORROWLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  5946.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  5947.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  5948. %@AS@%                                                                 Borrowing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5949. %@NL@%
  5950. %@NL@%
  5951. %@2@%Do not be made a beggar by banqueting upon borrowing.%@NL@%
  5952. %@CR:BORROWApocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  5953.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  5954. %@AS@%                                                                 Borrowing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5955. %@NL@%
  5956. %@NL@%
  5957. %@NL@%
  5958. %@1@%%@AS@%The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  5959. %@CR:THEBOURGEOISIE  @%%@NL@%
  5960. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Bourgeoisie@%%@NL@%
  5961.      The English: %@AB@%Thackeray%@AE@%%@BO:           ccaa5@%%@NL@%
  5962. %@NL@%
  5963.      %@2@%And the wind shall say "Here were decent godless people;%@NL@%
  5964.      Their only monument the asphalt road%@NL@%
  5965.      And a thousand lost golf balls."%@NL@%
  5966. %@CR:THEBOUEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  5967.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  5968.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  5969. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5970. %@NL@%
  5971. %@NL@%
  5972. %@2@%The bourgeoisie of the whole world, which looks complacently%@EH@%
  5973. upon the wholesale massacre after the battle, is convulsed by horror
  5974. at the desecration of brick and mortar.%@NL@%
  5975. %@CR:THEBOUMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  5976.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  5977.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  5978. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5979. %@NL@%
  5980. %@NL@%
  5981.      %@2@%How beastly the bourgeois is%@NL@%
  5982.      especially the male of the species%@NL@%
  5983.       - presentable, eminently presentable.%@NL@%
  5984. %@CR:THEBOULawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  5985.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  5986.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  5987. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5988. %@NL@%
  5989. %@NL@%
  5990. %@2@%The bourgeoisie prefers comfort to pleasure, convenience to%@EH@%
  5991. liberty, and a pleasant temperature to the deathly inner consuming
  5992. fire.%@NL@%
  5993. %@CR:THEBOUHesse     @%%@NL@%
  5994.                                                  Hermann Hesse (1877-1962)%@NL@%
  5995.                                                      German novelist, poet%@NL@%
  5996. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  5997. %@NL@%
  5998. %@NL@%
  5999. %@2@%The way to crush the bourgeoisie is to grind them between the%@EH@%
  6000. millstones of taxation and inflation.%@NL@%
  6001. %@CR:THEBOULenin     @%%@NL@%
  6002.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  6003.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  6004. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6005. %@NL@%
  6006. %@NL@%
  6007. %@2@%Destroy him as you will, the bourgeois always bounces up. Execute%@EH@%
  6008. him, expropriate him, starve him out%@AI@% en masse,%@AE@% and he
  6009. reappears in your children.%@NL@%
  6010. %@CR:THEBOUConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  6011.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  6012.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  6013. %@AS@%                                                           The Bourgeoisie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6014. %@NL@%
  6015. %@NL@%
  6016. %@NL@%
  6017. %@1@%%@AS@%Boys%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6018. %@CR:BOYS            @%%@NL@%
  6019. %@2@%See:%@QR:Boys@%%@NL@%
  6020.      Adolescence: %@AB@%Hawkins%@AE@%%@BO:            736e@%%@NL@%
  6021. %@NL@%
  6022. %@2@%I never see any difference in boys. I only know two sorts of%@EH@%
  6023. boys. Mealy boys and beef-faced boys.%@NL@%
  6024. %@CR:BOYS  Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  6025.                                                  Mr. Grimwig, %@AI@%Oliver Twist%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6026.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  6027.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  6028. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6029. %@NL@%
  6030. %@NL@%
  6031. %@2@%I have seen thousands of boys and young men, narrow-chested,%@EH@%
  6032. hunched-up, miserable specimens, smoking endless cigarettes, many
  6033. of them betting.%@NL@%
  6034. %@CR:BOYS  BadenPowel@%%@NL@%
  6035.                                  Sir Robert, Lord Baden-Powell (1857-1941)%@NL@%
  6036.                                                            British soldier%@NL@%
  6037.          explaining reasons for foundation of Boy Scouts Association, 1907%@NL@%
  6038. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6039. %@NL@%
  6040. %@NL@%
  6041. %@2@%The fact that boys are allowed to exist at all is evidence%@EH@%
  6042. of a remarkable Christian forbearance among men.%@NL@%
  6043. %@CR:BOYS  Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  6044.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  6045.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  6046. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6047. %@NL@%
  6048. %@NL@%
  6049. %@2@%All my life I have loved a womanly woman and admired a manly%@EH@%
  6050. man, but I never could stand a boily boy.%@NL@%
  6051. %@CR:BOYS  Rosebery  @%%@NL@%
  6052.                                                  Lord Rosebery (1847-1929)%@NL@%
  6053.                                 British Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  6054. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6055. %@NL@%
  6056. %@NL@%
  6057. %@2@%Boys are capital fellows in their own way, among their mates;%@EH@%
  6058. but they are unwholesome companions for grown people.%@NL@%
  6059. %@CR:BOYS  Lamb1     @%%@NL@%
  6060.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  6061.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  6062. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6063. %@NL@%
  6064. %@NL@%
  6065. %@2@%Boys will be boys, and so will a lot of middle-aged men.%@NL@%
  6066. %@CR:BOYS  Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  6067.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  6068.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  6069. %@AS@%                                                                      Boys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6070. %@NL@%
  6071. %@NL@%
  6072. %@NL@%
  6073. %@1@%%@AS@%The British%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6074. %@CR:THEBRITISH      @%%@NL@%
  6075. %@2@%See:%@QR:The British@%%@NL@%
  6076.      Drink: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           b7dfa@%%@NL@%
  6077.      %@AB@%The English%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           cb733@%%@NL@%
  6078.      %@AB@%The Scots%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          23d66c@%%@NL@%
  6079.      Snobbery: %@AB@%Sampson%@AE@%%@BO:          25b8b4@%%@NL@%
  6080.      Wales: %@AB@%Thomas%@AE@%%@BO:          2a6ea2@%%@NL@%
  6081. %@NL@%
  6082. %@2@%What annoys me about Britain is the rugged will to lose.%@NL@%
  6083. %@CR:THEBRICamp      @%%@NL@%
  6084.                                                     William Camp (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  6085.                                  British author, communications consultant%@NL@%
  6086. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6087. %@NL@%
  6088. %@NL@%
  6089. %@2@%An Englishman is never happy unless he is miserable; a Scotsman%@EH@%
  6090. is never at home but when he is abroad; an Irishman is never at
  6091. peace but when he's fighting.%@NL@%
  6092. %@CR:THEBRICamp      @%%@NL@%
  6093.                                                    anonymous, 19th century%@NL@%
  6094. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6095. %@NL@%
  6096. %@NL@%
  6097. %@2@%We always used to be noted for understatement. The difference%@EH@%
  6098. is that in the past we never meant it.%@NL@%
  6099. %@CR:THEBRIPenney    @%%@NL@%
  6100.                                         Sir William, Lord Penney (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  6101.                                                          British scientist%@NL@%
  6102. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6103. %@NL@%
  6104. %@NL@%
  6105. %@2@%The British are a self-distrustful, diffident people, agreeing%@EH@%
  6106. with alacrity that they are neither successful, nor clever and
  6107. only modestly claiming that they have a keener sense of humour,
  6108. more robust common sense, and greater staying power as a nation
  6109. than all the rest of the world put together.%@NL@%
  6110. %@CR:THEBRIPenney    @%%@NL@%
  6111.                                                     the London %@AI@%Times%@AE@%, 1950%@NL@%
  6112. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6113. %@NL@%
  6114. %@NL@%
  6115. %@2@%That detached and baronial air of superiority the Briton habitually%@EH@%
  6116. affects when circumstances beyond his control bring him into the
  6117. presence of creatures of a lesser breed.%@NL@%
  6118. %@CR:THEBRIVanPaassen@%%@NL@%
  6119.                                             Pierre Van Paassen (1895-1968)%@NL@%
  6120.                                      American author, journalist, minister%@NL@%
  6121. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6122. %@NL@%
  6123. %@NL@%
  6124. %@2@%The British tourist is always happy abroad as long as the natives%@EH@%
  6125. are waiters.%@NL@%
  6126. %@CR:THEBRIMorley3   @%%@NL@%
  6127.                                                    Robert Morley (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  6128.                                                         British actor, wit%@NL@%
  6129. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6130. %@NL@%
  6131. %@NL@%
  6132. %@2@%Gorgonised me from head to foot with a stony British stare.%@NL@%
  6133. %@CR:THEBRITennyson  @%%@NL@%
  6134.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  6135.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  6136. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6137. %@NL@%
  6138. %@NL@%
  6139. %@2@%It is equality of monotony which makes the strength of the%@EH@%
  6140. British Isles.%@NL@%
  6141. %@CR:THEBRIRoosevelt1@%%@NL@%
  6142.                                              Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962)%@NL@%
  6143.              American columnist, lecturer, U.S. delegate at United Nations%@NL@%
  6144. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6145. %@NL@%
  6146. %@NL@%
  6147. %@2@%Very few people indeed realise how early the British go to%@EH@%
  6148. bed.%@NL@%
  6149. %@CR:THEBRIRoosevelt1@%%@NL@%
  6150.                                                           the London %@AI@%Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6151. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6152. %@NL@%
  6153. %@NL@%
  6154. %@2@%The national anthem belongs to the eighteenth century. In it%@EH@%
  6155. you find us ordering God about to do our political dirty work.%@NL@%
  6156. %@CR:THEBRIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  6157.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  6158.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  6159. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6160. %@NL@%
  6161. %@NL@%
  6162. %@2@%I always enjoy appearing before a British audience. Even if%@EH@%
  6163. they don't feel like laughing, they nod their heads to show they've
  6164. understood.%@NL@%
  6165. %@CR:THEBRIHope      @%%@NL@%
  6166.                                                         Bob Hope (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  6167.                                                          American comedian%@NL@%
  6168. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6169. %@NL@%
  6170. %@NL@%
  6171. %@2@%What right have the Americans to be forecasting %@AI@%our%@AE@% weather?%@NL@%
  6172. %@CR:THEBRIHope      @%%@NL@%
  6173.                                                 letter to the London %@AI@%Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6174. %@AS@%                                                               The British%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6175. %@NL@%
  6176. %@NL@%
  6177. %@NL@%
  6178. %@1@%%@AS@%Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6179. %@CR:BUREAUCRACY     @%%@NL@%
  6180. %@2@%See:%@QR:Bureaucracy@%%@NL@%
  6181.      Revolution: %@AB@%Kafka%@AE@%%@BO:          22af27@%%@NL@%
  6182.      The State: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          26c52b@%%@NL@%
  6183. %@NL@%
  6184. %@2@%Our greatest growth industry is the Civil Service.%@NL@%
  6185. %@CR:BUREAULucas2    @%%@NL@%
  6186.                                                     Lord Lucas (1896-1967)%@NL@%
  6187.                                                      British public figure%@NL@%
  6188. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6189. %@NL@%
  6190. %@NL@%
  6191. %@2@%This place needs a laxative.%@NL@%
  6192. %@CR:BUREAUGeldof    @%%@NL@%
  6193.                                                       Bob Geldof (b. 1954)%@NL@%
  6194.                                                        Irish rock musician%@NL@%
  6195.                                                         of EEC bureaucracy%@NL@%
  6196. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6197. %@NL@%
  6198. %@NL@%
  6199. %@2@%The working of great institutions is mainly the result of a%@EH@%
  6200. vast mass of routine, petty malice, self-interest, carelessness
  6201. and sheer mistake. Only a residual fraction is thought.%@NL@%
  6202. %@CR:BUREAUSantayana @%%@NL@%
  6203.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  6204.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  6205. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6206. %@NL@%
  6207. %@NL@%
  6208. %@2@%Poor fellow, he suffers from files.%@NL@%
  6209. %@CR:BUREAUBevan     @%%@NL@%
  6210.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  6211.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  6212.                                                      of Sir Walter Citrine%@NL@%
  6213. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6214. %@NL@%
  6215. %@NL@%
  6216. %@2@%Official dignity tends to increase in inverse ratio to the%@EH@%
  6217. importance of the country in which the office is held.%@NL@%
  6218. %@CR:BUREAUHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  6219.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  6220.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  6221. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6222. %@NL@%
  6223. %@NL@%
  6224. %@2@%The longer the title, the less important the job.%@NL@%
  6225. %@CR:BUREAUMcGovern  @%%@NL@%
  6226.                                                  George McGovern (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  6227.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  6228. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6229. %@NL@%
  6230. %@NL@%
  6231. %@2@%There is something about a bureaucrat that does not like a%@EH@%
  6232. poem.%@NL@%
  6233. %@CR:BUREAUVidal     @%%@NL@%
  6234.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  6235.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  6236. %@AS@%                                                               Bureaucracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6237. %@NL@%
  6238. %@NL@%
  6239. %@NL@%
  6240. %@1@%%@AS@%Business%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6241. %@CR:BUSINESS        @%%@NL@%
  6242. %@2@%See:%@QR:Business@%%@NL@%
  6243.      America: %@AB@%Coolidge%@AE@%%@BO:           19948@%%@NL@%
  6244.      Bargaining: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:           3a641@%%@NL@%
  6245.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Stowell%@AE@%%@BO:           a9c86@%%@NL@%
  6246.      %@AB@%Management%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          18f3d0@%%@NL@%
  6247.      Partnership: %@AB@%Carnegie%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce2e6@%; %@AB@%Wrigley Jr.%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce460@%%@NL@%
  6248.      Private Interest: %@AB@%Pitt%@AE@%%@BO:          2052ad@%%@NL@%
  6249.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Cassandra%@AE@%%@BO:          209eba@%%@NL@%
  6250.      Resolve: %@AB@%Livy%@AE@%%@BO:          2279c7@%%@NL@%
  6251.      Retirement: %@AB@%Goodhart%@AE@%%@BO:          228c8f@%%@NL@%
  6252.      Teachers: %@AB@%Leacock%@AE@%%@BO:          27f8a9@%%@NL@%
  6253.      Wealth: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          2acf01@%%@NL@%
  6254. %@NL@%
  6255. %@2@%Nothing knits man to man like the frequent passage from hand%@EH@%
  6256. to hand of cash.%@NL@%
  6257. %@CR:BUSINESickert   @%%@NL@%
  6258.                                                 Walter Sickert (1860-1942)%@NL@%
  6259.                                                             British artist%@NL@%
  6260. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6261. %@NL@%
  6262. %@NL@%
  6263. %@2@%Commerce is the great civilizer. We exchange ideas when we%@EH@%
  6264. exchange fabrics.%@NL@%
  6265. %@CR:BUSINEIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  6266.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  6267.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  6268. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6269. %@NL@%
  6270. %@NL@%
  6271. %@2@%The propensity to truck, barter and exchange one thing for%@EH@%
  6272. another  . . .  is common to all men, and to be found in no other
  6273. race of animals.%@NL@%
  6274. %@CR:BUSINESmith1    @%%@NL@%
  6275.                                                     Adam Smith (1723-1790)%@NL@%
  6276.                                                         Scottish economist%@NL@%
  6277. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6278. %@NL@%
  6279. %@NL@%
  6280. %@2@%Everyone lives by selling something.%@NL@%
  6281. %@CR:BUSINEStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  6282.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  6283.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  6284. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6285. %@NL@%
  6286. %@NL@%
  6287. %@2@%If I see something I like, I buy it; then I try to sell it.%@NL@%
  6288. %@CR:BUSINEGrade     @%%@NL@%
  6289.                                                       Lord Grade (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  6290.                                           British film and TV entrepreneur%@NL@%
  6291. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6292. %@NL@%
  6293. %@NL@%
  6294. %@2@%The selfish spirit of commerce knows no country, and feels%@EH@%
  6295. no passion or principle but that of gain.%@NL@%
  6296. %@CR:BUSINEJefferson @%%@NL@%
  6297.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  6298.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  6299. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6300. %@NL@%
  6301. %@NL@%
  6302. %@2@%No nation was ever ruined by trade.%@NL@%
  6303. %@CR:BUSINEFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  6304.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  6305.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  6306. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6307. %@NL@%
  6308. %@NL@%
  6309. %@2@%What's good for the country is good for General Motors, and%@EH@%
  6310. what's good for General Motors is good for the country.%@NL@%
  6311. %@CR:BUSINEWilson1   @%%@NL@%
  6312.                                                 Charles Wilson (1890-1961)%@NL@%
  6313.                               American industrialist, Secretary of Defense%@NL@%
  6314. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6315. %@NL@%
  6316. %@NL@%
  6317. %@2@%Free enterprise ended in the United States a good many years%@EH@%
  6318. ago. Big oil, big steel, big agriculture avoid the open marketplace.
  6319. Big corporations fix prices among themselves and drive out the
  6320. small entrepreneur. In their conglomerate forms, the huge corporations
  6321. have begun to challenge the legitimacy of the state.%@NL@%
  6322. %@CR:BUSINEVidal     @%%@NL@%
  6323.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  6324.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  6325. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6326. %@NL@%
  6327. %@NL@%
  6328. %@2@%For the merchant, even honesty is a financial speculation.%@NL@%
  6329. %@CR:BUSINEBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  6330.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  6331.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  6332. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6333. %@NL@%
  6334. %@NL@%
  6335. %@2@%Nothing is illegal if one hundred businessmen decide to do%@EH@%
  6336. it.%@NL@%
  6337. %@CR:BUSINEYoung1    @%%@NL@%
  6338.                                                     Andrew Young (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  6339.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  6340. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6341. %@NL@%
  6342. %@NL@%
  6343. %@2@%You never expected justice from a company, did you? They have%@EH@%
  6344. neither a soul to lose, nor a body to kick.%@NL@%
  6345. %@CR:BUSINESmith8    @%%@NL@%
  6346.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  6347.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  6348. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6349. %@NL@%
  6350. %@NL@%
  6351. %@2@%Honour sinks where commerce long prevails.%@NL@%
  6352. %@CR:BUSINEGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  6353.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  6354.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  6355. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6356. %@NL@%
  6357. %@NL@%
  6358. %@2@%When you are skinning your customers you should leave some%@EH@%
  6359. skin on to grow again so that you can skin them again.%@NL@%
  6360. %@CR:BUSINEKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  6361.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  6362.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  6363.                                              advice to British businessmen%@NL@%
  6364. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6365. %@NL@%
  6366. %@NL@%
  6367. %@2@%Every crowd has a silver lining.%@NL@%
  6368. %@CR:BUSINEBarnum    @%%@NL@%
  6369.                                              Phineas T. Barnum (1810-1891)%@NL@%
  6370.                                                           American showman%@NL@%
  6371. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6372. %@NL@%
  6373. %@NL@%
  6374. %@2@%Half the time when men think they are talking business they%@EH@%
  6375. are wasting time.%@NL@%
  6376. %@CR:BUSINEHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  6377.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  6378.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  6379. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6380. %@NL@%
  6381. %@NL@%
  6382. %@2@%There's no such thing as a free lunch.%@NL@%
  6383. %@CR:BUSINEFriedman  @%%@NL@%
  6384.                                                  Milton Friedman (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  6385.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  6386. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6387. %@NL@%
  6388. %@NL@%
  6389. %@2@%Giv'um's dead, and Lend'um's very bad. Nothink for nothink%@EH@%
  6390. 'ere, and precious little for sixpence!%@NL@%
  6391. %@CR:BUSINEFriedman  @%%@NL@%
  6392.                                                             %@AI@%Punch%@AE@% magazine%@NL@%
  6393. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6394. %@NL@%
  6395. %@NL@%
  6396. %@2@%I have always felt that our businessmen, if they had been left%@EH@%
  6397. to themselves to make a religion, would have turned out something
  6398. uncommonly like Juju.%@NL@%
  6399. %@CR:BUSINEKingsley2 @%%@NL@%
  6400.                                                  Mary Kingsley (1862-1900)%@NL@%
  6401.                                                   British traveler, writer%@NL@%
  6402. %@AS@%                                                                  Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6403. %@NL@%
  6404. %@NL@%
  6405. %@NL@%
  6406. %@1@%%@AS@%Busts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6407. %@CR:BUSTS           @%%@NL@%
  6408. %@2@%See:%@QR:Busts@%%@NL@%
  6409.      Dress: %@AB@%Gregory%@AE@%%@BO:           b59e8@%%@NL@%
  6410.      Ladies: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:          1697ee@%%@NL@%
  6411. %@NL@%
  6412.      %@2@%Uncorsetted, her friendly bust%@NL@%
  6413.      Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.%@NL@%
  6414. %@CR:BUSTS Eliot2    @%%@NL@%
  6415.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  6416.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  6417. %@AS@%                                                                     Busts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6418. %@NL@%
  6419. %@NL@%
  6420. %@2@%Dramatic art in her opinion is knowing how to fill a sweater.%@NL@%
  6421. %@CR:BUSTS Davis2    @%%@NL@%
  6422.                                                    Bette Davis (1908-1989)%@NL@%
  6423.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  6424.                                                         of Jayne Mansfield%@NL@%
  6425. %@AS@%                                                                     Busts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6426. %@NL@%
  6427. %@NL@%
  6428. %@2@%There are two good reasons why men go to see her. Those are%@EH@%
  6429. enough.%@NL@%
  6430. %@CR:BUSTS Hughes1   @%%@NL@%
  6431.                                                  Howard Hughes (1905-1976)%@NL@%
  6432.                                        American businessman, film producer%@NL@%
  6433.                                                            of Jane Russell%@NL@%
  6434. %@AS@%                                                                     Busts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6435. %@NL@%
  6436. %@NL@%
  6437. %@NL@%
  6438. %@1@%%@AS@%Lord Byron%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6439. %@CR:BYRON           @%%@NL@%
  6440. %@2@%See:%@QR:Lord Byron@%%@NL@%
  6441.      England: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           ca507@%%@NL@%
  6442. %@NL@%
  6443. %@2@%Lord Byron is only great as a poet; as soon as he reflects,%@EH@%
  6444. he is a child.%@NL@%
  6445. %@CR:BYRON Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  6446.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  6447.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  6448. %@AS@%                                                                Lord Byron%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6449. %@NL@%
  6450. %@NL@%
  6451. %@2@%The temptation, never easily resisted by him, of displaying%@EH@%
  6452. his wit at the expense of his character.%@NL@%
  6453. %@CR:BYRON Moore5    @%%@NL@%
  6454.                                                   Thomas Moore (1779-1852)%@NL@%
  6455.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  6456. %@AS@%                                                                Lord Byron%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6457. %@NL@%
  6458. %@NL@%
  6459. %@2@%Mad, bad, and dangerous to know.%@NL@%
  6460. %@CR:BYRON Lamb2     @%%@NL@%
  6461.                                             Lady Caroline Lamb (1785-1828)%@NL@%
  6462.                                             society figure, lover of Byron%@NL@%
  6463.                             entry in journal following their first meeting%@NL@%
  6464. %@AS@%                                                                Lord Byron%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6465. %@NL@%
  6466. %@NL@%
  6467. %@2@%In his endeavours to corrupt my mind he has sought to make%@EH@%
  6468. me smile first at Vice, saying "There is nothing to which a woman
  6469. may not be reconciled by repetition or familiarity." There is
  6470. %@AI@%no%@AE@% Vice with which he has not endeavoured in this manner to familiarize
  6471. me.%@NL@%
  6472. %@CR:BYRON Milbanke  @%%@NL@%
  6473.                                 Annabella Milbanke, Lady Byron (1792-1860)%@NL@%
  6474. %@AS@%                                                                Lord Byron%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6475. %@NL@%
  6476. %@NL@%
  6477.      %@2@%I have not loved the world, nor the world me;%@NL@%
  6478.      I have not flatter'd its rank breath, nor bow'd%@NL@%
  6479.      To its idolatries a patient knee.%@NL@%
  6480. %@CR:BYRON Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  6481.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  6482.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  6483. %@AS@%                                                                Lord Byron%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6484. %@NL@%
  6485. %@NL@%
  6486. %@NL@%
  6487. %@1@%%@AS@%Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6488. %@CR:CAPITALPUNISHMEN@%%@NL@%
  6489. %@2@%See:%@QR:Capital Punishment@%%@NL@%
  6490.      Trials: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          294dd5@%%@NL@%
  6491. %@NL@%
  6492.      %@2@%It is sweet to dance to violins%@NL@%
  6493.      When love and life are fair:%@NL@%
  6494.      To dance to flutes, to dance to lutes%@NL@%
  6495.      Is delicate and rare;%@NL@%
  6496.      But it is not so sweet with nimble feet%@NL@%
  6497.      To dance upon the air.%@NL@%
  6498. %@CR:CAPITAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  6499.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  6500.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  6501. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6502. %@NL@%
  6503. %@NL@%
  6504. %@2@%I went out to Charing Cross to see Major-General Harrison hanged,%@EH@%
  6505. drawn and quartered; which was done there, he looking as cheerful
  6506. as any man could do in that condition.%@NL@%
  6507. %@CR:CAPITAPepys     @%%@NL@%
  6508.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  6509.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  6510. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6511. %@NL@%
  6512. %@NL@%
  6513. %@2@%If the Court sentences the blighter to hang, then the blighter%@EH@%
  6514. will hang.%@NL@%
  6515. %@CR:CAPITAZiaulHaq  @%%@NL@%
  6516.                                             General Zia ul-Haq (1924-1988)%@NL@%
  6517.                                                      President of Pakistan%@NL@%
  6518.                                              of the death sentence imposed%@NL@%
  6519.                                                     on former President of%@NL@%
  6520.                                         Pakistan Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, 1979%@NL@%
  6521. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6522. %@NL@%
  6523. %@NL@%
  6524. %@2@%The highest and ultimate instrument of political power is capital%@EH@%
  6525. punishment.%@NL@%
  6526. %@CR:CAPITAMelanchtho@%%@NL@%
  6527.                                             Philip Melanchthon (1497-1560)%@NL@%
  6528.                                                   German scholar, humanist%@NL@%
  6529. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6530. %@NL@%
  6531. %@NL@%
  6532. %@2@%If we are to abolish the death penalty, I should like to see%@EH@%
  6533. the first step taken by my friends the murderers.%@NL@%
  6534. %@CR:CAPITAKarr      @%%@NL@%
  6535.                                                  Alphonse Karr (1808-1890)%@NL@%
  6536.                                                French journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  6537. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6538. %@NL@%
  6539. %@NL@%
  6540. %@2@%Many a good hanging prevents a bad marriage.%@NL@%
  6541. %@CR:CAPITAShakespear@%%@NL@%
  6542.                                                       Feste, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6543.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  6544.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  6545. %@AS@%                                                        Capital Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6546. %@NL@%
  6547. %@NL@%
  6548. %@NL@%
  6549. %@1@%%@AS@%Capitalism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6550. %@CR:CAPITALISM      @%%@NL@%
  6551. %@2@%See:%@QR:Capitalism@%%@NL@%
  6552.      Economics: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:           be854@%%@NL@%
  6553.      Fascism: %@AB@%Sinclair%@AE@%%@BO:           e7b35@%%@NL@%
  6554.      Inflation: %@AB@%Keynes%@AE@%%@BO:          14d317@%%@NL@%
  6555.      Socialism: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:          25f0e4@%%@NL@%
  6556. %@NL@%
  6557. %@2@%We are too mealy-mouthed. We fear the word "capitalism" is%@EH@%
  6558. unpopular. So we talk about the "free enterprise" system and
  6559. run to cover in the folds of the flag and talk about the American
  6560. way of life.%@NL@%
  6561. %@CR:CAPITAJohnston  @%%@NL@%
  6562.                                               Eric A. Johnston (1896-1963)%@NL@%
  6563.                                                      American entrepreneur%@NL@%
  6564. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6565. %@NL@%
  6566. %@NL@%
  6567. %@2@%It is a socialist idea that making profits is a vice; I consider%@EH@%
  6568. the real vice is making losses.%@NL@%
  6569. %@CR:CAPITAChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  6570.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  6571.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  6572. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6573. %@NL@%
  6574. %@NL@%
  6575. %@2@%The decadent international but individualistic capitalism in%@EH@%
  6576. the hands of which we found ourselves after the war is not a success.
  6577. It is not intelligent. It is not beautiful. It is not just. It
  6578. is not virtuous. And it doesn't deliver the goods.%@NL@%
  6579. %@CR:CAPITAKeynes    @%%@NL@%
  6580.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  6581.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  6582.                                                                    in 1933%@NL@%
  6583. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6584. %@NL@%
  6585. %@NL@%
  6586. %@2@%The forces in a capitalist society, if left unchecked, tend%@EH@%
  6587. to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.%@NL@%
  6588. %@CR:CAPITANehru     @%%@NL@%
  6589.                                               Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964)%@NL@%
  6590.                                                      Indian prime minister%@NL@%
  6591. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6592. %@NL@%
  6593. %@NL@%
  6594. %@2@%Capitalists are no more capable of self-sacrifice than a man%@EH@%
  6595. is capable of lifting himself up by his bootstraps.%@NL@%
  6596. %@CR:CAPITALenin     @%%@NL@%
  6597.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  6598.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  6599. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6600. %@NL@%
  6601. %@NL@%
  6602. %@2@%Capitalism inevitably and by virtue of the very logic of its%@EH@%
  6603. civilization creates, educates and subsidizes a vested interest
  6604. in social unrest.%@NL@%
  6605. %@CR:CAPITASchumpeter@%%@NL@%
  6606.                                               J. A. Schumpeter (1883-1950)%@NL@%
  6607.                                              American economist, socialist%@NL@%
  6608. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6609. %@NL@%
  6610. %@NL@%
  6611. %@2@%Advocates of capitalism are very apt to appeal to the sacred%@EH@%
  6612. principles of liberty, which are embodied in one maxim: %@AI@%The fortunate
  6613. %@AI@%must not be restrained in the exercise of tyranny over the unfortunate.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6614. %@CR:CAPITARussell1  @%%@NL@%
  6615.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  6616.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  6617. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6618. %@NL@%
  6619. %@NL@%
  6620. %@2@%History suggests that capitalism is a necessary condition for%@EH@%
  6621. political freedom. Clearly it is not a sufficient condition.%@NL@%
  6622. %@CR:CAPITAFriedman  @%%@NL@%
  6623.                                                  Milton Friedman (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  6624.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  6625. %@AS@%                                                                Capitalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6626. %@NL@%
  6627. %@NL@%
  6628. %@NL@%
  6629. %@1@%%@AS@%Cards%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6630. %@CR:CARDS           @%%@NL@%
  6631. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cards@%%@NL@%
  6632.      Swindles: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          27a878@%%@NL@%
  6633. %@NL@%
  6634. %@2@%I am sorry I have not learned to play at cards. It is very%@EH@%
  6635. useful in life: it generates kindness and consolidates society.%@NL@%
  6636. %@CR:CARDS Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  6637.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  6638.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  6639. %@AS@%                                                                     Cards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6640. %@NL@%
  6641. %@NL@%
  6642. %@2@%Is is very wonderful to see persons of the best sense passing%@EH@%
  6643. away a dozen hours together in shuffling and dividing a pack of
  6644. cards, with no other conversation but what is made up of a few
  6645. game phrases, and no other ideas but those of black or red spots
  6646. ranged together in different figures.%@NL@%
  6647. %@CR:CARDS Addison   @%%@NL@%
  6648.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  6649.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  6650. %@AS@%                                                                     Cards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6651. %@NL@%
  6652. %@NL@%
  6653. %@2@%A man's idea in a card game is war - cool, devastating and%@EH@%
  6654. pitiless. A lady's idea of it is a combination of larceny, embezzlement
  6655. and burglary.%@NL@%
  6656. %@CR:CARDS Dunne     @%%@NL@%
  6657.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  6658.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  6659. %@AS@%                                                                     Cards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6660. %@NL@%
  6661. %@NL@%
  6662. %@NL@%
  6663. %@1@%%@AS@%Careers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6664. %@CR:CAREERS         @%%@NL@%
  6665. %@2@%See:%@QR:Careers@%%@NL@%
  6666.      Work: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          2c3bc1@%%@NL@%
  6667. %@NL@%
  6668. %@2@%The best careers advice to give to the young is "Find out%@EH@%
  6669. what you like doing best and get someone to pay you for doing it."%@NL@%
  6670. %@CR:CAREERWhitehorn @%%@NL@%
  6671.                                              Katharine Whitehorn (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  6672.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  6673. %@AS@%                                                                   Careers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6674. %@NL@%
  6675. %@NL@%
  6676. %@2@%Be nice to people on your way up because you'll meet them on%@EH@%
  6677. your way down.%@NL@%
  6678. %@CR:CAREERMizner2   @%%@NL@%
  6679.                                                  Wilson Mizner (1876-1933)%@NL@%
  6680.                                                    American dramatist, wit%@NL@%
  6681. %@AS@%                                                                   Careers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6682. %@NL@%
  6683. %@NL@%
  6684. %@2@%His was the sort of career that made the Recording Angel think%@EH@%
  6685. seriously about taking up shorthand.%@NL@%
  6686. %@CR:CAREERBentley   @%%@NL@%
  6687.                                                Nicolas Bentley (1907-1978)%@NL@%
  6688.                                          British artist, author, publisher%@NL@%
  6689. %@AS@%                                                                   Careers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6690. %@NL@%
  6691. %@NL@%
  6692. %@2@%I have found some of the best reasons I ever had for remaining%@EH@%
  6693. at the bottom simply by looking at the men at the top.%@NL@%
  6694. %@CR:CAREERColby     @%%@NL@%
  6695.                                                    F. M. Colby (1865-1925)%@NL@%
  6696.                                                  American editor, essayist%@NL@%
  6697. %@AS@%                                                                   Careers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6698. %@NL@%
  6699. %@NL@%
  6700. %@NL@%
  6701. %@1@%%@AS@%Caricature%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6702. %@CR:CARICATURE      @%%@NL@%
  6703. %@2@%%@QR:Caricature@%Caricature is the tribute that mediocrity pays to genius.%@NL@%
  6704. %@CR:CARICAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  6705.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  6706.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  6707. %@AS@%                                                                Caricature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6708. %@NL@%
  6709. %@NL@%
  6710. %@NL@%
  6711. %@1@%%@AS@%Cars%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6712. %@CR:CARS            @%%@NL@%
  6713. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cars@%%@NL@%
  6714.      Women: %@AB@%White%@AE@%%@BO:          2bbaf6@%%@NL@%
  6715. %@NL@%
  6716. %@2@%No other man-made device since the shields and lances of the%@EH@%
  6717. ancient knights fulfils a man's ego like an automobile.%@NL@%
  6718. %@CR:CARS  Rootes    @%%@NL@%
  6719.                                       Sir William, Lord Rootes (1894-1964)%@NL@%
  6720.                                            British automobile manufacturer%@NL@%
  6721. %@AS@%                                                                      Cars%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6722. %@NL@%
  6723. %@NL@%
  6724. %@2@%A noisy exhaust almost amounts to a mating call.%@NL@%
  6725. %@CR:CARS  Leavy     @%%@NL@%
  6726.                                                      J. A. Leavy (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  6727.                               British businessman, Conservative politician%@NL@%
  6728. %@AS@%                                                                      Cars%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6729. %@NL@%
  6730. %@NL@%
  6731. %@2@%There is no class of person more moved by hate than the motorist.%@NL@%
  6732. %@CR:CARS  Hewitt    @%%@NL@%
  6733.                                       C. R. Hewitt, C. H. Rolphe (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  6734.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  6735. %@AS@%                                                                      Cars%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6736. %@NL@%
  6737. %@NL@%
  6738. %@2@%I think that cars today are almost the exact equivalent of%@EH@%
  6739. the great Gothic cathedrals: I mean the supreme creation of an
  6740. era, conceived with passion by unknown artists, and consumed in
  6741. image if not in usage by a whole population which appropriates
  6742. them as a purely magical object.%@NL@%
  6743. %@CR:CARS  Barthes   @%%@NL@%
  6744.                                                 Roland Barthes (1915-1980)%@NL@%
  6745.                                                            French academic%@NL@%
  6746. %@AS@%                                                                      Cars%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6747. %@NL@%
  6748. %@NL@%
  6749. %@2@%I don't even like %@AI@%old%@AE@% cars  . . .  I'd rather have a goddam%@EH@%
  6750. horse. A horse is at least %@AI@%human,%@AE@% for God's sake.%@NL@%
  6751. %@CR:CARS  Salinger  @%%@NL@%
  6752.                                                   J. D. Salinger (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  6753.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  6754. %@AS@%                                                                      Cars%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6755. %@NL@%
  6756. %@NL@%
  6757. %@NL@%
  6758. %@1@%%@AS@%Catholicism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6759. %@CR:CATHOLICISM     @%%@NL@%
  6760. %@2@%See:%@QR:Catholicism@%%@NL@%
  6761.      Church of England: %@AB@%Steele%@AE@%%@BO:           69141@%%@NL@%
  6762.      Faith: %@AB@%Gide%@AE@%%@BO:           dfe38@%%@NL@%
  6763.      %@AB@%The Pope%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1f1c5a@%%@NL@%
  6764. %@NL@%
  6765. %@2@%A little skill in antiquity inclines a man to Popery.%@NL@%
  6766. %@CR:CATHOLFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  6767.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  6768.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  6769. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6770. %@NL@%
  6771. %@NL@%
  6772. %@2@%She [the Catholic Church] thoroughly understands what no%@EH@%
  6773. other Church has ever understood, how to deal with enthusiasts.%@NL@%
  6774. %@CR:CATHOLMacaulay3 @%%@NL@%
  6775.                                      Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  6776.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  6777. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6778. %@NL@%
  6779. %@NL@%
  6780. %@2@%Good, strong, thick, stupefying incense-smoke.%@NL@%
  6781. %@CR:CATHOLBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  6782.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  6783.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  6784. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6785. %@NL@%
  6786. %@NL@%
  6787. %@2@%Here is everything which can lay hold of the eye, ear and%@EH@%
  6788. imagination - everything which can charm and bewitch the simple and
  6789. ignorant. I wonder how Luther ever broke the spell.%@NL@%
  6790. %@CR:CATHOLAdams3    @%%@NL@%
  6791.                                                     John Adams (1735-1826)%@NL@%
  6792.                                              American statesman, president%@NL@%
  6793. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6794. %@NL@%
  6795. %@NL@%
  6796. %@2@%The Pope is barely Catholic enough for some converts.%@NL@%
  6797. %@CR:CATHOLAyscough  @%%@NL@%
  6798.                                                  John Ayscough (1858-1928)%@NL@%
  6799.                                         British priest, novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  6800. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6801. %@NL@%
  6802. %@NL@%
  6803. %@2@%The priest is always fascinating to an adulterous generation%@EH@%
  6804. because they think he knows more ways of committing adultery than
  6805. anybody else. It's logical. He deals in sin as much as a dustman
  6806. deals in garbage.%@NL@%
  6807. %@CR:CATHOLMenen     @%%@NL@%
  6808.                                                     Aubrey Menen (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  6809.                                                 British novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  6810. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6811. %@NL@%
  6812. %@NL@%
  6813. %@2@%I don't like your way of conditioning and contracting with%@EH@%
  6814. the saints. Do this and I'll do that! Here's one for t'other. Save
  6815. me and I'll give you a taper or go on a pilgrimage.%@NL@%
  6816. %@CR:CATHOLErasmus   @%%@NL@%
  6817.                                                        Erasmus (1466-1536)%@NL@%
  6818.                                                             Dutch humanist%@NL@%
  6819. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6820. %@NL@%
  6821. %@NL@%
  6822. %@2@%Outside of the Catholic church everything may be had except%@EH@%
  6823. salvation.%@NL@%
  6824. %@CR:CATHOLSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  6825.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  6826.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  6827. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6828. %@NL@%
  6829. %@NL@%
  6830. %@2@%All human life is here, but the Holy Ghost seems to be somewhere%@EH@%
  6831. else.%@NL@%
  6832. %@CR:CATHOLBurgess1  @%%@NL@%
  6833.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  6834.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  6835.                                                             of the Vatican%@NL@%
  6836. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6837. %@NL@%
  6838. %@NL@%
  6839. %@2@%You can't run the Church on Hail Marys.%@NL@%
  6840. %@CR:CATHOLMarcinkus @%%@NL@%
  6841.                                        Archbishop Paul Marcinkus (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  6842.                                   American ecclesiastic, Vatican financier%@NL@%
  6843. %@AS@%                                                               Catholicism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6844. %@NL@%
  6845. %@NL@%
  6846. %@NL@%
  6847. %@1@%%@AS@%Caution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6848. %@CR:CAUTION         @%%@NL@%
  6849. %@2@%See:%@QR:Caution@%%@NL@%
  6850.      Economizing: %@AB@%Publilius Syrus%@AE@%%@BO:           bf009@%%@NL@%
  6851. %@NL@%
  6852. %@2@%Set the foot down with distrust on the crust of the world - it%@EH@%
  6853. is thin.%@NL@%
  6854. %@CR:CAUTIOMillay    @%%@NL@%
  6855.                                        Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950)%@NL@%
  6856.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  6857. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6858. %@NL@%
  6859. %@NL@%
  6860. %@2@%In skating over thin ice, our safety is in our speed.%@NL@%
  6861. %@CR:CAUTIOEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  6862.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  6863.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  6864. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6865. %@NL@%
  6866. %@NL@%
  6867. %@2@%Now, gentlemen, we have got our harpoon into the monster, but%@EH@%
  6868. we must still take uncommon care, or else by a single flop of his
  6869. tail he will send us all to eternity.%@NL@%
  6870. %@CR:CAUTIOLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  6871.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  6872.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  6873. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6874. %@NL@%
  6875. %@NL@%
  6876. %@2@%If we shake hands with icy fingers it is because we have burnt%@EH@%
  6877. them so horribly before.%@NL@%
  6878. %@CR:CAUTIOSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  6879.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  6880.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  6881. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6882. %@NL@%
  6883. %@NL@%
  6884. %@2@%An appearance of carelessness is vital in true caution.%@NL@%
  6885. %@CR:CAUTIOBenson    @%%@NL@%
  6886.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  6887.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  6888. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6889. %@NL@%
  6890. %@NL@%
  6891. %@2@%Put all thine eggs in one basket and - watch that basket.%@NL@%
  6892. %@CR:CAUTIOTwain     @%%@NL@%
  6893.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  6894.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  6895. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6896. %@NL@%
  6897. %@NL@%
  6898. %@2@%He that leaveth nothing to chance will do few things ill, but%@EH@%
  6899. he will do very few things.%@NL@%
  6900. %@CR:CAUTIOSavile    @%%@NL@%
  6901.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  6902.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  6903. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6904. %@NL@%
  6905. %@NL@%
  6906. %@2@%Caution has its place, no doubt, but we cannot refuse our support%@EH@%
  6907. to a serious venture which challenges the whole of the personality.
  6908. If we oppose it, we are trying to suppress what is best in man - his
  6909. daring and his aspirations. And should we succeed, we should only
  6910. have stood in the way of that invaluable experience which might
  6911. have given a meaning to life. What would have happened if Paul
  6912. had allowed himself to be talked out of his journey to Damascus?%@NL@%
  6913. %@CR:CAUTIOJung      @%%@NL@%
  6914.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  6915.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  6916. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6917. %@NL@%
  6918. %@NL@%
  6919. %@2@%Of all the thirty-six alternatives, running away is best.%@NL@%
  6920. %@CR:CAUTIOJung      @%%@NL@%
  6921.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  6922. %@AS@%                                                                   Caution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6923. %@NL@%
  6924. %@NL@%
  6925. %@NL@%
  6926. %@1@%%@AS@%Censorship%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  6927. %@CR:CENSORSHIP      @%%@NL@%
  6928. %@2@%See:%@QR:Censorship@%%@NL@%
  6929.      Fashion: %@AB@%Hellman%@AE@%%@BO:           e8844@%%@NL@%
  6930. %@NL@%
  6931. %@2@%Art made tongue-tied by authority.%@NL@%
  6932. %@CR:CENSORShakespear@%%@NL@%
  6933.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  6934.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  6935. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6936. %@NL@%
  6937. %@NL@%
  6938. %@2@%Those expressions are omitted which can not with propriety%@EH@%
  6939. be read aloud in the family.%@NL@%
  6940. %@CR:CENSORBowdler   @%%@NL@%
  6941.                                             Dr. Thomas Bowdler (1754-1825)%@NL@%
  6942.                                                 English editor, expurgator%@NL@%
  6943. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6944. %@NL@%
  6945. %@NL@%
  6946. %@2@%Fear of corrupting the mind of the younger generation is the%@EH@%
  6947. loftiest form of cowardice.%@NL@%
  6948. %@CR:CENSORJackson3  @%%@NL@%
  6949.                                               Holbrook Jackson (1874-1948)%@NL@%
  6950.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  6951. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6952. %@NL@%
  6953. %@NL@%
  6954. %@2@%I know of no book which has been a source of brutality and%@EH@%
  6955. sadistic conduct, both public and private, that can compare with
  6956. the Bible.%@NL@%
  6957. %@CR:CENSORPaget     @%%@NL@%
  6958.                                                       Lord Paget (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  6959.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  6960. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6961. %@NL@%
  6962. %@NL@%
  6963. %@2@%Who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but%@EH@%
  6964. he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image
  6965. of God, as it were in the eye.%@NL@%
  6966. %@CR:CENSORMilton    @%%@NL@%
  6967.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  6968.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  6969. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6970. %@NL@%
  6971. %@NL@%
  6972. %@2@%Censorship is like an appendix. When inert, it is useless;%@EH@%
  6973. when active it is extremely dangerous.%@NL@%
  6974. %@CR:CENSOREdelman   @%%@NL@%
  6975.                                                Maurice Edelman (1911-1975)%@NL@%
  6976.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  6977. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6978. %@NL@%
  6979. %@NL@%
  6980. %@2@%Censorship is the commonest social blasphemy because it is%@EH@%
  6981. mostly concealed, built into us by indolence, self-interest, and
  6982. cowardice.%@NL@%
  6983. %@CR:CENSOROsborne   @%%@NL@%
  6984.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  6985.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  6986. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6987. %@NL@%
  6988. %@NL@%
  6989. %@2@%Did you ever hear anyone say "That work had better be banned%@EH@%
  6990. because I might read it and it might be very damaging to me"?%@NL@%
  6991. %@CR:CENSORJackson4  @%%@NL@%
  6992.                                           Joseph Henry Jackson (1894-1955)%@NL@%
  6993.                                             American critic, travel-writer%@NL@%
  6994. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  6995. %@NL@%
  6996. %@NL@%
  6997. %@2@%Every burned book enlightens the world.%@NL@%
  6998. %@CR:CENSOREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  6999.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  7000.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  7001. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7002. %@NL@%
  7003. %@NL@%
  7004. %@2@%If we can't stamp out literature in the country, we can at%@EH@%
  7005. least stop it being brought in from outside.%@NL@%
  7006. %@CR:CENSORWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  7007.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  7008.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  7009. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7010. %@NL@%
  7011. %@NL@%
  7012. %@2@%I am confident, of course, knowing that I shall fulfill my%@EH@%
  7013. tasks as a writer in any circumstances, and from my grave even
  7014. more successfully and incontestably than when I live. No one can
  7015. bar truth's course, and for its progress I am prepared to accept
  7016. even death. But perhaps repeated lessons will teach us, at least,
  7017. not to arrest a writer's pen during his lifetime.%@NL@%
  7018. %@CR:CENSORSolzhenits@%%@NL@%
  7019.                                           Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  7020.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  7021. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7022. %@NL@%
  7023. %@NL@%
  7024. %@2@%They who have put out the people's eyes reproach them of their%@EH@%
  7025. blindness.%@NL@%
  7026. %@CR:CENSORMilton    @%%@NL@%
  7027.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  7028.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7029. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7030. %@NL@%
  7031. %@NL@%
  7032. %@2@%The artist and the censor differ in this wise: that the first%@EH@%
  7033. is a decent mind in an indecent body and that the second is an
  7034. indecent mind in a decent body.%@NL@%
  7035. %@CR:CENSORNathan    @%%@NL@%
  7036.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  7037.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  7038. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7039. %@NL@%
  7040. %@NL@%
  7041. %@2@%He who discommendeth others obliquely commendeth himself.%@NL@%
  7042. %@CR:CENSORBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  7043.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  7044.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  7045. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7046. %@NL@%
  7047. %@NL@%
  7048. %@2@%They can't censor the gleam in my eye.%@NL@%
  7049. %@CR:CENSORLaughton  @%%@NL@%
  7050.                                               Charles Laughton (1899-1962)%@NL@%
  7051.                                                              British actor%@NL@%
  7052. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7053. %@NL@%
  7054. %@NL@%
  7055. %@2@%I believe in censorship. After all, I made a fortune out of%@EH@%
  7056. it.%@NL@%
  7057. %@CR:CENSORWest1     @%%@NL@%
  7058.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  7059.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  7060. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7061. %@NL@%
  7062. %@NL@%
  7063. %@2@%This film is apparently meaningless, but if it has any meaning%@EH@%
  7064. it is doubtless objectionable.%@NL@%
  7065. %@CR:CENSORWest1     @%%@NL@%
  7066.                            British Board of Film Censors banning Cocteau's%@NL@%
  7067.                                       %@AI@%The Seashell and the Clergyman, %@AE@%1956%@NL@%
  7068. %@AS@%                                                                Censorship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7069. %@NL@%
  7070. %@NL@%
  7071. %@NL@%
  7072. %@1@%%@AS@%Ceremony%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7073. %@CR:CEREMONY        @%%@NL@%
  7074. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ceremony@%%@NL@%
  7075.      America: %@AB@%Waugh%@AE@%%@BO:           18666@%%@NL@%
  7076. %@NL@%
  7077. %@2@%Some people think that whatever is done solemnly must make%@EH@%
  7078. sense.%@NL@%
  7079. %@CR:CEREMOLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  7080.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  7081.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  7082. %@AS@%                                                                  Ceremony%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7083. %@NL@%
  7084. %@NL@%
  7085. %@2@%Ceremony is the smoke of friendship.%@NL@%
  7086. %@CR:CEREMOLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  7087.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  7088. %@AS@%                                                                  Ceremony%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7089. %@NL@%
  7090. %@NL@%
  7091. %@2@%It is superstition to put one's hopes in formalities; but it%@EH@%
  7092. is pride to be unwilling to submit to them.%@NL@%
  7093. %@CR:CEREMOPascal    @%%@NL@%
  7094.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  7095.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  7096. %@AS@%                                                                  Ceremony%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7097. %@NL@%
  7098. %@NL@%
  7099. %@NL@%
  7100. %@1@%%@AS@%Certainty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7101. %@CR:CERTAINTY       @%%@NL@%
  7102. %@2@%See:%@QR:Certainty@%%@NL@%
  7103.      Belief: %@AB@%Junius%@AE@%%@BO:           3d059@%%@NL@%
  7104.      The Public: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:          20f1de@%%@NL@%
  7105.      Self-confidence: %@AB@%Melbourne%@AE@%%@BO:          2444a1@%%@NL@%
  7106. %@NL@%
  7107. %@2@%The fundamental cause of trouble in the world today is that%@EH@%
  7108. the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.%@NL@%
  7109. %@CR:CERTAIRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  7110.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  7111.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  7112. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7113. %@NL@%
  7114. %@NL@%
  7115.      %@2@%The best lack all conviction, while the worst%@NL@%
  7116.      Are full of passionate intensity.%@NL@%
  7117. %@CR:CERTAIYeats     @%%@NL@%
  7118.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  7119.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  7120. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7121. %@NL@%
  7122. %@NL@%
  7123.      %@2@%Ah, what a dusty answer gets the soul%@NL@%
  7124.      When hot for certainties in this our life!%@NL@%
  7125. %@CR:CERTAIMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  7126.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  7127.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  7128. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7129. %@NL@%
  7130. %@NL@%
  7131. %@2@%We are not certain, we are never certain. If we were we could%@EH@%
  7132. reach some conclusions, and we could, at last, make others take
  7133. us seriously.%@NL@%
  7134. %@CR:CERTAICamus1    @%%@NL@%
  7135.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  7136.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  7137. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7138. %@NL@%
  7139. %@NL@%
  7140. %@2@%If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end in doubts,%@EH@%
  7141. but if he will be content to begin with doubts, he shall end in
  7142. certainties.%@NL@%
  7143. %@CR:CERTAIBacon     @%%@NL@%
  7144.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  7145.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  7146. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7147. %@NL@%
  7148. %@NL@%
  7149. %@2@%I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the heart's affections,%@EH@%
  7150. and the truth of imagination.%@NL@%
  7151. %@CR:CERTAIKeats     @%%@NL@%
  7152.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  7153.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7154. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7155. %@NL@%
  7156. %@NL@%
  7157. %@2@%In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.%@NL@%
  7158. %@CR:CERTAIFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  7159.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  7160.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  7161. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7162. %@NL@%
  7163. %@NL@%
  7164. %@2@%The only certainty is that nothing is certain.%@NL@%
  7165. %@CR:CERTAIPlinytheEl@%%@NL@%
  7166.                                                    Pliny the Elder (23-79)%@NL@%
  7167.                                                              Roman scholar%@NL@%
  7168. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7169. %@NL@%
  7170. %@NL@%
  7171. %@2@%It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who%@EH@%
  7172. is always dull.%@NL@%
  7173. %@CR:CERTAIMencken   @%%@NL@%
  7174.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  7175.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  7176. %@AS@%                                                                 Certainty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7177. %@NL@%
  7178. %@NL@%
  7179. %@NL@%
  7180. %@1@%%@AS@%Change%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7181. %@CR:CHANGE          @%%@NL@%
  7182. %@2@%See:%@QR:Change@%%@NL@%
  7183.      Conservatives: %@AB@%Falkland%@AE@%%@BO:           7e384@%%@NL@%
  7184. %@NL@%
  7185.      %@2@%Let the great world spin for ever down the ringing grooves of change.%@NL@%
  7186. %@CR:CHANGETennyson  @%%@NL@%
  7187.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  7188.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7189. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7190. %@NL@%
  7191. %@NL@%
  7192. %@2@%When our first parents were driven out of Paradise, Adam is%@EH@%
  7193. believed to have remarked to Eve: "My dear, we live in an age
  7194. of transition."%@NL@%
  7195. %@CR:CHANGEInge      @%%@NL@%
  7196.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  7197.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  7198. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7199. %@NL@%
  7200. %@NL@%
  7201. %@2@%One change leaves the way open for the introduction of others.%@NL@%
  7202. %@CR:CHANGEMachiavell@%%@NL@%
  7203.                                            Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)%@NL@%
  7204.                                              Italian political philosopher%@NL@%
  7205. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7206. %@NL@%
  7207. %@NL@%
  7208. %@2@%For good and evil, man is a free creative spirit. This produces%@EH@%
  7209. the very queer world we live in, a world in continuous creation
  7210. and therefore continuous change and insecurity.%@NL@%
  7211. %@CR:CHANGECary      @%%@NL@%
  7212.                                                     Joyce Cary (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  7213.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  7214. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7215. %@NL@%
  7216. %@NL@%
  7217. %@2@%Progress is impossible without change; and those who cannot%@EH@%
  7218. change their minds cannot change anything.%@NL@%
  7219. %@CR:CHANGEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  7220.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  7221.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  7222. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7223. %@NL@%
  7224. %@NL@%
  7225. %@2@%Change is not made without inconvenience, even from worse to%@EH@%
  7226. better.%@NL@%
  7227. %@CR:CHANGEHooker    @%%@NL@%
  7228.                                                 Richard Hooker (1554-1600)%@NL@%
  7229.                                                         English theologian%@NL@%
  7230. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7231. %@NL@%
  7232. %@NL@%
  7233. %@2@%There is a certain relief in change, even though it be from%@EH@%
  7234. bad to worse; as I have found in traveling in a stage-coach, that
  7235. it is often a comfort to shift one's position and be bruised in
  7236. a new place.%@NL@%
  7237. %@CR:CHANGEIrving    @%%@NL@%
  7238.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  7239.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  7240. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7241. %@NL@%
  7242. %@NL@%
  7243. %@2@%A living thing is distinguished from a dead thing by the multiplicity%@EH@%
  7244. of the changes at any moment taking place in it.%@NL@%
  7245. %@CR:CHANGESpencer   @%%@NL@%
  7246.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  7247.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  7248. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7249. %@NL@%
  7250. %@NL@%
  7251. %@2@%All things change, nothing is extinguished.%@NL@%
  7252. %@CR:CHANGEOvid      @%%@NL@%
  7253.                                                         Ovid (43 BC-17 AD)%@NL@%
  7254.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  7255. %@AS@%                                                                    Change%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7256. %@NL@%
  7257. %@NL@%
  7258. %@NL@%
  7259. %@1@%%@AS@%Chaos%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7260. %@CR:CHAOS           @%%@NL@%
  7261. %@2@%See:%@QR:Chaos@%%@NL@%
  7262.      War: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          2a8d33@%%@NL@%
  7263. %@NL@%
  7264. %@2@%There is nothing stable in the world; uproar's your only music.%@NL@%
  7265. %@CR:CHAOS Keats     @%%@NL@%
  7266.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  7267.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7268. %@AS@%                                                                     Chaos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7269. %@NL@%
  7270. %@NL@%
  7271. %@2@%Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit.%@NL@%
  7272. %@CR:CHAOS Adams2    @%%@NL@%
  7273.                                                 Henry B. Adams (1838-1918)%@NL@%
  7274.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  7275. %@AS@%                                                                     Chaos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7276. %@NL@%
  7277. %@NL@%
  7278. %@2@%Confusion is a word we have invented for an order which is%@EH@%
  7279. not understood.%@NL@%
  7280. %@CR:CHAOS Miller2   @%%@NL@%
  7281.                                                   Henry Miller (1891-1980)%@NL@%
  7282.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  7283. %@AS@%                                                                     Chaos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7284. %@NL@%
  7285. %@NL@%
  7286. %@2@%In all chaos there is a cosmos, in all disorder a secret order.%@NL@%
  7287. %@CR:CHAOS Jung      @%%@NL@%
  7288.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  7289.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  7290. %@AS@%                                                                     Chaos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7291. %@NL@%
  7292. %@NL@%
  7293. %@NL@%
  7294. %@1@%%@AS@%Character%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7295. %@CR:CHARACTER       @%%@NL@%
  7296. %@2@%See:%@QR:Character@%%@NL@%
  7297.      Reputation: %@AB@%Paine%@AE@%%@BO:          22655a@%; %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          2266e6@%%@NL@%
  7298.      Society: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          25f8d7@%%@NL@%
  7299.      Solitude: %@AB@%Stendhal%@AE@%%@BO:          26123c@%%@NL@%
  7300. %@NL@%
  7301. %@2@%Character is what you are in the dark.%@NL@%
  7302. %@CR:CHARACMoody     @%%@NL@%
  7303.                                                   Dwight Moody (1837-1899)%@NL@%
  7304.                                                        American evangelist%@NL@%
  7305. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7306. %@NL@%
  7307. %@NL@%
  7308. %@2@%Before you advise anyone "Be yourself!" reassess his%@EH@%
  7309. character.%@NL@%
  7310. %@CR:CHARACMoody     @%%@NL@%
  7311.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  7312. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7313. %@NL@%
  7314. %@NL@%
  7315. %@2@%Every man has three characters: that which he shows, that which%@EH@%
  7316. he has, and that which he thinks he has.%@NL@%
  7317. %@CR:CHARACKarr      @%%@NL@%
  7318.                                                  Alphonse Karr (1808-1890)%@NL@%
  7319.                                                French journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  7320. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7321. %@NL@%
  7322. %@NL@%
  7323. %@2@%Men will often say that they have "found themselves" when%@EH@%
  7324. they have really been worn down into a groove by the brutal and
  7325. compulsive force of circumstance.%@NL@%
  7326. %@CR:CHARACWolfe2    @%%@NL@%
  7327.                                                   Thomas Wolfe (1900-1938)%@NL@%
  7328.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  7329. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7330. %@NL@%
  7331. %@NL@%
  7332.      %@2@%%@AI@%Es bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7333.      %@AI@%Sich ein Charakter in dem Strom der%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7334.      %@AI@%Welt.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7335. %@NL@%
  7336. %@2@%Talent develops in tranquillity, character in the full current
  7337. of human life.%@NL@%
  7338. %@CR:CHARACGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  7339.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  7340.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  7341. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7342. %@NL@%
  7343. %@NL@%
  7344. %@2@%The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if%@EH@%
  7345. he knew he would never be found out.%@NL@%
  7346. %@CR:CHARACMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  7347.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  7348.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  7349. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7350. %@NL@%
  7351. %@NL@%
  7352. %@2@%Character - the willingness to accept responsibility%@EH@%
  7353. for one's own life - is the source from which self-respect springs.%@NL@%
  7354. %@CR:CHARACDidion    @%%@NL@%
  7355.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  7356.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  7357. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7358. %@NL@%
  7359. %@NL@%
  7360. %@2@%We must have a weak spot or two in a character before we can%@EH@%
  7361. love it much.%@NL@%
  7362. %@CR:CHARACHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  7363.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  7364.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  7365. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7366. %@NL@%
  7367. %@NL@%
  7368. %@2@%In me the tiger sniffs the rose.%@NL@%
  7369. %@CR:CHARACSassoon   @%%@NL@%
  7370.                                              Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967)%@NL@%
  7371.                                                       British poet, author%@NL@%
  7372. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7373. %@NL@%
  7374. %@NL@%
  7375. %@2@%The hardest thing is writing a recommendation for someone we%@EH@%
  7376. know.%@NL@%
  7377. %@CR:CHARACHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  7378.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  7379.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  7380. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7381. %@NL@%
  7382. %@NL@%
  7383. %@2@%People always say that they are not themselves when tempted%@EH@%
  7384. by anger into betraying what they really are.%@NL@%
  7385. %@CR:CHARACHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  7386.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  7387.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  7388. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7389. %@NL@%
  7390. %@NL@%
  7391. %@2@%You can tell a lot about a fellow's character by the way he%@EH@%
  7392. eats jelly beans.%@NL@%
  7393. %@CR:CHARACReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  7394.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  7395.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  7396. %@AS@%                                                                 Character%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7397. %@NL@%
  7398. %@NL@%
  7399. %@NL@%
  7400. %@1@%%@AS@%Charity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7401. %@CR:CHARITY         @%%@NL@%
  7402. %@2@%See:%@QR:Charity@%%@NL@%
  7403.      %@AB@%Aid%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           13be5@%%@NL@%
  7404.      Altruism: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:           15a5f@%%@NL@%
  7405.      Benefactors: %@AB@%Confucius%@AE@%%@BO:           3e26a@%%@NL@%
  7406.      Intentions: %@AB@%Thatcher%@AE@%%@BO:          155b07@%%@NL@%
  7407.      Landlords: %@AB@%Pollok%@AE@%%@BO:          169d46@%%@NL@%
  7408. %@NL@%
  7409. %@2@%I did give ten shillings and no more, though I believe most%@EH@%
  7410. of the rest did give more, and did believe that I did so too.%@NL@%
  7411. %@CR:CHARITPepys     @%%@NL@%
  7412.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  7413.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  7414. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7415. %@NL@%
  7416. %@NL@%
  7417. %@2@%In necessary things, unity; in disputed things, liberty; in%@EH@%
  7418. all things, charity.%@NL@%
  7419. %@CR:CHARITPepys     @%%@NL@%
  7420.                                                         variously ascribed%@NL@%
  7421. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7422. %@NL@%
  7423. %@NL@%
  7424. %@2@%God loveth a cheerful giver.%@NL@%
  7425. %@CR:CHARITSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  7426.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  7427.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  7428. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7429. %@NL@%
  7430. %@NL@%
  7431. %@2@%The most difficult part is to give. Then why not add a smile?%@NL@%
  7432. %@CR:CHARITlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  7433.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  7434.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  7435. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7436. %@NL@%
  7437. %@NL@%
  7438. %@2@%Beggars should be abolished. It annoys one to give to them,%@EH@%
  7439. and it annoys one not to give to them.%@NL@%
  7440. %@CR:CHARITNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  7441.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  7442.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  7443. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7444. %@NL@%
  7445. %@NL@%
  7446. %@2@%A man who sees another man on the street corner with only a%@EH@%
  7447. stump for an arm will be so shocked the first time he'll give him
  7448. sixpence. But the second time it'll only be a threepenny bit.
  7449. And if he sees him a third time, he'll have him cold-bloodedly
  7450. handed over to the police.%@NL@%
  7451. %@CR:CHARITBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  7452.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  7453.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  7454.                                                       %@AI@%The Threepenny Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7455.                                   trans. Desmond I. Vesey and Eric Bentley%@NL@%
  7456. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7457. %@NL@%
  7458. %@NL@%
  7459. %@2@%We do not quite forgive a giver. The hand that feeds us is%@EH@%
  7460. in some danger of being bitten.%@NL@%
  7461. %@CR:CHARITEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  7462.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  7463.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  7464. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7465. %@NL@%
  7466. %@NL@%
  7467. %@2@%In your Salvation shelter I saw poverty, misery, cold, and%@EH@%
  7468. hunger. You gave them bread and treacle and dreams of heaven. I
  7469. give from thirty shillings a week to twelve thousand a year. They
  7470. find their own dreams; but I look after the drainage.%@NL@%
  7471. %@CR:CHARITShaw      @%%@NL@%
  7472.                                                  Undershaft, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7473.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  7474.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  7475. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7476. %@NL@%
  7477. %@NL@%
  7478. %@2@%The biggest disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but%@EH@%
  7479. rather the feeling of being unwanted.%@NL@%
  7480. %@CR:CHARITMotherTere@%%@NL@%
  7481.                                                    Mother Teresa (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  7482.                                               Albanian Catholic missionary%@NL@%
  7483. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7484. %@NL@%
  7485. %@NL@%
  7486. %@2@%The cliche "charity begins at home" has done more damage%@EH@%
  7487. than any other in the English tongue.%@NL@%
  7488. %@CR:CHARITHuddleston@%%@NL@%
  7489.                                         Bishop Trevor Huddleston (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  7490.                                              British clergyman, campaigner%@NL@%
  7491. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7492. %@NL@%
  7493. %@NL@%
  7494.      %@2@%The organised charity, scrimped and iced,%@NL@%
  7495.      In the name of a cautious, statistical%@NL@%
  7496.      Christ.%@NL@%
  7497. %@CR:CHARITOReilly   @%%@NL@%
  7498.                                            John Boyle O'Reilly (1844-1890)%@NL@%
  7499.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  7500. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7501. %@NL@%
  7502. %@NL@%
  7503. %@2@%Charity is the sterilized milk of human kindness.%@NL@%
  7504. %@CR:CHARITHerford   @%%@NL@%
  7505.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  7506.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  7507. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7508. %@NL@%
  7509. %@NL@%
  7510. %@2@%Charity is injurious unless it helps the recipient to become%@EH@%
  7511. independent of it.%@NL@%
  7512. %@CR:CHARITRockefelle@%%@NL@%
  7513.                                            John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937)%@NL@%
  7514.                                     American industrialist, philanthropist%@NL@%
  7515. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7516. %@NL@%
  7517. %@NL@%
  7518. %@2@%Charity creates a multitude of sins.%@NL@%
  7519. %@CR:CHARITWilde     @%%@NL@%
  7520.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  7521.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  7522. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7523. %@NL@%
  7524. %@NL@%
  7525. %@2@%If begging should unfortunately be thy lot, knock at the large%@EH@%
  7526. gates only.%@NL@%
  7527. %@CR:CHARITWilde     @%%@NL@%
  7528.                                                            Arabian proverb%@NL@%
  7529. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7530. %@NL@%
  7531. %@NL@%
  7532. %@2@%He that feeds upon charity has a cold dinner and no supper.%@NL@%
  7533. %@CR:CHARITFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  7534.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  7535.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  7536. %@AS@%                                                                   Charity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7537. %@NL@%
  7538. %@NL@%
  7539. %@NL@%
  7540. %@1@%%@AS@%Charm%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7541. %@CR:CHARM           @%%@NL@%
  7542. %@2@%See:%@QR:Charm@%%@NL@%
  7543.      The Scots: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@BO:          23db98@%%@NL@%
  7544. %@NL@%
  7545. %@2@%"Charm" - which means the power to effect work without%@EH@%
  7546. employing brute force - is indispensable to women. Charm is
  7547. a woman's strength just as strength is a man's charm.%@NL@%
  7548. %@CR:CHARM Ellis     @%%@NL@%
  7549.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  7550.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  7551. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7552. %@NL@%
  7553. %@NL@%
  7554. %@2@%It's a sort of bloom on a woman. If you have it, you don't%@EH@%
  7555. need to have anything else; and if you don't have it, it doesn't
  7556. much matter what else you have.%@NL@%
  7557. %@CR:CHARM Barrie2   @%%@NL@%
  7558.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  7559.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  7560. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7561. %@NL@%
  7562. %@NL@%
  7563.      %@2@%Charming women can true converts make.%@NL@%
  7564.      We love the precepts for the teacher's sake.%@NL@%
  7565. %@CR:CHARM Farquhar  @%%@NL@%
  7566.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  7567.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  7568. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7569. %@NL@%
  7570. %@NL@%
  7571. %@2@%She lacks the indefinable charm of weakness.%@NL@%
  7572. %@CR:CHARM Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  7573.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  7574.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  7575. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7576. %@NL@%
  7577. %@NL@%
  7578. %@2@%Men get to be a mixture of the charming mannerisms of the women%@EH@%
  7579. they have known.%@NL@%
  7580. %@CR:CHARM Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  7581.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  7582.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  7583. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7584. %@NL@%
  7585. %@NL@%
  7586. %@2@%You know what charm is: a way of getting the answer yes without%@EH@%
  7587. having asked any clear question.%@NL@%
  7588. %@CR:CHARM Camus1    @%%@NL@%
  7589.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  7590.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  7591. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7592. %@NL@%
  7593. %@NL@%
  7594. %@2@%I am bewitched with the rogue's company: if the rascal have%@EH@%
  7595. not given me medicines to make me love him, I'll be hanged.%@NL@%
  7596. %@CR:CHARM Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  7597.                                             Falstaff, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7598.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  7599.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  7600. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7601. %@NL@%
  7602. %@NL@%
  7603. %@2@%All charming people, I fancy, are spoiled. It is the secret%@EH@%
  7604. of their attraction.%@NL@%
  7605. %@CR:CHARM Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  7606.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  7607.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  7608. %@AS@%                                                                     Charm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7609. %@NL@%
  7610. %@NL@%
  7611. %@NL@%
  7612. %@1@%%@AS@%Chastity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7613. %@CR:CHASTITY        @%%@NL@%
  7614. %@2@%See:%@QR:Chastity@%%@NL@%
  7615.      Lust: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          18a71c@%%@NL@%
  7616. %@NL@%
  7617. %@2@%Of all sexual aberrations, perhaps the most peculiar is chastity.%@NL@%
  7618. %@CR:CHASTIdeGourmont@%%@NL@%
  7619.                                               Remy de Gourmont (1858-1915)%@NL@%
  7620.                                                    French critic, novelist%@NL@%
  7621. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7622. %@NL@%
  7623. %@NL@%
  7624. %@2@%A woman's chastity consists, like an onion, of a series of%@EH@%
  7625. coats.%@NL@%
  7626. %@CR:CHASTIHawthorne @%%@NL@%
  7627.                                            Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)%@NL@%
  7628.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  7629. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7630. %@NL@%
  7631. %@NL@%
  7632.      %@2@%How happy is the blameless vestal's lot!%@NL@%
  7633.      The world forgetting, by the world forgot.%@NL@%
  7634. %@CR:CHASTIPope      @%%@NL@%
  7635.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  7636.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7637. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7638. %@NL@%
  7639. %@NL@%
  7640. %@2@%There are few virtuous women who are not bored with their trade.%@NL@%
  7641. %@CR:CHASTILaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  7642.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  7643.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  7644. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7645. %@NL@%
  7646. %@NL@%
  7647. %@2@%There, it is true, are abstinent; but from all that they do%@EH@%
  7648. the bitch of sensuality looks out with envious eyes.%@NL@%
  7649. %@CR:CHASTINietzsche @%%@NL@%
  7650.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  7651.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  7652. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7653. %@NL@%
  7654. %@NL@%
  7655. %@2@%Your old virginity is like one of our French withered pears;%@EH@%
  7656. it looks ill, it eats drily.%@NL@%
  7657. %@CR:CHASTIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  7658.                                        Parolles, %@AI@%All's Well That Ends Well%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7659.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  7660.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  7661. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7662. %@NL@%
  7663. %@NL@%
  7664. %@2@%An unattempted woman cannot boast of her chastity.%@NL@%
  7665. %@CR:CHASTIMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  7666.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  7667.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  7668. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7669. %@NL@%
  7670. %@NL@%
  7671. %@2@%It is fatally easy for Western folk, who have discarded chastity%@EH@%
  7672. as a value for themselves, to suppose that it can have no value
  7673. for anyone else. At the same time as Californians try to re-invent
  7674. "celibacy," by which they seem to mean perverse restraint, the
  7675. rest of us call societies which place a high value on chastity
  7676. "backward."%@NL@%
  7677. %@CR:CHASTIGreer     @%%@NL@%
  7678.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  7679.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  7680. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7681. %@NL@%
  7682. %@NL@%
  7683. %@2@%Only the English and the Americans are improper. East of Suez%@EH@%
  7684. everyone wants a virgin.%@NL@%
  7685. %@CR:CHASTICartland  @%%@NL@%
  7686.                                                 Barbara Cartland (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  7687.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  7688. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7689. %@NL@%
  7690. %@NL@%
  7691. %@2@%A chaste woman ought not to dye her hair yellow.%@NL@%
  7692. %@CR:CHASTIMenander  @%%@NL@%
  7693.                                                Menander (c. 342-c. 291 BC)%@NL@%
  7694.                                                           Greek playwright%@NL@%
  7695. %@AS@%                                                                  Chastity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7696. %@NL@%
  7697. %@NL@%
  7698. %@NL@%
  7699. %@1@%%@AS@%Chess%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7700. %@CR:CHESS           @%%@NL@%
  7701. %@2@%%@QR:Chess@%The chess-board is the world; the pieces are the phenomena%@EH@%
  7702. of the universe; the rules of the game are what we call the laws
  7703. of Nature. The player on the other side is hidden from us. We know
  7704. that his play is always fair, just, and patient. But also we know,
  7705. to our cost, that he never overlooks a mistake, or makes the smallest
  7706. allowance for ignorance.%@NL@%
  7707. %@CR:CHESS Huxley2   @%%@NL@%
  7708.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  7709.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  7710. %@AS@%                                                                     Chess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7711. %@NL@%
  7712. %@NL@%
  7713. %@2@%I am still a victim of chess. It has all the beauty of art - and%@EH@%
  7714. much more. It cannot be commercialized. Chess is much purer than
  7715. art in its social position.%@NL@%
  7716. %@CR:CHESS Duchamp   @%%@NL@%
  7717.                                                 Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968)%@NL@%
  7718.                                                     French artist, Dadaist%@NL@%
  7719.               recalling his decision in the 1920s to give up art for chess%@NL@%
  7720. %@AS@%                                                                     Chess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7721. %@NL@%
  7722. %@NL@%
  7723. %@2@%Life's too short for chess.%@NL@%
  7724. %@CR:CHESS Byron1    @%%@NL@%
  7725.                                                 Henry J. Byron (1834-1884)%@NL@%
  7726.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  7727. %@AS@%                                                                     Chess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7728. %@NL@%
  7729. %@NL@%
  7730. %@NL@%
  7731. %@1@%%@AS@%Childhood%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7732. %@CR:CHILDHOOD       @%%@NL@%
  7733. %@2@%%@QR:Childhood@%That great cathedral space which was childhood.%@NL@%
  7734. %@CR:CHILDHWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  7735.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  7736.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  7737. %@AS@%                                                                 Childhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7738. %@NL@%
  7739. %@NL@%
  7740. %@2@%What is childhood but a series of happy delusions.%@NL@%
  7741. %@CR:CHILDHSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  7742.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  7743.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  7744. %@AS@%                                                                 Childhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7745. %@NL@%
  7746. %@NL@%
  7747. %@2@%All our adventures were by the fireside, and all our migrations%@EH@%
  7748. from the blue bed to the brown.%@NL@%
  7749. %@CR:CHILDHGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  7750.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  7751.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  7752. %@AS@%                                                                 Childhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7753. %@NL@%
  7754. %@NL@%
  7755. %@2@%Heaven lies about us in our infancy!%@NL@%
  7756. %@CR:CHILDHWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  7757.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  7758.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7759. %@AS@%                                                                 Childhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7760. %@NL@%
  7761. %@NL@%
  7762. %@2@%The world begins lying about us pretty soon afterward.%@NL@%
  7763. %@CR:CHILDHBierce    @%%@NL@%
  7764.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  7765.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  7766. %@AS@%                                                                 Childhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7767. %@NL@%
  7768. %@NL@%
  7769. %@NL@%
  7770. %@1@%%@AS@%Children%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7771. %@CR:CHILDREN        @%%@NL@%
  7772. %@2@%See:%@QR:Children@%%@NL@%
  7773.      Dancing: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:           96c1c@%%@NL@%
  7774.      Education: %@AB@%Montessori%@AE@%%@BO:           c16e8@%%@NL@%
  7775.      Father: %@AB@%Hemingway%@AE@%%@BO:           e9703@%; %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:           e9a00@%%@NL@%
  7776.      God: %@AB@%Steinem%@AE@%%@BO:          1103cc@%%@NL@%
  7777.      Happiness: %@AB@%Szasz%@AE@%%@BO:          120e1f@%%@NL@%
  7778.      Knowledge: %@AB@%Saki%@AE@%%@BO:          168384@%%@NL@%
  7779.      Maturity: %@AB@%Szasz%@AE@%%@BO:          19dab4@%%@NL@%
  7780.      Parents: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          1cc67d@%; %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1cbd13@%; %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          1cbb46@%; %@AB@%Brown%@AE@%%@BO:          1cc142@%%@NL@%
  7781. %@NL@%
  7782. %@2@%Youth is a wonderful thing; what a crime to waste it on children.%@NL@%
  7783. %@CR:CHILDRShaw      @%%@NL@%
  7784.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  7785.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  7786. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7787. %@NL@%
  7788. %@NL@%
  7789.      %@2@%Alas, regardless of their doom,%@NL@%
  7790.      The little victims play!%@NL@%
  7791.      No sense have they of ills to come,%@NL@%
  7792.      Nor care beyond to-day.%@NL@%
  7793. %@CR:CHILDRGray      @%%@NL@%
  7794.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  7795.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  7796. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7797. %@NL@%
  7798. %@NL@%
  7799. %@2@%When childhood dies, its corpses are called adults and they%@EH@%
  7800. enter society, one of the politer names of hell. That is why we
  7801. dread children, even if we love them. They show us the state of
  7802. our decay.%@NL@%
  7803. %@CR:CHILDRAldiss    @%%@NL@%
  7804.                                                     Brian Aldiss (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  7805.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  7806. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7807. %@NL@%
  7808. %@NL@%
  7809. %@2@%If children grew up according to early indications, we should%@EH@%
  7810. have nothing but geniuses.%@NL@%
  7811. %@CR:CHILDRGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  7812.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  7813.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  7814. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7815. %@NL@%
  7816. %@NL@%
  7817. %@2@%Don't take up a man's time talking about the smartness of your%@EH@%
  7818. children; he wants to talk to you about the smartness of his.%@NL@%
  7819. %@CR:CHILDRHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  7820.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  7821.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  7822. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7823. %@NL@%
  7824. %@NL@%
  7825. %@2@%There is little use to talk about your child to anyone; other%@EH@%
  7826. people either have one or haven't.%@NL@%
  7827. %@CR:CHILDRHerold    @%%@NL@%
  7828.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  7829.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  7830. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7831. %@NL@%
  7832. %@NL@%
  7833. %@2@%The parent who could see his boy as he really is would shake%@EH@%
  7834. his head and say; "Willy is no good: I'll sell him."%@NL@%
  7835. %@CR:CHILDRLeacock   @%%@NL@%
  7836.                                                Stephen Leacock (1869-1944)%@NL@%
  7837.                                               Canadian humorist, economist%@NL@%
  7838. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7839. %@NL@%
  7840. %@NL@%
  7841. %@2@%There is no sinner like a young saint.%@NL@%
  7842. %@CR:CHILDRBehn      @%%@NL@%
  7843.                                                     Aphra Behn (1640-1689)%@NL@%
  7844.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  7845. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7846. %@NL@%
  7847. %@NL@%
  7848. %@2@%We have left undone those things which we ought to have done;%@EH@%
  7849. and we have done those things which we ought not to have done.%@NL@%
  7850. %@CR:CHILDRBehn      @%%@NL@%
  7851.                                                      Book of Common Prayer%@NL@%
  7852. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7853. %@NL@%
  7854. %@NL@%
  7855. %@2@%Before I got married I had six theories about bringing up children;%@EH@%
  7856. now I have six children, and no theories.%@NL@%
  7857. %@CR:CHILDRWilmot    @%%@NL@%
  7858.                                 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680)%@NL@%
  7859.                                                     English courtier, poet%@NL@%
  7860. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7861. %@NL@%
  7862. %@NL@%
  7863. %@2@%To bring up a child in the way he should go, travel that way%@EH@%
  7864. yourself once in a while.%@NL@%
  7865. %@CR:CHILDRBillings  @%%@NL@%
  7866.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  7867.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  7868. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7869. %@NL@%
  7870. %@NL@%
  7871. %@2@%Telling lies and showing off to get attention are the mistakes%@EH@%
  7872. I made that I don't want my kids to make.%@NL@%
  7873. %@CR:CHILDRFonda     @%%@NL@%
  7874.                                                       Jane Fonda (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  7875.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  7876. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7877. %@NL@%
  7878. %@NL@%
  7879. %@2@%Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses%@EH@%
  7880. and dogs than of their children.%@NL@%
  7881. %@CR:CHILDRPenn      @%%@NL@%
  7882.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  7883.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  7884. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7885. %@NL@%
  7886. %@NL@%
  7887. %@2@%Children are all foreigners. We treat them as such.%@NL@%
  7888. %@CR:CHILDREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  7889.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  7890.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  7891. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7892. %@NL@%
  7893. %@NL@%
  7894.      %@2@%Oh, grown-ups cannot understand,%@NL@%
  7895.      And grown-ups never will,%@NL@%
  7896.      How short the way to fairyland%@NL@%
  7897.      Across the purple hill.%@NL@%
  7898. %@CR:CHILDRNoyes     @%%@NL@%
  7899.                                                   Alfred Noyes (1880-1958)%@NL@%
  7900.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  7901. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7902. %@NL@%
  7903. %@NL@%
  7904. %@2@%Ignorance is a painless evil; so, I should think, is dirt,%@EH@%
  7905. considering the merry faces that go along with it.%@NL@%
  7906. %@CR:CHILDREliot1    @%%@NL@%
  7907.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  7908.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  7909. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7910. %@NL@%
  7911. %@NL@%
  7912. %@2@%Girls like to be played with, and rumpled a little, too, sometimes.%@NL@%
  7913. %@CR:CHILDRGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  7914.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  7915.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  7916. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7917. %@NL@%
  7918. %@NL@%
  7919. %@2@%What money is better bestowed than that of a schoolboy's tip?%@NL@%
  7920. %@CR:CHILDRThackeray @%%@NL@%
  7921.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  7922.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  7923. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7924. %@NL@%
  7925. %@NL@%
  7926. %@2@%There is nothing so aggravating as a fresh boy who is too old%@EH@%
  7927. to ignore and too young to kick.%@NL@%
  7928. %@CR:CHILDRHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  7929.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  7930.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  7931. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7932. %@NL@%
  7933. %@NL@%
  7934. %@2@%He followed in his father's footsteps, but his gait was somewhat%@EH@%
  7935. erratic.%@NL@%
  7936. %@CR:CHILDRBentley   @%%@NL@%
  7937.                                                Nicolas Bentley (1907-1978)%@NL@%
  7938.                                          British artist, author, publisher%@NL@%
  7939. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7940. %@NL@%
  7941. %@NL@%
  7942. %@2@%Children suck the mother when they are young and the father%@EH@%
  7943. when they are old.%@NL@%
  7944. %@CR:CHILDRBentley   @%%@NL@%
  7945.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  7946. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7947. %@NL@%
  7948. %@NL@%
  7949.      %@2@%How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is%@NL@%
  7950.      To have a thankless child.%@NL@%
  7951. %@CR:CHILDRShakespear@%%@NL@%
  7952.                                                            Lear, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7953.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  7954.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  7955. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7956. %@NL@%
  7957. %@NL@%
  7958. %@2@%There are three degrees of filial piety. The highest is being%@EH@%
  7959. a credit to our parents, the second is not disgracing them; the
  7960. lowest is being able simply to support them.%@NL@%
  7961. %@CR:CHILDRConfucius @%%@NL@%
  7962.                                                     Confucius (551-478 BC)%@NL@%
  7963.                                                               Chinese sage%@NL@%
  7964. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7965. %@NL@%
  7966. %@NL@%
  7967. %@2@%I am assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance%@EH@%
  7968. in London, that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year
  7969. old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food, whether
  7970. stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled; and I make no doubt that it
  7971. will equally serve in a fricassee, or a ragout.%@NL@%
  7972. %@CR:CHILDRSwift     @%%@NL@%
  7973.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  7974.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  7975. %@AS@%                                                                  Children%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7976. %@NL@%
  7977. %@NL@%
  7978. %@NL@%
  7979. %@1@%%@AS@%Chivalry%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  7980. %@CR:CHIVALRY        @%%@NL@%
  7981. %@2@%See:%@QR:Chivalry@%%@NL@%
  7982.      Bores: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:           48bdb@%%@NL@%
  7983. %@NL@%
  7984. %@2@%I thought that ten thousand swords would have leaped from their%@EH@%
  7985. scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult.
  7986. But the age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists,
  7987. and calculators has succeeded.%@NL@%
  7988. %@CR:CHIVALBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  7989.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  7990.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  7991.                                                        of Marie Antoinette%@NL@%
  7992. %@AS@%                                                                  Chivalry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  7993. %@NL@%
  7994. %@NL@%
  7995. %@2@%The age of chivalry is never past, so long as there is a wrong%@EH@%
  7996. left unredressed on earth.%@NL@%
  7997. %@CR:CHIVALKingsley1 @%%@NL@%
  7998.                                               Charles Kingsley (1819-1875)%@NL@%
  7999.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  8000. %@AS@%                                                                  Chivalry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8001. %@NL@%
  8002. %@NL@%
  8003. %@NL@%
  8004. %@1@%%@AS@%Christianity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8005. %@CR:CHRISTIANITY    @%%@NL@%
  8006. %@2@%See:%@QR:Christianity@%%@NL@%
  8007.      %@AB@%Catholicism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           53775@%%@NL@%
  8008.      %@AB@%The Church%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           66048@%%@NL@%
  8009.      Death: %@AB@%Ouida%@AE@%%@BO:           98fc2@%%@NL@%
  8010.      %@AB@%God%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          10d5a3@%%@NL@%
  8011.      The Jews: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          15e7a1@%%@NL@%
  8012.      Sects: %@AB@%Farquhar%@AE@%%@BO:          24149d@%; %@AB@%Tertullian%@AE@%%@BO:          24179d@%%@NL@%
  8013. %@NL@%
  8014. %@2@%Who is the father of the Babe, fair maid? No, no, thou needst%@EH@%
  8015. not answer; an Angel came to thee in a dream; it is enough, say
  8016. no more. To thee and thy love child bring gifts of gold and frankincense
  8017. and myrrh, to thee and thy Babe we bend the knee.%@NL@%
  8018. %@CR:CHRISTHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  8019.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  8020.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  8021. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8022. %@NL@%
  8023. %@NL@%
  8024.      %@2@%He was the Word, that spake it;%@NL@%
  8025.      He took the bread and brake it;%@NL@%
  8026.      And what that Word did make it,%@NL@%
  8027.      I do believe and take it.%@NL@%
  8028. %@CR:CHRISTDonne     @%%@NL@%
  8029.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  8030.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  8031. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8032. %@NL@%
  8033. %@NL@%
  8034. %@2@%The whole religious complexion of the modern world is due to%@EH@%
  8035. the absence from Jerusalem of a lunatic asylum.%@NL@%
  8036. %@CR:CHRISTEllis     @%%@NL@%
  8037.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  8038.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  8039. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8040. %@NL@%
  8041. %@NL@%
  8042. %@2@%The idea of Christ is much older than Christianity.%@NL@%
  8043. %@CR:CHRISTSantayana @%%@NL@%
  8044.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  8045.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  8046. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8047. %@NL@%
  8048. %@NL@%
  8049.      %@2@%What if men take the following where%@NL@%
  8050.      He leads,%@NL@%
  8051.      Weary of mumbling Athanasian creeds?%@NL@%
  8052. %@CR:CHRISTNoel      @%%@NL@%
  8053.                                                     Roden Noel (1834-1894)%@NL@%
  8054.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8055. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8056. %@NL@%
  8057. %@NL@%
  8058. %@2@%Christianity taught men that love is worth more than intelligence.%@NL@%
  8059. %@CR:CHRISTMaritain  @%%@NL@%
  8060.                                               Jacques Maritain (1882-1973)%@NL@%
  8061.                                                         French philosopher%@NL@%
  8062. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8063. %@NL@%
  8064. %@NL@%
  8065. %@2@%The doctrine of the Kingdom of Heaven, which was the main teaching%@EH@%
  8066. of Jesus, is certainly one of the most revolutionary doctrines
  8067. that ever stirred and changed human thought.%@NL@%
  8068. %@CR:CHRISTWells     @%%@NL@%
  8069.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  8070.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  8071. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8072. %@NL@%
  8073. %@NL@%
  8074. %@2@%No sooner had Jesus knocked over the dragon of superstition%@EH@%
  8075. than Paul boldly set it on its legs again in the name of Jesus.%@NL@%
  8076. %@CR:CHRISTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  8077.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  8078.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  8079. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8080. %@NL@%
  8081. %@NL@%
  8082. %@2@%He who begins by loving Christianity better than Truth will%@EH@%
  8083. proceed by loving his own sect or church better than Christianity,
  8084. and end in loving himself better than all.%@NL@%
  8085. %@CR:CHRISTColeridge @%%@NL@%
  8086.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  8087.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8088. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8089. %@NL@%
  8090. %@NL@%
  8091. %@2@%Christian: One who believes that the New Testament is a divinely%@EH@%
  8092. inspired book admirably suited to the spiritual needs of his neighbor.%@NL@%
  8093. %@CR:CHRISTBierce    @%%@NL@%
  8094.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  8095.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  8096. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8097. %@NL@%
  8098. %@NL@%
  8099. %@2@%To make one a complete Christian he must have the works of%@EH@%
  8100. a Papist, the words of a Puritan, and the faith of a Protestant.%@NL@%
  8101. %@CR:CHRISTHowell    @%%@NL@%
  8102.                                                   James Howell (1594-1666)%@NL@%
  8103.                                                   English diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  8104. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8105. %@NL@%
  8106. %@NL@%
  8107. %@2@%Scratch the Christian and you find the pagan - spoiled.%@NL@%
  8108. %@CR:CHRISTZangwill  @%%@NL@%
  8109.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  8110.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  8111. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8112. %@NL@%
  8113. %@NL@%
  8114. %@2@%The early Christian rules of life were not made to last, because%@EH@%
  8115. the early Christians did not believe that the world itself was
  8116. going to last.%@NL@%
  8117. %@CR:CHRISTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  8118.                                                 Hotchkiss, %@AI@%Getting Married%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8119.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  8120.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  8121. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8122. %@NL@%
  8123. %@NL@%
  8124. %@2@%Most people believe that the Christian commandments are intentionally%@EH@%
  8125. a little too severe - like setting a clock half an hour ahead
  8126. to make sure of not being late in the morning.%@NL@%
  8127. %@CR:CHRISTKierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  8128.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  8129.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  8130. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8131. %@NL@%
  8132. %@NL@%
  8133. %@2@%The Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt not be found out.%@NL@%
  8134. %@CR:CHRISTWhyteMelvi@%%@NL@%
  8135.                                          George Whyte-Melville (1821-1878)%@NL@%
  8136.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  8137. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8138. %@NL@%
  8139. %@NL@%
  8140. %@2@%The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It%@EH@%
  8141. has been found difficult; and left untried.%@NL@%
  8142. %@CR:CHRISTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  8143.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  8144.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8145. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8146. %@NL@%
  8147. %@NL@%
  8148. %@2@%Bear the Cross cheerfully and it will bear you.%@NL@%
  8149. %@CR:CHRISTKempis    @%%@NL@%
  8150.                                                Thomas a Kempis (1380-1471)%@NL@%
  8151.                                                        German monk, mystic%@NL@%
  8152. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8153. %@NL@%
  8154. %@NL@%
  8155. %@2@%"One loving soul," says St Augustine, "sets another on fire."%@EH@%
  8156. Christianity can sometimes be caught no less than taught.%@NL@%
  8157. %@CR:CHRISTLunn      @%%@NL@%
  8158.                                                    Arnold Lunn (1888-1974)%@NL@%
  8159.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  8160. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8161. %@NL@%
  8162. %@NL@%
  8163. %@2@%I reject Christianity because it is Jewish, because it is international%@EH@%
  8164. and because, in cowardly fashion, it preaches Peace on Earth.%@NL@%
  8165. %@CR:CHRISTLudendorff@%%@NL@%
  8166.                             Field-Marshal Erich von Ludendorff (1865-1937)%@NL@%
  8167.                                                      German chief-of-staff%@NL@%
  8168. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8169. %@NL@%
  8170. %@NL@%
  8171. %@2@%Christianity broke the heart of the world and mended it.%@NL@%
  8172. %@CR:CHRISTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  8173.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  8174.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8175. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8176. %@NL@%
  8177. %@NL@%
  8178. %@2@%Two great European narcotics, alcohol and Christianity.%@NL@%
  8179. %@CR:CHRISTNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  8180.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  8181.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  8182. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8183. %@NL@%
  8184. %@NL@%
  8185.      %@2@%The fear of hell, or aiming to be blest,%@NL@%
  8186.      Savours too much of private interest.%@NL@%
  8187. %@CR:CHRISTWaller    @%%@NL@%
  8188.                                                  Edmund Waller (1606-1687)%@NL@%
  8189.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8190. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8191. %@NL@%
  8192. %@NL@%
  8193.      %@2@%The Three in One, the One in Three?%@NL@%
  8194.      Not so!%@NL@%
  8195.      To my own Gods I go.%@NL@%
  8196.      It may be they shall give me greater ease%@NL@%
  8197.      Than your cold Christ and tangled%@NL@%
  8198.      Trinities.%@NL@%
  8199. %@CR:CHRISTKipling   @%%@NL@%
  8200.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  8201.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8202. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8203. %@NL@%
  8204. %@NL@%
  8205. %@2@%People in general are equally horrified at hearing the Christian%@EH@%
  8206. religion doubted, and at seeing it practised.%@NL@%
  8207. %@CR:CHRISTButler4   @%%@NL@%
  8208.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  8209.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8210. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8211. %@NL@%
  8212. %@NL@%
  8213. %@2@%Kill them all, God will know his own!%@NL@%
  8214. %@CR:CHRISTArnoldOfCi@%%@NL@%
  8215.                                                          Arnold of Citeaux%@NL@%
  8216.                                Papal Legate at the siege of Beziers, 1209,%@NL@%
  8217.                                                 in the Albigensian Crusade%@NL@%
  8218. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8219. %@NL@%
  8220. %@NL@%
  8221. %@2@%The word is my crucifix.%@NL@%
  8222. %@CR:CHRISTArnoldOfCi@%%@NL@%
  8223.                                              motto of the Carthusian Order%@NL@%
  8224. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8225. %@NL@%
  8226. %@NL@%
  8227. %@2@%The cross has been carried forward on the hilt of the sword.%@NL@%
  8228. %@CR:CHRISTMacdonald @%%@NL@%
  8229.                                                E. M. Macdonald (1865-1940)%@NL@%
  8230.                                                         Canadian statesman%@NL@%
  8231. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8232. %@NL@%
  8233. %@NL@%
  8234. %@2@%Thou has conquered, O pale Galilean.%@NL@%
  8235. %@CR:CHRISTSwinburne @%%@NL@%
  8236.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  8237.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  8238. %@AS@%                                                              Christianity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8239. %@NL@%
  8240. %@NL@%
  8241. %@NL@%
  8242. %@1@%%@AS@%Christmas%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8243. %@CR:CHRISTMAS       @%%@NL@%
  8244. %@2@%%@QR:Christmas@%There are some people who want to throw their arms round you%@EH@%
  8245. simply because it is Christmas; there are other people who want
  8246. to strangle you simply because it is Christmas.%@NL@%
  8247. %@CR:CHRISTLynd      @%%@NL@%
  8248.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  8249.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  8250. %@AS@%                                                                 Christmas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8251. %@NL@%
  8252. %@NL@%
  8253. %@NL@%
  8254. %@1@%%@AS@%The Church%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8255. %@CR:THECHURCH       @%%@NL@%
  8256. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Church@%%@NL@%
  8257.      %@AB@%Catholicism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           53775@%%@NL@%
  8258.      %@AB@%Christianity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           62d9c@%%@NL@%
  8259.      %@AB@%Church of England%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           6891d@%%@NL@%
  8260.      Heresy: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          1272b2@%%@NL@%
  8261.      Marriage: %@AB@%Baudelaire%@AE@%%@BO:          196322@%%@NL@%
  8262.      Poverty: %@AB@%Sheen%@AE@%%@BO:          1f5d10@%%@NL@%
  8263. %@NL@%
  8264. %@2@%He cannot have God for his father who refuses to have the church%@EH@%
  8265. for his mother.%@NL@%
  8266. %@CR:THECHUSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  8267.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  8268.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  8269. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8270. %@NL@%
  8271. %@NL@%
  8272.      %@2@%And of all plagues with which mankind are curst,%@NL@%
  8273.      Ecclesiastic tyranny's the worst.%@NL@%
  8274. %@CR:THECHUDefoe     @%%@NL@%
  8275.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  8276.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  8277. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8278. %@NL@%
  8279. %@NL@%
  8280. %@2@%I grant you the clergy are mostly dull dogs; but with a little%@EH@%
  8281. disguise and ritual they will pass as holy men with the ignorant.%@NL@%
  8282. %@CR:THECHUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  8283.                                Charles, %@AI@%In Good King Charles's Golden Days%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8284.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  8285.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  8286. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8287. %@NL@%
  8288. %@NL@%
  8289. %@2@%A Curate - there is something which excites compassion in%@EH@%
  8290. the very name of a curate!%@NL@%
  8291. %@CR:THECHUSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  8292.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  8293.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  8294. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8295. %@NL@%
  8296. %@NL@%
  8297. %@2@%A congregation who can't afford to pay a clergyman enough want%@EH@%
  8298. a missionary more than they do a clergyman.%@NL@%
  8299. %@CR:THECHUBillings  @%%@NL@%
  8300.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  8301.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  8302. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8303. %@NL@%
  8304. %@NL@%
  8305. %@2@%How can a bishop marry? How can he flirt? The most he can say%@EH@%
  8306. is "I will see you in the vestry after service."%@NL@%
  8307. %@CR:THECHUSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  8308.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  8309.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  8310. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8311. %@NL@%
  8312. %@NL@%
  8313. %@2@%Archbishop: a Christian ecclesiastic of a rank superior to%@EH@%
  8314. that attained by Christ.%@NL@%
  8315. %@CR:THECHUMencken   @%%@NL@%
  8316.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  8317.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  8318. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8319. %@NL@%
  8320. %@NL@%
  8321. %@2@%There is not in the universe a more ridiculous nor a more contemptible%@EH@%
  8322. animal than a proud clergyman.%@NL@%
  8323. %@CR:THECHUFielding  @%%@NL@%
  8324.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  8325.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  8326. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8327. %@NL@%
  8328. %@NL@%
  8329. %@2@%The parson knows enough who knows a Duke.%@NL@%
  8330. %@CR:THECHUCowper    @%%@NL@%
  8331.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  8332.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8333. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8334. %@NL@%
  8335. %@NL@%
  8336. %@2@%That clergyman soon becomes an object of contempt who being%@EH@%
  8337. often asked out to dinner never refuses to go.%@NL@%
  8338. %@CR:THECHUSaintJerom@%%@NL@%
  8339.                                                     Saint Jerome (345-420)%@NL@%
  8340.                                                          Christian scholar%@NL@%
  8341. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8342. %@NL@%
  8343. %@NL@%
  8344. %@2@%The merriment of parsons is mighty offensive.%@NL@%
  8345. %@CR:THECHUJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  8346.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  8347.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  8348. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8349. %@NL@%
  8350. %@NL@%
  8351.      %@2@%His creed no parson ever knew,%@NL@%
  8352.      For this was still his "simple plan,"%@NL@%
  8353.      To have with clergymen to do%@NL@%
  8354.      As little as a Christian can.%@NL@%
  8355. %@CR:THECHUDoyle2    @%%@NL@%
  8356.                                              Sir Francis Doyle (1810-1888)%@NL@%
  8357.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8358. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8359. %@NL@%
  8360. %@NL@%
  8361.      %@2@%As my poor father used to say,%@NL@%
  8362.      When parsons came to call,%@NL@%
  8363.      "He's not my sort, but pass the port,%@NL@%
  8364.       - Thank God, there's room for all."%@NL@%
  8365. %@CR:THECHUHerbert1  @%%@NL@%
  8366.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  8367.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  8368. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8369. %@NL@%
  8370. %@NL@%
  8371. %@2@%Parsons always seem to be specially horrified about things%@EH@%
  8372. like sunbathing and naked bodies. They don't mind poverty and misery
  8373. and cruelty to animals nearly as much.%@NL@%
  8374. %@CR:THECHUErtz      @%%@NL@%
  8375.                                                     Susan Ertz (1894-1985)%@NL@%
  8376.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  8377. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8378. %@NL@%
  8379. %@NL@%
  8380. %@2@%While I cannot be regarded as a pillar, I must be regarded%@EH@%
  8381. as a buttress of the church, because I support it from the outside.%@NL@%
  8382. %@CR:THECHUMelbourne @%%@NL@%
  8383.                                                 Lord Melbourne (1779-1848)%@NL@%
  8384.                                          English statesman, Prime Minister%@NL@%
  8385. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8386. %@NL@%
  8387. %@NL@%
  8388. %@2@%The Church has always been willing to swap off treasures in%@EH@%
  8389. heaven for cash down.%@NL@%
  8390. %@CR:THECHUIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  8391.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  8392.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  8393. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8394. %@NL@%
  8395. %@NL@%
  8396. %@2@%Avoid like the plague a clergyman who is also a businessman.%@NL@%
  8397. %@CR:THECHUSaintJerom@%%@NL@%
  8398.                                                     Saint Jerome (345-420)%@NL@%
  8399.                                                          Christian scholar%@NL@%
  8400. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8401. %@NL@%
  8402. %@NL@%
  8403. %@2@%A little, round, fat, oily man of God.%@NL@%
  8404. %@CR:THECHUThomson1  @%%@NL@%
  8405.                                                  James Thomson (1700-1748)%@NL@%
  8406.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  8407. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8408. %@NL@%
  8409. %@NL@%
  8410. %@2@%If Jesus had wanted to make a woman an Apostle He could have%@EH@%
  8411. done so.%@NL@%
  8412. %@CR:THECHUThomson1  @%%@NL@%
  8413.           Pamphlet against the ordination of women to the priesthood, 1985%@NL@%
  8414. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8415. %@NL@%
  8416. %@NL@%
  8417. %@2@%There is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in Christ%@EH@%
  8418. Jesus.%@NL@%
  8419. %@CR:THECHUSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  8420.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  8421.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  8422. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8423. %@NL@%
  8424. %@NL@%
  8425. %@2@%As the French say, there are three sexes-men, women and clergymen.%@NL@%
  8426. %@CR:THECHUSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  8427.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  8428.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  8429. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8430. %@NL@%
  8431. %@NL@%
  8432. %@2@%The Church has an almost pathological preoccupation with survival.%@NL@%
  8433. %@CR:THECHURobinson  @%%@NL@%
  8434.                                                  John Robinson (1919-1983)%@NL@%
  8435.                                                         Bishop of Woolwich%@NL@%
  8436. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8437. %@NL@%
  8438. %@NL@%
  8439. %@2@%What is wrong with priests and popes is that instead of being%@EH@%
  8440. apostles and saints, they are nothing but empirics who say "I
  8441. know" instead of "I am learning," and pray for credulity and
  8442. inertia as wise men pray for scepticism and activity.%@NL@%
  8443. %@CR:THECHUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  8444.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  8445.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  8446. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8447. %@NL@%
  8448. %@NL@%
  8449. %@2@%The Church after all is not a club of saints; it is a hospital%@EH@%
  8450. for sinners.%@NL@%
  8451. %@CR:THECHUStewart1  @%%@NL@%
  8452.                                           George Craig Stewart (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  8453.                                                          Bishop of Chicago%@NL@%
  8454. %@AS@%                                                                The Church%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8455. %@NL@%
  8456. %@NL@%
  8457. %@NL@%
  8458. %@1@%%@AS@%Church of England%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8459. %@CR:THECHURCHOFENGLA@%%@NL@%
  8460. %@2@%%@QR:Church of England@%Alas the Church of England! What with Popery on one hand, and%@EH@%
  8461. schismatics on the other, how has she been crucified between two
  8462. thieves!%@NL@%
  8463. %@CR:THECHUDefoe     @%%@NL@%
  8464.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  8465.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  8466. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8467. %@NL@%
  8468. %@NL@%
  8469. %@2@%This is what the Church is said to want, not party men, but%@EH@%
  8470. sensible, temperate, sober, well-judging persons, to guide it through
  8471. the channel of no-meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of
  8472. Aye and No.%@NL@%
  8473. %@CR:THECHUNewman1   @%%@NL@%
  8474.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  8475.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  8476. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8477. %@NL@%
  8478. %@NL@%
  8479. %@2@%Place before your eyes two precepts, and only two. One is Preach%@EH@%
  8480. the Gospel; and the other is - Put down enthusiasm  . . .  The
  8481. Church of England in a nutshell.%@NL@%
  8482. %@CR:THECHUWard2     @%%@NL@%
  8483.                                              Mrs Humphrey Ward (1851-1920)%@NL@%
  8484.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  8485. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8486. %@NL@%
  8487. %@NL@%
  8488. %@2@%The merit claimed for the Anglican Church is, that if you let%@EH@%
  8489. it alone, it will let you alone.%@NL@%
  8490. %@CR:THECHUEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  8491.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  8492.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  8493. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8494. %@NL@%
  8495. %@NL@%
  8496. %@2@%There is this difference between the Church of Rome and the%@EH@%
  8497. Church of England: the one professes to be infallible - the
  8498. other to be never in the wrong.%@NL@%
  8499. %@CR:THECHUSteele    @%%@NL@%
  8500.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  8501.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  8502. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8503. %@NL@%
  8504. %@NL@%
  8505. %@2@%I have, alas, only one illusion left, and that is the Archbishop%@EH@%
  8506. of Canterbury.%@NL@%
  8507. %@CR:THECHUSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  8508.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  8509.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  8510. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8511. %@NL@%
  8512. %@NL@%
  8513. %@2@%I must believe in the Apostolic Succession, there being no%@EH@%
  8514. other way of accounting for the descent of the Bishop of Exeter
  8515. from Judas Iscariot.%@NL@%
  8516. %@CR:THECHUSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  8517.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  8518.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  8519. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8520. %@NL@%
  8521. %@NL@%
  8522. %@2@%The Church of England seems to wish us to regard birth as the%@EH@%
  8523. entry to sin, marriage as a means of avoiding one aspect of sin,
  8524. and death to be the welcome relief whereby we can sin no more.%@NL@%
  8525. %@CR:THECHUWilson5   @%%@NL@%
  8526.                                             Sir Steuart Wilson (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  8527.                                            British administrator, musician%@NL@%
  8528. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8529. %@NL@%
  8530. %@NL@%
  8531. %@2@%A soul cannot be eternally satisfied with kindness, and a soothing%@EH@%
  8532. murmur, and the singing of hymns.%@NL@%
  8533. %@CR:THECHUBenson    @%%@NL@%
  8534.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  8535.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  8536. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8537. %@NL@%
  8538. %@NL@%
  8539. %@2@%To tolerate everything is to teach nothing.%@NL@%
  8540. %@CR:THECHUKinsman   @%%@NL@%
  8541.                                              Dr. F. J. Kinsman (1868-1944)%@NL@%
  8542.                                                         American clergyman%@NL@%
  8543. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8544. %@NL@%
  8545. %@NL@%
  8546. %@2@%I do hereby profess  . . .  that Protestantism is the dreariest%@EH@%
  8547. of possible religions; that the thought of the Anglican service
  8548. makes me shiver, and the thought of the Thirty-Nine Articles makes
  8549. me shudder.%@NL@%
  8550. %@CR:THECHUNewman1   @%%@NL@%
  8551.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  8552.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  8553. %@AS@%                                                         Church of England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8554. %@NL@%
  8555. %@NL@%
  8556. %@NL@%
  8557. %@1@%%@AS@%Church-going%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8558. %@CR:CHURCHGOING     @%%@NL@%
  8559. %@2@%See:%@QR:Church-going@%%@NL@%
  8560.      Preaching: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1fd3f7@%%@NL@%
  8561. %@NL@%
  8562. %@2@%America has become so tense and nervous it has been years since%@EH@%
  8563. I've seen anyone asleep in church - and that is a sad situation.%@NL@%
  8564. %@CR:CHURCHPeale     @%%@NL@%
  8565.                                         Dr. Norman Vincent Peale (b. 1898)%@NL@%
  8566.                              President of the Protestant Council, New York%@NL@%
  8567. %@AS@%                                                              Church-going%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8568. %@NL@%
  8569. %@NL@%
  8570. %@2@%Light half-believers of our casual creeds.%@NL@%
  8571. %@CR:CHURCHArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  8572.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  8573.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  8574. %@AS@%                                                              Church-going%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8575. %@NL@%
  8576. %@NL@%
  8577. %@2@%Too hot to go to Church? What about Hell?%@NL@%
  8578. %@CR:CHURCHArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  8579.                                                     poster in Dayton, Ohio%@NL@%
  8580. %@AS@%                                                              Church-going%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8581. %@NL@%
  8582. %@NL@%
  8583. %@2@%She say, Celie, tell the truth, have you ever found God in%@EH@%
  8584. church? I never did. I just found a bunch of folks hoping for him
  8585. to show. Any God I ever felt in church I brought in with me. And
  8586. I think all the other folks did too. They come to church to %@AI@%share%@AE@%
  8587. God, not find God.%@NL@%
  8588. %@CR:CHURCHWalker1   @%%@NL@%
  8589.                                                     Alice Walker (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  8590.                                                    American author, critic%@NL@%
  8591. %@AS@%                                                              Church-going%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8592. %@NL@%
  8593. %@NL@%
  8594. %@NL@%
  8595. %@1@%%@AS@%Churches%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8596. %@CR:CHURCHES        @%%@NL@%
  8597. %@2@%%@QR:Churches@%A church is a place in which gentlemen who have never been%@EH@%
  8598. to heaven brag about it to persons who will never get there.%@NL@%
  8599. %@CR:CHURCHMencken   @%%@NL@%
  8600.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  8601.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  8602. %@AS@%                                                                  Churches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8603. %@NL@%
  8604. %@NL@%
  8605. %@2@%I never weary of great churches. It is my favourite kind of%@EH@%
  8606. mountain scenery. Mankind was never so happily inspired as when
  8607. it made a cathedral.%@NL@%
  8608. %@CR:CHURCHStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  8609.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  8610.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  8611. %@AS@%                                                                  Churches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8612. %@NL@%
  8613. %@NL@%
  8614.      %@2@%Cathedrals, luxury liners laden with souls,%@NL@%
  8615.      Holding to the east their hulls of%@NL@%
  8616.      stone.%@NL@%
  8617. %@CR:CHURCHAuden     @%%@NL@%
  8618.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  8619.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  8620. %@AS@%                                                                  Churches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8621. %@NL@%
  8622. %@NL@%
  8623. %@2@%When churchyards are consecrated I find it awfully difficult%@EH@%
  8624. to imagine that the Holy Spirit is operating only along the dotted
  8625. line on the part of the plan coloured pink.%@NL@%
  8626. %@CR:CHURCHHussey    @%%@NL@%
  8627.                                               Canon R. L. Hussey (b. 1899)%@NL@%
  8628.                                                          British clergyman%@NL@%
  8629. %@AS@%                                                                  Churches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8630. %@NL@%
  8631. %@NL@%
  8632. %@2@%The beautiful uncut hair of graves.%@NL@%
  8633. %@CR:CHURCHWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  8634.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  8635.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  8636. %@AS@%                                                                  Churches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8637. %@NL@%
  8638. %@NL@%
  8639. %@NL@%
  8640. %@1@%%@AS@%Cinema%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8641. %@CR:CINEMA          @%%@NL@%
  8642. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cinema@%%@NL@%
  8643.      %@AB@%Hollywood%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          12f718@%%@NL@%
  8644. %@NL@%
  8645. %@2@%The cinema is not a slice of life but a piece of cake.%@NL@%
  8646. %@CR:CINEMAHitchcock @%%@NL@%
  8647.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  8648.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  8649. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8650. %@NL@%
  8651. %@NL@%
  8652. %@2@%The cinema, like the detective story, makes it possible to%@EH@%
  8653. experience without danger all the excitement, passion and desirousness
  8654. which must be repressed in a humanitarian ordering of life.%@NL@%
  8655. %@CR:CINEMAJung      @%%@NL@%
  8656.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  8657.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  8658. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8659. %@NL@%
  8660. %@NL@%
  8661. %@2@%The theater is like a faithful wife. The film is the great%@EH@%
  8662. adventure - the costly, exacting mistress.%@NL@%
  8663. %@CR:CINEMABergman   @%%@NL@%
  8664.                                                   Ingmar Bergman (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  8665.                                          Swedish film and theater director%@NL@%
  8666. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8667. %@NL@%
  8668. %@NL@%
  8669. %@2@%They get excited about the sort of stuff I could get shooting%@EH@%
  8670. through a piece of Kleenex.%@NL@%
  8671. %@CR:CINEMAWilder1   @%%@NL@%
  8672.                                                     Billy Wilder (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  8673.                                                   American writer-director%@NL@%
  8674.                                                         on European cinema%@NL@%
  8675. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8676. %@NL@%
  8677. %@NL@%
  8678. %@2@%Film is not the art of scholars but of illiterates. Film culture%@EH@%
  8679. is not analysis but agitation of the mind.%@NL@%
  8680. %@CR:CINEMAHerzog    @%%@NL@%
  8681.                                                    Werner Herzog (b. 1942)%@NL@%
  8682.                                                       German film director%@NL@%
  8683. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8684. %@NL@%
  8685. %@NL@%
  8686. %@2@%Movies are so rarely great art that if we cannot appreciate%@EH@%
  8687. the great %@AI@%trash%@AE@% we have very little reason to be interested in
  8688. them.%@NL@%
  8689. %@CR:CINEMAKael      @%%@NL@%
  8690.                                                     Pauline Kael (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  8691.                                                       American film critic%@NL@%
  8692. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8693. %@NL@%
  8694. %@NL@%
  8695. %@2@%The trouble with a movie these days is that it's old before%@EH@%
  8696. it's released. It's no accident that it comes in a can.%@NL@%
  8697. %@CR:CINEMAWelles    @%%@NL@%
  8698.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  8699.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  8700. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8701. %@NL@%
  8702. %@NL@%
  8703. %@2@%All television ever did was shrink the demand for ordinary%@EH@%
  8704. movies. The demand for extraordinary movies increased. If any one
  8705. thing is wrong with the movie industry today, it is the unrelenting
  8706. effort to astonish.%@NL@%
  8707. %@CR:CINEMAJames1    @%%@NL@%
  8708.                                                      Clive James (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  8709.                                                  Australian writer, critic%@NL@%
  8710. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8711. %@NL@%
  8712. %@NL@%
  8713. %@2@%There's only one thing that can kill the movies, and that's%@EH@%
  8714. education.%@NL@%
  8715. %@CR:CINEMARogers3   @%%@NL@%
  8716.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  8717.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  8718. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8719. %@NL@%
  8720. %@NL@%
  8721. %@2@%Film music should have the same relationship to the film drama%@EH@%
  8722. that somebody's piano playing in my living room has to the book
  8723. I am reading.%@NL@%
  8724. %@CR:CINEMAStravinsky@%%@NL@%
  8725.                                                Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971)%@NL@%
  8726.                                                  Russian-American composer%@NL@%
  8727. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8728. %@NL@%
  8729. %@NL@%
  8730. %@2@%A director must be a policeman, a midwife, a psychoanalyst,%@EH@%
  8731. a sycophant and a bastard.%@NL@%
  8732. %@CR:CINEMAWilder1   @%%@NL@%
  8733.                                                     Billy Wilder (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  8734.                                                   American writer-director%@NL@%
  8735. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8736. %@NL@%
  8737. %@NL@%
  8738. %@2@%Saddest movie I've ever seen - I cried all the way through.%@EH@%
  8739. It's sad when you're eighty-two.%@NL@%
  8740. %@CR:CINEMAMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  8741.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  8742.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  8743.                                                     on Last Tango in Paris%@NL@%
  8744. %@AS@%                                                                    Cinema%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8745. %@NL@%
  8746. %@NL@%
  8747. %@NL@%
  8748. %@1@%%@AS@%Circumstances%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8749. %@CR:CIRCUMSTANCES   @%%@NL@%
  8750. %@2@%See:%@QR:Circumstances@%%@NL@%
  8751.      Planning: %@AB@%Osler%@AE@%%@BO:          1dd74a@%%@NL@%
  8752. %@NL@%
  8753. %@2@%It is nice to make heroic decisions and to be prevented by%@EH@%
  8754. "circumstances beyond your control" from ever trying to execute
  8755. them.%@NL@%
  8756. %@CR:CIRCUMJames4    @%%@NL@%
  8757.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  8758.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  8759. %@AS@%                                                             Circumstances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8760. %@NL@%
  8761. %@NL@%
  8762. %@2@%People are always blaming their circumstances for what they%@EH@%
  8763. are. I don't believe in circumstances. The people who get on in
  8764. this world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances
  8765. they want, and, if they can't find them, make them.%@NL@%
  8766. %@CR:CIRCUMShaw      @%%@NL@%
  8767.                                             Vivie, %@AI@%Mrs Warren's Profession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8768.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  8769.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  8770. %@AS@%                                                             Circumstances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8771. %@NL@%
  8772. %@NL@%
  8773. %@2@%If all our happiness is bound up entirely in our personal circumstances%@EH@%
  8774. it is difficult not to demand of life more than it has to give.%@NL@%
  8775. %@CR:CIRCUMRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  8776.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  8777.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  8778. %@AS@%                                                             Circumstances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8779. %@NL@%
  8780. %@NL@%
  8781. %@2@%Circumstances! I make circumstances!%@NL@%
  8782. %@CR:CIRCUMNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  8783.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  8784.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  8785. %@AS@%                                                             Circumstances%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8786. %@NL@%
  8787. %@NL@%
  8788. %@NL@%
  8789. %@1@%%@AS@%City Life%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8790. %@CR:CITYLIFE        @%%@NL@%
  8791. %@2@%See:%@QR:City Life@%%@NL@%
  8792.      Country Life: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           8775c@%; %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           869b4@%%@NL@%
  8793.      %@AB@%London%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          17bd7a@%%@NL@%
  8794.      %@AB@%New York%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bac0c@%%@NL@%
  8795. %@NL@%
  8796. %@2@%City Life. Millions of people being lonesome together.%@NL@%
  8797. %@CR:CITYLIThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  8798.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  8799.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  8800. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8801. %@NL@%
  8802. %@NL@%
  8803. %@2@%God the first garden made, and the first city Cain.%@NL@%
  8804. %@CR:CITYLICowley    @%%@NL@%
  8805.                                                 Abraham Cowley (1618-1667)%@NL@%
  8806.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8807. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8808. %@NL@%
  8809. %@NL@%
  8810. %@2@%Fields and trees teach me nothing, but the people in a city%@EH@%
  8811. do.%@NL@%
  8812. %@CR:CITYLISocrates  @%%@NL@%
  8813.                                                      Socrates (469-399 BC)%@NL@%
  8814.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  8815. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8816. %@NL@%
  8817. %@NL@%
  8818. %@2@%If you would be known, and not know, vegetate in a village;%@EH@%
  8819. if you would know, and not be known, live in a city.%@NL@%
  8820. %@CR:CITYLIColton    @%%@NL@%
  8821.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  8822.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  8823. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8824. %@NL@%
  8825. %@NL@%
  8826. %@2@%A great city is the place to escape the true drama of provincial%@EH@%
  8827. life, and find solace in fantasy.%@NL@%
  8828. %@CR:CITYLIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  8829.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  8830.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8831. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8832. %@NL@%
  8833. %@NL@%
  8834. %@2@%As a remedy to life in society I would suggest the big city.%@EH@%
  8835. Nowadays it is the only desert within our means.%@NL@%
  8836. %@CR:CITYLICamus1    @%%@NL@%
  8837.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  8838.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  8839. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8840. %@NL@%
  8841. %@NL@%
  8842. %@2@%Crowds without company, and dissipation without pleasure.%@NL@%
  8843. %@CR:CITYLIGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  8844.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  8845.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  8846. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8847. %@NL@%
  8848. %@NL@%
  8849. %@2@%%@AI@%Omnis civitas corpus est.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8850. Every city is a living body.%@NL@%
  8851. %@CR:CITYLISaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  8852.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  8853.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  8854. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8855. %@NL@%
  8856. %@NL@%
  8857. %@2@%A large city cannot be experientially known; its life is too%@EH@%
  8858. manifold for any individual to be able to participate in it.%@NL@%
  8859. %@CR:CITYLIHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  8860.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  8861.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  8862. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8863. %@NL@%
  8864. %@NL@%
  8865. %@2@%They who have spent all their lives in cities improve their%@EH@%
  8866. talents but impair their virtues; and strengthen their minds but
  8867. weaken their morals.%@NL@%
  8868. %@CR:CITYLIColton    @%%@NL@%
  8869.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  8870.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  8871. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8872. %@NL@%
  8873. %@NL@%
  8874.      %@2@%%@AI@%Poiche voi, cittadine infauste mura,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8875.      %@AI@%Vidi e conobbi assai, la dove segue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8876.      %@AI@%Odio al dolor compagno.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8877. %@NL@%
  8878. %@2@%For I have seen and known you too well, black city walls, where
  8879. pain follows close behind hatred.%@NL@%
  8880. %@CR:CITYLILeopardi  @%%@NL@%
  8881.                                               Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837)%@NL@%
  8882.                                                               Italian poet%@NL@%
  8883. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8884. %@NL@%
  8885. %@NL@%
  8886. %@2@%The city is not a concrete jungle. It is a human zoo.%@NL@%
  8887. %@CR:CITYLIMorris1   @%%@NL@%
  8888.                                                   Desmond Morris (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  8889.                                                     British anthropologist%@NL@%
  8890. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8891. %@NL@%
  8892. %@NL@%
  8893.      %@2@%This City now doth like a garment wear%@NL@%
  8894.      The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,%@NL@%
  8895.      Ships, towers, domes, theatres and temples lie%@NL@%
  8896.      Open unto the fields and to the sky;%@NL@%
  8897.      All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.%@NL@%
  8898. %@CR:CITYLIWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  8899.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  8900.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  8901. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8902. %@NL@%
  8903. %@NL@%
  8904. %@2@%No city should be too large for a man to walk out of it in%@EH@%
  8905. a morning.%@NL@%
  8906. %@CR:CITYLIConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  8907.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  8908.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  8909. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8910. %@NL@%
  8911. %@NL@%
  8912. %@2@%Cities, like cats, will reveal themselves at night.%@NL@%
  8913. %@CR:CITYLIBrooke    @%%@NL@%
  8914.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  8915.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  8916. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8917. %@NL@%
  8918. %@NL@%
  8919.      %@2@%Prepare for death if here at night you roam,%@NL@%
  8920.      And sign your will before you sup from home.%@NL@%
  8921. %@CR:CITYLIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  8922.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  8923.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  8924. %@AS@%                                                                 City Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8925. %@NL@%
  8926. %@NL@%
  8927. %@NL@%
  8928. %@1@%%@AS@%Civilization%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  8929. %@CR:CIVILIZATION    @%%@NL@%
  8930. %@2@%See:%@QR:Civilization@%%@NL@%
  8931.      Curiosity: %@AB@%Trevelyan%@AE@%%@BO:           94d13@%%@NL@%
  8932.      The Devil: %@AB@%Knox%@AE@%%@BO:           a86b2@%%@NL@%
  8933.      Leisure: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          17330b@%%@NL@%
  8934.      Progress: %@AB@%Rogers%@AE@%%@BO:          206cf6@%%@NL@%
  8935.      Suicide: %@AB@%Ellis%@AE@%%@BO:          27555f@%%@NL@%
  8936.      Tolerance: %@AB@%Menen%@AE@%%@BO:          28d56b@%%@NL@%
  8937.      Women: and Men: %@AB@%Meredith%@AE@%%@BO:          2c1593@%%@NL@%
  8938. %@NL@%
  8939. %@2@%The origin of civilization is man's determination to do nothing%@EH@%
  8940. for himself which he can get done for him.%@NL@%
  8941. %@CR:CIVILIBailey2   @%%@NL@%
  8942.                                                   H. C. Bailey (1878-1961)%@NL@%
  8943.                                                        British crimewriter%@NL@%
  8944. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8945. %@NL@%
  8946. %@NL@%
  8947. %@2@%Civilization - by which I here mean barbarism made strong%@EH@%
  8948. and luxurious by mechanical power.%@NL@%
  8949. %@CR:CIVILILewis2    @%%@NL@%
  8950.                                                    C. S. Lewis (1898-1963)%@NL@%
  8951.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  8952. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8953. %@NL@%
  8954. %@NL@%
  8955. %@2@%Civilization - a heap of rubble scavenged by scrawny English%@EH@%
  8956. Lit vultures.%@NL@%
  8957. %@CR:CIVILIMuggeridge@%%@NL@%
  8958.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  8959.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  8960. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8961. %@NL@%
  8962. %@NL@%
  8963. %@2@%All civilization has from time to time become a thin crust%@EH@%
  8964. over a volcano of revolution.%@NL@%
  8965. %@CR:CIVILIEllis     @%%@NL@%
  8966.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  8967.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  8968. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8969. %@NL@%
  8970. %@NL@%
  8971. %@2@%Civilization is the lamb's skin in which barbarism masquerades.%@NL@%
  8972. %@CR:CIVILIAldrich   @%%@NL@%
  8973.                                          Thomas Bailey Aldrich (1836-1907)%@NL@%
  8974.                                                    American writer, editor%@NL@%
  8975. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8976. %@NL@%
  8977. %@NL@%
  8978. %@2@%Our civilization is not even skin deep; it reaches no lower%@EH@%
  8979. than our clothes. Humanity is still essentially Yahoo-manity.%@NL@%
  8980. %@CR:CIVILIInge      @%%@NL@%
  8981.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  8982.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  8983. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8984. %@NL@%
  8985. %@NL@%
  8986. %@2@%Every new generation is a fresh invasion of savages.%@NL@%
  8987. %@CR:CIVILIAllen2    @%%@NL@%
  8988.                                                   Hervey Allen (1889-1949)%@NL@%
  8989.                                            American educator, poet, author%@NL@%
  8990. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8991. %@NL@%
  8992. %@NL@%
  8993. %@2@%Is it progress if a cannibal uses knife and fork?%@NL@%
  8994. %@CR:CIVILILec       @%%@NL@%
  8995.                                                Stanislaus J. Lec (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  8996.                                                                Polish poet%@NL@%
  8997. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  8998. %@NL@%
  8999. %@NL@%
  9000. %@2@%Civilization is a progress from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneity%@EH@%
  9001. toward a definite, coherent heterogeneity.%@NL@%
  9002. %@CR:CIVILISpencer   @%%@NL@%
  9003.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  9004.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  9005. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9006. %@NL@%
  9007. %@NL@%
  9008. %@2@%Increased means and increased leisure are the two civilizers%@EH@%
  9009. of man.%@NL@%
  9010. %@CR:CIVILIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  9011.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  9012.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  9013. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9014. %@NL@%
  9015. %@NL@%
  9016. %@2@%The three great elements of modern civilization, gunpowder,%@EH@%
  9017. printing, and the Protestant religion.%@NL@%
  9018. %@CR:CIVILICarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  9019.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  9020.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  9021. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9022. %@NL@%
  9023. %@NL@%
  9024. %@2@%The nineteenth century regarded European civilization as mature%@EH@%
  9025. and late, the final expression of the human spirit. We are only
  9026. now beginning to realise that it is young and childish.%@NL@%
  9027. %@CR:CIVILIJoad      @%%@NL@%
  9028.                                                  C. E. M. Joad (1891-1953)%@NL@%
  9029.                                                   British author, academic%@NL@%
  9030. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9031. %@NL@%
  9032. %@NL@%
  9033. %@2@%Inscribe all human effort with one word,%@EH@%
  9034. Artistry's haunting curse, the
  9035. Incomplete!%@NL@%
  9036. %@CR:CIVILIBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  9037.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  9038.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9039. %@AS@%                                                              Civilization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9040. %@NL@%
  9041. %@NL@%
  9042. %@NL@%
  9043. %@1@%%@AS@%Class%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9044. %@CR:CLASS           @%%@NL@%
  9045. %@2@%See:%@QR:Class@%%@NL@%
  9046.      %@AB@%The Bourgeoisie%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           49948@%%@NL@%
  9047.      %@AB@%Inequality%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          14b6bd@%%@NL@%
  9048.      Ladies: %@AB@%Herford%@AE@%%@BO:          16965f@%%@NL@%
  9049.      Laughter: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          16b20e@%%@NL@%
  9050.      Secrets: %@AB@%Chapman%@AE@%%@BO:          240f29@%%@NL@%
  9051.      Slavery: %@AB@%Hammond%@AE@%%@BO:          2576aa@%%@NL@%
  9052.      %@AB@%The Working Class%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2c49fd@%%@NL@%
  9053. %@NL@%
  9054. %@2@%The history of all hitherto existing society is the history%@EH@%
  9055. of class struggles.%@NL@%
  9056. %@CR:CLASS Marx2     @%%@NL@%
  9057.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  9058.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  9059.                                               Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)%@NL@%
  9060.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  9061. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9062. %@NL@%
  9063. %@NL@%
  9064. %@2@%A society that gives to one class all the opportunities for%@EH@%
  9065. leisure, and to another all the burdens of work, dooms both classes
  9066. to spiritual sterility.%@NL@%
  9067. %@CR:CLASS Mumford2  @%%@NL@%
  9068.                                                  Lewis Mumford (1895-1990)%@NL@%
  9069.                                             American writer on environment%@NL@%
  9070. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9071. %@NL@%
  9072. %@NL@%
  9073. %@2@%We educate one another; and we cannot do this if half of us%@EH@%
  9074. consider the other half not good enough to talk to.%@NL@%
  9075. %@CR:CLASS Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  9076.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  9077.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  9078. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9079. %@NL@%
  9080. %@NL@%
  9081. %@2@%There are no persons more solicitous about the preservation%@EH@%
  9082. of rank than those who have no rank at all.%@NL@%
  9083. %@CR:CLASS Shenstone @%%@NL@%
  9084.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  9085.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9086. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9087. %@NL@%
  9088. %@NL@%
  9089. %@2@%The terrifying characteristic of British society is that many%@EH@%
  9090. of those who are supposed to be inferior have been brainwashed
  9091. into believing that they actually are.%@NL@%
  9092. %@CR:CLASS Benn      @%%@NL@%
  9093.                                                        Tony Benn (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  9094.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  9095. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9096. %@NL@%
  9097. %@NL@%
  9098. %@2@%The most perfect political community is one in which the middle%@EH@%
  9099. class is in control and outnumbers both of the other classes.%@NL@%
  9100. %@CR:CLASS Aristotle @%%@NL@%
  9101.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  9102.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  9103. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9104. %@NL@%
  9105. %@NL@%
  9106. %@2@%The one class you do not belong to and are not proud of at%@EH@%
  9107. all is the lower-middle class. No one ever describes himself as
  9108. belonging to the lower-middle class.%@NL@%
  9109. %@CR:CLASS Mikes     @%%@NL@%
  9110.                                                     George Mikes (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  9111.                                            Hungarian-born British humorist%@NL@%
  9112. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9113. %@NL@%
  9114. %@NL@%
  9115. %@2@%When we say a woman is of a certain social class, we really%@EH@%
  9116. mean her husband or father is.%@NL@%
  9117. %@CR:CLASS Fairbairns@%%@NL@%
  9118.                                                   Zoe Fairbairns (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  9119.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  9120. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9121. %@NL@%
  9122. %@NL@%
  9123. %@2@%The classes that wash most are those that work least.%@NL@%
  9124. %@CR:CLASS Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  9125.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  9126.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  9127. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9128. %@NL@%
  9129. %@NL@%
  9130. %@2@%Ladies and gentlemen are permitted to have friends in the kennel%@EH@%
  9131. but not in the kitchen.%@NL@%
  9132. %@CR:CLASS Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  9133.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  9134.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  9135. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9136. %@NL@%
  9137. %@NL@%
  9138.      %@2@%I am his Highness' dog at Kew;%@NL@%
  9139.      Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?%@NL@%
  9140. %@CR:CLASS Pope      @%%@NL@%
  9141.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  9142.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9143. %@AS@%                                                                     Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9144. %@NL@%
  9145. %@NL@%
  9146. %@NL@%
  9147. %@1@%%@AS@%Cliches%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9148. %@CR:CLICHES         @%%@NL@%
  9149. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cliches@%%@NL@%
  9150.      Oxford: %@AB@%Guedalla%@AE@%%@BO:          1c9da0@%%@NL@%
  9151. %@NL@%
  9152. %@2@%Man is a creature who lives not upon bread alone, but principally%@EH@%
  9153. by catchwords.%@NL@%
  9154. %@CR:CLICHEStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  9155.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  9156.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  9157. %@AS@%                                                                   Cliches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9158. %@NL@%
  9159. %@NL@%
  9160. %@2@%A good catchword can obscure analysis for fifty years.%@NL@%
  9161. %@CR:CLICHEWilkie    @%%@NL@%
  9162.                                              Wendell L. Wilkie (1892-1944)%@NL@%
  9163.                                   American lawyer, businessman, politician%@NL@%
  9164. %@AS@%                                                                   Cliches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9165. %@NL@%
  9166. %@NL@%
  9167. %@2@%If you have to be in a soap opera try not to get the worst%@EH@%
  9168. role.%@NL@%
  9169. %@CR:CLICHEBoyGeorge @%%@NL@%
  9170.                                                       Boy George (b. 1961)%@NL@%
  9171.                                                        British rock singer%@NL@%
  9172. %@AS@%                                                                   Cliches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9173. %@NL@%
  9174. %@NL@%
  9175. %@NL@%
  9176. %@1@%%@AS@%Clubs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9177. %@CR:CLUBS           @%%@NL@%
  9178. %@2@%See:%@QR:Clubs@%%@NL@%
  9179.      Institutions: %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:          1511c9@%%@NL@%
  9180. %@NL@%
  9181. %@2@%This happy breed of men, this little world.%@NL@%
  9182. %@CR:CLUBS Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  9183.                                                     Gaunt, %@AI@%King Richard II%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9184.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  9185.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9186. %@AS@%                                                                     Clubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9187. %@NL@%
  9188. %@NL@%
  9189. %@2@%Most clubs have the atmosphere of a Duke's house with the Duke%@EH@%
  9190. lying dead upstairs.%@NL@%
  9191. %@CR:CLUBS Sutherland@%%@NL@%
  9192.                                               Douglas Sutherland (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  9193.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  9194. %@AS@%                                                                     Clubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9195. %@NL@%
  9196. %@NL@%
  9197. %@2@%I don't care to belong to any social organization which would%@EH@%
  9198. accept me as a member.%@NL@%
  9199. %@CR:CLUBS Marx1     @%%@NL@%
  9200.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  9201.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  9202. %@AS@%                                                                     Clubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9203. %@NL@%
  9204. %@NL@%
  9205. %@NL@%
  9206. %@1@%%@AS@%Cocktail Parties%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9207. %@CR:COCKTAILPARTIES @%%@NL@%
  9208. %@2@%%@QR:Cocktail Parties@%The cocktail party - as the name itself indicates - was%@EH@%
  9209. originally invented by dogs. They are simply bottom-sniffings raised
  9210. to the rank of formal ceremonies.%@NL@%
  9211. %@CR:COCKTADurrell2  @%%@NL@%
  9212.                                                 Lawrence Durrell (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  9213.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  9214. %@AS@%                                                          Cocktail Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9215. %@NL@%
  9216. %@NL@%
  9217. %@2@%It was one of those parties where you cough twice before you%@EH@%
  9218. speak and then decide not to say it after all.%@NL@%
  9219. %@CR:COCKTAWodehouse @%%@NL@%
  9220.                                                P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975)%@NL@%
  9221.                                                 British novelist, humorist%@NL@%
  9222. %@AS@%                                                          Cocktail Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9223. %@NL@%
  9224. %@NL@%
  9225. %@2@%We are persons of quality, I assure you, and women of fashion,%@EH@%
  9226. and come to see and to be seen.%@NL@%
  9227. %@CR:COCKTAJonson    @%%@NL@%
  9228.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  9229.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9230. %@AS@%                                                          Cocktail Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9231. %@NL@%
  9232. %@NL@%
  9233. %@2@%Consider yourselves introduced, because I only remember one%@EH@%
  9234. of your names, and that wouldn't be fair to the other.%@NL@%
  9235. %@CR:COCKTABeerbohmTr@%%@NL@%
  9236.                                      Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1853-1917)%@NL@%
  9237.                                                      English actor-manager%@NL@%
  9238. %@AS@%                                                          Cocktail Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9239. %@NL@%
  9240. %@NL@%
  9241. %@NL@%
  9242. %@1@%%@AS@%Cocktails%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9243. %@CR:COCKTAILS       @%%@NL@%
  9244. %@2@%%@QR:Cocktails@%That faint but sensitive enteric expectancy that suggests the%@EH@%
  9245. desirability of a cocktail.%@NL@%
  9246. %@CR:COCKTAMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  9247.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  9248.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  9249. %@AS@%                                                                 Cocktails%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9250. %@NL@%
  9251. %@NL@%
  9252. %@2@%I must get out of these wet clothes and into a dry Martini.%@NL@%
  9253. %@CR:COCKTAWoollcott @%%@NL@%
  9254.                                            Alexander Woollcott (1887-1943)%@NL@%
  9255.                                                 American columnist, critic%@NL@%
  9256. %@AS@%                                                                 Cocktails%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9257. %@NL@%
  9258. %@NL@%
  9259. %@NL@%
  9260. %@1@%%@AS@%Coffee%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9261. %@CR:COFFEE          @%%@NL@%
  9262. %@2@%%@QR:Coffee@%The morning cup of coffee has an exhilaration about it which%@EH@%
  9263. the cheering influence of the afternoon or evening cup of tea cannot
  9264. be expected to reproduce.%@NL@%
  9265. %@CR:COFFEEHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  9266.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  9267.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  9268. %@AS@%                                                                    Coffee%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9269. %@NL@%
  9270. %@NL@%
  9271. %@2@%Black as hell, strong as death, sweet as love.%@NL@%
  9272. %@CR:COFFEEHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  9273.                                                            Turkish proverb%@NL@%
  9274. %@AS@%                                                                    Coffee%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9275. %@NL@%
  9276. %@NL@%
  9277. %@2@%Coffee in England is just toasted milk.%@NL@%
  9278. %@CR:COFFEEFry       @%%@NL@%
  9279.                                                  Christopher Fry (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  9280.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  9281. %@AS@%                                                                    Coffee%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9282. %@NL@%
  9283. %@NL@%
  9284.      %@2@%Coffee, which makes the politician wise,%@NL@%
  9285.      And see through all things with his half-shut eyes.%@NL@%
  9286. %@CR:COFFEEPope      @%%@NL@%
  9287.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  9288.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9289. %@AS@%                                                                    Coffee%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9290. %@NL@%
  9291. %@NL@%
  9292. %@NL@%
  9293. %@1@%%@AS@%Coincidence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9294. %@CR:COINCIDENCE     @%%@NL@%
  9295. %@2@%%@QR:Coincidence@%It is only in literature that coincidences seem unnatural.%@NL@%
  9296. %@CR:COINCILynd      @%%@NL@%
  9297.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  9298.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  9299. %@AS@%                                                               Coincidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9300. %@NL@%
  9301. %@NL@%
  9302. %@2@%Although we talk so much about coincidence we do not really%@EH@%
  9303. believe in it. In our heart of hearts we think better of the universe,
  9304. we are secretly convinced that it is not such a slipshod, haphazard
  9305. affair, that everything in it has meaning.%@NL@%
  9306. %@CR:COINCIPriestley @%%@NL@%
  9307.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  9308.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  9309. %@AS@%                                                               Coincidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9310. %@NL@%
  9311. %@NL@%
  9312. %@NL@%
  9313. %@1@%%@AS@%Color%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9314. %@CR:COLOR           @%%@NL@%
  9315. %@2@%%@QR:Color@%Green how I love you green.%@NL@%
  9316.      Green wind. Green branches.%@NL@%
  9317. %@CR:COLOR Lorca     @%%@NL@%
  9318.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  9319.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  9320. %@AS@%                                                                     Color%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9321. %@NL@%
  9322. %@NL@%
  9323. %@2@%I've been forty years discovering that the queen of all colors%@EH@%
  9324. is black.%@NL@%
  9325. %@CR:COLOR Renoir    @%%@NL@%
  9326.                                                 Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)%@NL@%
  9327.                                                   French painter, sculptor%@NL@%
  9328. %@AS@%                                                                     Color%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9329. %@NL@%
  9330. %@NL@%
  9331. %@2@%Artists can color the sky red because they know it's blue.%@EH@%
  9332. Those of us who aren't artists must color things the way they really
  9333. are or people might think we're stupid.%@NL@%
  9334. %@CR:COLOR Feiffer   @%%@NL@%
  9335.                                                    Jules Feiffer (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  9336.                                                        American cartoonist%@NL@%
  9337. %@AS@%                                                                     Color%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9338. %@NL@%
  9339. %@NL@%
  9340. %@NL@%
  9341. %@1@%%@AS@%Comedy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9342. %@CR:COMEDY          @%%@NL@%
  9343. %@2@%%@QR:Comedy@%Life is a tragedy when seen in close-up, but a comedy in long-shot.%@NL@%
  9344. %@CR:COMEDYChaplin   @%%@NL@%
  9345.                                                Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977)%@NL@%
  9346.                                              English comic actor, director%@NL@%
  9347. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9348. %@NL@%
  9349. %@NL@%
  9350. %@2@%Chaplin's genius was in comedy. He had no sense of humor.%@NL@%
  9351. %@CR:COMEDYGrey1     @%%@NL@%
  9352.                                                                  Lita Grey%@NL@%
  9353.                                             second wife of Charlie Chaplin%@NL@%
  9354. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9355. %@NL@%
  9356. %@NL@%
  9357. %@2@%This fellow's wise enough to play the fool.%@NL@%
  9358. %@CR:COMEDYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  9359.                                                       Viola, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9360.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  9361.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9362. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9363. %@NL@%
  9364. %@NL@%
  9365. %@2@%The test of a real comedian is whether you laugh at him before%@EH@%
  9366. he opens his mouth.%@NL@%
  9367. %@CR:COMEDYNathan    @%%@NL@%
  9368.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  9369.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  9370. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9371. %@NL@%
  9372. %@NL@%
  9373. %@2@%The first thing any comedian does on getting an unscheduled%@EH@%
  9374. laugh is to verify the state of his buttons; the second is to look
  9375. around to see if a cat has walked out on the stage.%@NL@%
  9376. %@CR:COMEDYFields    @%%@NL@%
  9377.                                                   W. C. Fields (1879-1946)%@NL@%
  9378.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  9379. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9380. %@NL@%
  9381. %@NL@%
  9382. %@2@%Everything is funny as long as it is happening to somebody%@EH@%
  9383. else.%@NL@%
  9384. %@CR:COMEDYRogers3   @%%@NL@%
  9385.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  9386.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  9387. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9388. %@NL@%
  9389. %@NL@%
  9390. %@2@%Though it makes the unskilful laugh, cannot but make the judicious%@EH@%
  9391. grieve.%@NL@%
  9392. %@CR:COMEDYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  9393.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9394.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  9395.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9396. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9397. %@NL@%
  9398. %@NL@%
  9399. %@2@%The only rules comedy can tolerate are those of taste, and%@EH@%
  9400. the only limitations those of libel.%@NL@%
  9401. %@CR:COMEDYThurber   @%%@NL@%
  9402.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  9403.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  9404. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9405. %@NL@%
  9406. %@NL@%
  9407. %@2@%Comedy is an escape, not from truth but from despair; a narrow%@EH@%
  9408. escape into faith.%@NL@%
  9409. %@CR:COMEDYFry       @%%@NL@%
  9410.                                                  Christopher Fry (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  9411.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  9412. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9413. %@NL@%
  9414. %@NL@%
  9415. %@2@%I had rather have a fool to make me merry than experience to%@EH@%
  9416. make me sad.%@NL@%
  9417. %@CR:COMEDYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  9418.                                                   Rosalind, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9419.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  9420.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9421. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9422. %@NL@%
  9423. %@NL@%
  9424. %@2@%Comedy, like sodomy, is an unnatural act.%@NL@%
  9425. %@CR:COMEDYFeldman   @%%@NL@%
  9426.                                                  Marty Feldman (1933-1982)%@NL@%
  9427.                                                           British comedian%@NL@%
  9428. %@AS@%                                                                    Comedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9429. %@NL@%
  9430. %@NL@%
  9431. %@NL@%
  9432. %@1@%%@AS@%Committees%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9433. %@CR:COMMITTEES      @%%@NL@%
  9434. %@2@%%@QR:Committees@%The English way is a committee - we are born with a belief%@EH@%
  9435. in a green cloth, clean pens and twelve men with grey hair.%@NL@%
  9436. %@CR:COMMITBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  9437.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  9438.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  9439. %@AS@%                                                                Committees%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9440. %@NL@%
  9441. %@NL@%
  9442. %@2@%The heaping together of paintings by Old Masters in museums%@EH@%
  9443. is a catastrophe; likewise, a collection of a hundred Great Brains
  9444. makes one big fathead.%@NL@%
  9445. %@CR:COMMITJung      @%%@NL@%
  9446.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  9447.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  9448. %@AS@%                                                                Committees%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9449. %@NL@%
  9450. %@NL@%
  9451. %@NL@%
  9452. %@1@%%@AS@%The Commonplace%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9453. %@CR:THECOMMONPLACE  @%%@NL@%
  9454. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Commonplace@%%@NL@%
  9455.      Banality: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:           39d46@%%@NL@%
  9456.      Boredom: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:           47d59@%%@NL@%
  9457.      Poetry: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          1e1cfb@%%@NL@%
  9458.      Sincerity: %@AB@%Lynd%@AE@%%@BO:          254fad@%%@NL@%
  9459.      Tragedy: %@AB@%Masefield%@AE@%%@BO:          2909d0@%%@NL@%
  9460. %@NL@%
  9461. %@2@%Most of us swim in the ocean of the commonplace.%@NL@%
  9462. %@CR:THECOMBaroja    @%%@NL@%
  9463.                                                     Pio Baroja (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  9464.                                                 Spanish novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  9465. %@AS@%                                                           The Commonplace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9466. %@NL@%
  9467. %@NL@%
  9468. %@2@%The characteristic of the hour is that the commonplace mind,%@EH@%
  9469. knowing itself to be commonplace, has the assurance to proclaim the
  9470. rights of the commonplace and impose them wherever it will.%@NL@%
  9471. %@CR:THECOMOrtegayGas@%%@NL@%
  9472.                                           Jose Ortega y Gasset (1883-1955)%@NL@%
  9473.                                              Spanish essayist, philosopher%@NL@%
  9474. %@AS@%                                                           The Commonplace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9475. %@NL@%
  9476. %@NL@%
  9477. %@2@%Little minds are interested in the extraordinary, great minds%@EH@%
  9478. in the commonplace.%@NL@%
  9479. %@CR:THECOMHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  9480.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  9481.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  9482. %@AS@%                                                           The Commonplace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9483. %@NL@%
  9484. %@NL@%
  9485.      %@2@%Thou unassuming common-place%@NL@%
  9486.      Of Nature, with that homely face.%@NL@%
  9487. %@CR:THECOMWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  9488.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  9489.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9490. %@AS@%                                                           The Commonplace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9491. %@NL@%
  9492. %@NL@%
  9493. %@2@%The Lord prefers common-looking people. That is the reason%@EH@%
  9494. He makes so many of them.%@NL@%
  9495. %@CR:THECOMLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  9496.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  9497.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  9498. %@AS@%                                                           The Commonplace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9499. %@NL@%
  9500. %@NL@%
  9501. %@NL@%
  9502. %@1@%%@AS@%Communism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9503. %@CR:COMMUNISM       @%%@NL@%
  9504. %@2@%See:%@QR:Communism@%%@NL@%
  9505.      %@AB@%Marxism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19b75a@%%@NL@%
  9506.      School: %@AB@%Nixon%@AE@%%@BO:          239e1e@%%@NL@%
  9507.      %@AB@%Socialism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          25dc63@%%@NL@%
  9508.      The USSR: %@AB@%Solzhenitsyn%@AE@%%@BO:          29ed9c@%%@NL@%
  9509. %@NL@%
  9510. %@2@%%@AI@%La propriete c'est le vol.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9511. Property is theft.%@NL@%
  9512. %@CR:COMMUNProudhon  @%%@NL@%
  9513.                                         Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  9514.                                                     French social theorist%@NL@%
  9515. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9516. %@NL@%
  9517. %@NL@%
  9518.      %@2@%What is a Communist? One who has yearnings%@NL@%
  9519.      For equal division of unequal earnings.%@NL@%
  9520. %@CR:COMMUNElliot    @%%@NL@%
  9521.                                                Ebenezer Elliot (1781-1849)%@NL@%
  9522.                                                  English pamphleteer, poet%@NL@%
  9523. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9524. %@NL@%
  9525. %@NL@%
  9526. %@2@%In communist society, where nobody has one exclusive sphere%@EH@%
  9527. of activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes,
  9528. society regulates the general production and thus makes it possible
  9529. for me  . . .  to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear
  9530. cattle in the evening, criticize after dinner, just as I have a
  9531. mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, herdsman or critic.%@NL@%
  9532. %@CR:COMMUNMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  9533.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  9534.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  9535. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9536. %@NL@%
  9537. %@NL@%
  9538. %@2@%Russian Communism is the illegitimate child of Karl Marx and%@EH@%
  9539. Catherine the Great.%@NL@%
  9540. %@CR:COMMUNAttlee    @%%@NL@%
  9541.                                                 Clement Attlee (1883-1967)%@NL@%
  9542.                                  British Labour politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  9543. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9544. %@NL@%
  9545. %@NL@%
  9546. %@2@%Communism, being the lay form of Catholicism, and indeed meaning%@EH@%
  9547. the same thing, has never had any lack of chaplains.%@NL@%
  9548. %@CR:COMMUNShaw      @%%@NL@%
  9549.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  9550.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  9551. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9552. %@NL@%
  9553. %@NL@%
  9554. %@2@%Communists are people who fancied that they had an unhappy%@EH@%
  9555. childhood.%@NL@%
  9556. %@CR:COMMUNStein     @%%@NL@%
  9557.                                                 Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)%@NL@%
  9558.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  9559. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9560. %@NL@%
  9561. %@NL@%
  9562. %@2@%Send your son to Moscow and he will return an anti-Communist;%@EH@%
  9563. send him to the Sorbonne and he will return a Communist.%@NL@%
  9564. %@CR:COMMUNHouphouetB@%%@NL@%
  9565.                                           Felix Houphouet-Boigny (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  9566.                                               President of the Ivory Coast%@NL@%
  9567. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9568. %@NL@%
  9569. %@NL@%
  9570. %@2@%Communism has never come to power in a country that was not%@EH@%
  9571. disrupted by war or corruption, or both.%@NL@%
  9572. %@CR:COMMUNKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  9573.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  9574.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  9575. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9576. %@NL@%
  9577. %@NL@%
  9578. %@2@%Our fear that Communism might someday take over most of the%@EH@%
  9579. world blinds us to the fact that anti-communism already has.%@NL@%
  9580. %@CR:COMMUNKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  9581.                                                     American analyst, 1967%@NL@%
  9582. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9583. %@NL@%
  9584. %@NL@%
  9585. %@2@%The crusade against Communism was even more imaginary than%@EH@%
  9586. the spectre of Communism.%@NL@%
  9587. %@CR:COMMUNTaylor1   @%%@NL@%
  9588.                                                  A. J. P. Taylor (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  9589.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  9590. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9591. %@NL@%
  9592. %@NL@%
  9593. %@2@%I detest communism, because it is the negation of liberty  . . . %@EH@%
  9594. I am not a communist because communism concentrates and absorbs
  9595. all the powers of society into the state.%@NL@%
  9596. %@CR:COMMUNBakunin   @%%@NL@%
  9597.                                                Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)%@NL@%
  9598.                                                 Russian political theorist%@NL@%
  9599. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9600. %@NL@%
  9601. %@NL@%
  9602. %@2@%Communism is not love. Communism is a hammer which we use to%@EH@%
  9603. crush the enemy.%@NL@%
  9604. %@CR:COMMUNMaoZedong @%%@NL@%
  9605.                                                     Mao Zedong (1893-1976)%@NL@%
  9606.                                  founder of the People's Republic of China%@NL@%
  9607. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9608. %@NL@%
  9609. %@NL@%
  9610. %@2@%So we, who are united in mind and soul, have no hesitation%@EH@%
  9611. about sharing property. All is common among us - except our
  9612. wives.%@NL@%
  9613. %@CR:COMMUNTertullian@%%@NL@%
  9614.                                                    Tertullian (c. 160-240)%@NL@%
  9615.                                                           Roman theologian%@NL@%
  9616. %@AS@%                                                                 Communism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9617. %@NL@%
  9618. %@NL@%
  9619. %@NL@%
  9620. %@1@%%@AS@%Commuters%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9621. %@CR:COMMUTERS       @%%@NL@%
  9622. %@2@%%@QR:Commuters@%A man who shaves and takes a train,%@NL@%
  9623.      And then rides back to shave again.%@NL@%
  9624. %@CR:COMMUTWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  9625.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  9626.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  9627. %@AS@%                                                                 Commuters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9628. %@NL@%
  9629. %@NL@%
  9630.      %@2@%The doors are shut in the evening;%@NL@%
  9631.      And they know no songs.%@NL@%
  9632. %@CR:COMMUTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  9633.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  9634.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  9635. %@AS@%                                                                 Commuters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9636. %@NL@%
  9637. %@NL@%
  9638. %@NL@%
  9639. %@1@%%@AS@%Company%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9640. %@CR:COMPANY         @%%@NL@%
  9641. %@2@%See:%@QR:Company@%%@NL@%
  9642.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:           a9765@%%@NL@%
  9643.      %@AB@%Friends%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fd38d@%%@NL@%
  9644.      %@AB@%Friendship%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fed18@%%@NL@%
  9645.      Happiness: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          121792@%%@NL@%
  9646.      %@AB@%Solitude%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          260490@%%@NL@%
  9647. %@NL@%
  9648. %@2@%Company, villainous company, hath been the spoil of me.%@NL@%
  9649. %@CR:COMPANShakespear@%%@NL@%
  9650.                                             Falstaff, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9651.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  9652.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  9653. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9654. %@NL@%
  9655. %@NL@%
  9656. %@2@%Who sleepeth with dogs shall rise with fleas.%@NL@%
  9657. %@CR:COMPANFlorio    @%%@NL@%
  9658.                                                    John Florio (1553-1626)%@NL@%
  9659.                                          English lexicographer, translator%@NL@%
  9660. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9661. %@NL@%
  9662. %@NL@%
  9663. %@2@%You could read Kant by yourself, if you wanted; but you must%@EH@%
  9664. share a joke with someone else.%@NL@%
  9665. %@CR:COMPANStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  9666.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  9667.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  9668. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9669. %@NL@%
  9670. %@NL@%
  9671.      %@2@%All who joy would win must share it -%@NL@%
  9672.      Happiness was born a twin.%@NL@%
  9673. %@CR:COMPANByron2    @%%@NL@%
  9674.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  9675.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9676. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9677. %@NL@%
  9678. %@NL@%
  9679. %@2@%I had three chairs in my house: one for solitude, two for friendship,%@EH@%
  9680. three for society.%@NL@%
  9681. %@CR:COMPANThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  9682.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  9683.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  9684. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9685. %@NL@%
  9686. %@NL@%
  9687. %@2@%Fan the sinking flame of hilarity with the wing of friendship;%@EH@%
  9688. and pass the rosy wine.%@NL@%
  9689. %@CR:COMPANDickens   @%%@NL@%
  9690.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  9691.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  9692. %@AS@%                                                                   Company%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9693. %@NL@%
  9694. %@NL@%
  9695. %@NL@%
  9696. %@1@%%@AS@%Compatibility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9697. %@CR:COMPATIBILITY   @%%@NL@%
  9698. %@2@%%@QR:Compatibility@%Madam, I have been looking for a person who disliked gravy%@EH@%
  9699. all my life; let us swear eternal friendship.%@NL@%
  9700. %@CR:COMPATSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  9701.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  9702.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  9703. %@AS@%                                                             Compatibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9704. %@NL@%
  9705. %@NL@%
  9706. %@NL@%
  9707. %@1@%%@AS@%Competition%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9708. %@CR:COMPETITION     @%%@NL@%
  9709. %@2@%See:%@QR:Competition@%%@NL@%
  9710.      Craftsmanship: %@AB@%Ruskin%@AE@%%@BO:           8a6d2@%%@NL@%
  9711. %@NL@%
  9712. %@2@%We throw all our attention on the utterly idle question whether%@EH@%
  9713. A has done as well as B, when the only question is whether A has
  9714. done as well as he could.%@NL@%
  9715. %@CR:COMPETSumner    @%%@NL@%
  9716.                                          William Graham Sumner (1840-1900)%@NL@%
  9717.                                                       American sociologist%@NL@%
  9718. %@AS@%                                                               Competition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9719. %@NL@%
  9720. %@NL@%
  9721.      %@2@%Thou shalt not covet; but tradition%@NL@%
  9722.      Approves all forms of competition.%@NL@%
  9723. %@CR:COMPETClough    @%%@NL@%
  9724.                                                   A. H. Clough (1819-1861)%@NL@%
  9725.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  9726. %@AS@%                                                               Competition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9727. %@NL@%
  9728. %@NL@%
  9729. %@2@%So long as the system of competition in the production and%@EH@%
  9730. exchange of the means of life goes on, the degradation of the arts
  9731. will go on; and if that system is to last for ever, then art is
  9732. doomed, and will surely die; that is to say, civilization will
  9733. die.%@NL@%
  9734. %@CR:COMPETMorris2   @%%@NL@%
  9735.                                                 William Morris (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  9736.                                            English artist, writer, printer%@NL@%
  9737. %@AS@%                                                               Competition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9738. %@NL@%
  9739. %@NL@%
  9740. %@NL@%
  9741. %@1@%%@AS@%Complacency%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9742. %@CR:COMPLACENCY     @%%@NL@%
  9743. %@2@%%@QR:Complacency@%The singular completeness of limited men.%@NL@%
  9744. %@CR:COMPLACarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  9745.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  9746.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  9747. %@AS@%                                                               Complacency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9748. %@NL@%
  9749. %@NL@%
  9750. %@2@%The plain working truth is that it is not only good for people%@EH@%
  9751. to be shocked occasionally, but absolutely necessary to the progress
  9752. of society that they should be shocked pretty often.%@NL@%
  9753. %@CR:COMPLAShaw      @%%@NL@%
  9754.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  9755.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  9756. %@AS@%                                                               Complacency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9757. %@NL@%
  9758. %@NL@%
  9759. %@2@%The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none.%@NL@%
  9760. %@CR:COMPLACarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  9761.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  9762.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  9763. %@AS@%                                                               Complacency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9764. %@NL@%
  9765. %@NL@%
  9766. %@NL@%
  9767. %@1@%%@AS@%Complaint%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9768. %@CR:COMPLAINT       @%%@NL@%
  9769. %@2@%See:%@QR:Complaint@%%@NL@%
  9770.      Pity: %@AB@%Austen%@AE@%%@BO:          1dc9a5@%%@NL@%
  9771. %@NL@%
  9772. %@2@%The wheel that squeaks the loudest is the one that gets the%@EH@%
  9773. grease.%@NL@%
  9774. %@CR:COMPLABillings  @%%@NL@%
  9775.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  9776.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  9777. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9778. %@NL@%
  9779. %@NL@%
  9780. %@2@%It is a general popular error to suppose the loudest complainers%@EH@%
  9781. for the public to be the most anxious for its welfare.%@NL@%
  9782. %@CR:COMPLABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  9783.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  9784.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  9785. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9786. %@NL@%
  9787. %@NL@%
  9788. %@2@%It is a folly of too many to mistake the echo of a London coffee-house%@EH@%
  9789. for the voice of the kingdom.%@NL@%
  9790. %@CR:COMPLASwift     @%%@NL@%
  9791.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  9792.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  9793. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9794. %@NL@%
  9795. %@NL@%
  9796. %@2@%The trouble with this country is that there are too many people%@EH@%
  9797. going about saying "The trouble with this country is . . . "%@NL@%
  9798. %@CR:COMPLALewis3    @%%@NL@%
  9799.                                                 Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951)%@NL@%
  9800.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  9801. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9802. %@NL@%
  9803. %@NL@%
  9804. %@2@%Depend upon it that if a man talks of his misfortunes there%@EH@%
  9805. is something in them that is not disagreeable to him.%@NL@%
  9806. %@CR:COMPLAJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  9807.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  9808.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  9809. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9810. %@NL@%
  9811. %@NL@%
  9812. %@2@%Can anybody remember when the times were not hard, and money%@EH@%
  9813. not scarce?%@NL@%
  9814. %@CR:COMPLAEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  9815.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  9816.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  9817. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9818. %@NL@%
  9819. %@NL@%
  9820. %@2@%When I meet a man whose name I can't remember, I give myself%@EH@%
  9821. two minutes, then if it is a hopeless case I always say "And how
  9822. is the old complaint?"%@NL@%
  9823. %@CR:COMPLADisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  9824.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  9825.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  9826. %@AS@%                                                                 Complaint%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9827. %@NL@%
  9828. %@NL@%
  9829. %@NL@%
  9830. %@1@%%@AS@%Compliments%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9831. %@CR:COMPLIMENTS     @%%@NL@%
  9832. %@2@%See:%@QR:Compliments@%%@NL@%
  9833.      %@AB@%Flattery%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           f1047@%%@NL@%
  9834.      Ireland: %@AB@%Hinkson%@AE@%%@BO:          15a4a6@%%@NL@%
  9835. %@NL@%
  9836. %@2@%I can live for two months on a good compliment.%@NL@%
  9837. %@CR:COMPLITwain     @%%@NL@%
  9838.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  9839.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  9840. %@AS@%                                                               Compliments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9841. %@NL@%
  9842. %@NL@%
  9843. %@2@%Nothing is so silly as the expression of a man who is being%@EH@%
  9844. complimented.%@NL@%
  9845. %@CR:COMPLIGide      @%%@NL@%
  9846.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  9847.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  9848. %@AS@%                                                               Compliments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9849. %@NL@%
  9850. %@NL@%
  9851. %@2@%Women are never disarmed by compliments. Men always are.%@NL@%
  9852. %@CR:COMPLIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  9853.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  9854.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  9855. %@AS@%                                                               Compliments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9856. %@NL@%
  9857. %@NL@%
  9858. %@2@%Some people pay a compliment as if they expected a receipt.%@NL@%
  9859. %@CR:COMPLIHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  9860.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  9861.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  9862. %@AS@%                                                               Compliments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9863. %@NL@%
  9864. %@NL@%
  9865. %@2@%Whenever a man's friends begin to compliment him about looking%@EH@%
  9866. young, he may be sure that they think he is growing old.%@NL@%
  9867. %@CR:COMPLIIrving    @%%@NL@%
  9868.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  9869.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  9870. %@AS@%                                                               Compliments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9871. %@NL@%
  9872. %@NL@%
  9873. %@NL@%
  9874. %@1@%%@AS@%Compromise%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9875. %@CR:COMPROMISE      @%%@NL@%
  9876. %@2@%%@QR:Compromise@%This world may be divided into those who take it or leave it%@EH@%
  9877. and those who split the difference.%@NL@%
  9878. %@CR:COMPROKnox1     @%%@NL@%
  9879.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  9880.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  9881. %@AS@%                                                                Compromise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9882. %@NL@%
  9883. %@NL@%
  9884. %@2@%All government - indeed every human benefit and enjoyment,%@EH@%
  9885. every virtue and every prudent act - is founded on compromise
  9886. and barter.%@NL@%
  9887. %@CR:COMPROBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  9888.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  9889.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  9890. %@AS@%                                                                Compromise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9891. %@NL@%
  9892. %@NL@%
  9893. %@2@%If one cannot catch a bird of paradise, better take a wet hen.%@NL@%
  9894. %@CR:COMPROKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  9895.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  9896.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  9897. %@AS@%                                                                Compromise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9898. %@NL@%
  9899. %@NL@%
  9900. %@2@%A compromise is the art of dividing a cake in such a way that%@EH@%
  9901. everyone believes that he has got the biggest piece.%@NL@%
  9902. %@CR:COMPROErhard    @%%@NL@%
  9903.                                              Dr. Ludwig Erhard (1897-1977)%@NL@%
  9904.                                                     East German politician%@NL@%
  9905. %@AS@%                                                                Compromise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9906. %@NL@%
  9907. %@NL@%
  9908. %@NL@%
  9909. %@1@%%@AS@%Conferences%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9910. %@CR:CONFERENCES     @%%@NL@%
  9911. %@2@%See:%@QR:Conferences@%%@NL@%
  9912.      %@AB@%Committees%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           7495e@%%@NL@%
  9913. %@NL@%
  9914. %@2@%A conference is a gathering of important people who singly%@EH@%
  9915. can do nothing, but together can decide that nothing can be done.%@NL@%
  9916. %@CR:CONFERAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  9917.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  9918.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  9919. %@AS@%                                                               Conferences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9920. %@NL@%
  9921. %@NL@%
  9922. %@2@%No grand idea was ever born in a conference, but a lot of foolish%@EH@%
  9923. ideas have died there.%@NL@%
  9924. %@CR:CONFERFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  9925.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  9926.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  9927. %@AS@%                                                               Conferences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9928. %@NL@%
  9929. %@NL@%
  9930. %@2@%Meetings are indispensable when you don't want to do anything.%@NL@%
  9931. %@CR:CONFERGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  9932.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  9933.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  9934. %@AS@%                                                               Conferences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9935. %@NL@%
  9936. %@NL@%
  9937. %@NL@%
  9938. %@1@%%@AS@%Confessions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9939. %@CR:CONFESSIONS     @%%@NL@%
  9940. %@2@%See:%@QR:Confessions@%%@NL@%
  9941.      Catholicism: %@AB@%Menen%@AE@%%@BO:           5413e@%%@NL@%
  9942.      Gossip: %@AB@%Fairbanks%@AE@%%@BO:          11491f@%%@NL@%
  9943.      Psychoanalysis: %@AB@%Sheen%@AE@%%@BO:          20e03c@%%@NL@%
  9944.      Sin: %@AB@%Gibran%@AE@%%@BO:          254527@%%@NL@%
  9945. %@NL@%
  9946. %@2@%There is no refuge from confession but suicide, and suicide%@EH@%
  9947. is confession.%@NL@%
  9948. %@CR:CONFESWebster1  @%%@NL@%
  9949.                                                 Daniel Webster (1782-1852)%@NL@%
  9950.                                                 American lawyer, statesman%@NL@%
  9951. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9952. %@NL@%
  9953. %@NL@%
  9954. %@2@%All the good writers of confessions, from Augustine onwards,%@EH@%
  9955. are men who are still a little in love with their sins.%@NL@%
  9956. %@CR:CONFESFrance    @%%@NL@%
  9957.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  9958.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  9959. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9960. %@NL@%
  9961. %@NL@%
  9962. %@2@%We only confess our little faults to persuade people that we%@EH@%
  9963. have no big ones.%@NL@%
  9964. %@CR:CONFESLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  9965.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  9966.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  9967. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9968. %@NL@%
  9969. %@NL@%
  9970. %@2@%Before confession, be perfectly sure that you do not wish to%@EH@%
  9971. be forgiven.%@NL@%
  9972. %@CR:CONFESMansfield2@%%@NL@%
  9973.                                            Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923)%@NL@%
  9974.                                                    New Zealand-born writer%@NL@%
  9975. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9976. %@NL@%
  9977. %@NL@%
  9978. %@2@%It is the confession, not the priest, that gives us absolution.%@NL@%
  9979. %@CR:CONFESWilde     @%%@NL@%
  9980.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  9981.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  9982. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9983. %@NL@%
  9984. %@NL@%
  9985. %@2@%A Protestant, if he wants aid or advice on any matter, can%@EH@%
  9986. only go to his solicitor.%@NL@%
  9987. %@CR:CONFESDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  9988.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  9989.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  9990. %@AS@%                                                               Confessions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  9991. %@NL@%
  9992. %@NL@%
  9993. %@NL@%
  9994. %@1@%%@AS@%Conformity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  9995. %@CR:CONFORMITY      @%%@NL@%
  9996. %@2@%See:%@QR:Conformity@%%@NL@%
  9997.      Convention: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:           81b1f@%%@NL@%
  9998.      Society: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          25f8d7@%%@NL@%
  9999.      The Suburbs: %@AB@%Kronenberger%@AE@%%@BO:          271844@%%@NL@%
  10000. %@NL@%
  10001. %@2@%Where an opinion is general, it is usually correct.%@NL@%
  10002. %@CR:CONFORAusten    @%%@NL@%
  10003.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  10004.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  10005. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10006. %@NL@%
  10007. %@NL@%
  10008. %@2@%Every generation laughs at the old fashions, but follows religiously%@EH@%
  10009. the new.%@NL@%
  10010. %@CR:CONFORThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  10011.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  10012.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  10013. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10014. %@NL@%
  10015. %@NL@%
  10016. %@2@%For not all have the gift of martyrdom.%@NL@%
  10017. %@CR:CONFORDryden    @%%@NL@%
  10018.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  10019.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  10020. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10021. %@NL@%
  10022. %@NL@%
  10023. %@2@%Once conform, once do what other people do because they do%@EH@%
  10024. it, and a lethargy steals over all the finer nerves and faculties
  10025. of the soul. She becomes all outer show and inward emptiness;
  10026. dull, callous, and indifferent.%@NL@%
  10027. %@CR:CONFORWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  10028.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  10029.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  10030. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10031. %@NL@%
  10032. %@NL@%
  10033. %@2@%That so few now dare to be eccentric marks the chief danger%@EH@%
  10034. of the time.%@NL@%
  10035. %@CR:CONFORMill      @%%@NL@%
  10036.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  10037.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  10038. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10039. %@NL@%
  10040. %@NL@%
  10041. %@2@%People have fallen into a foolish habit of speaking of orthodoxy%@EH@%
  10042. as something heavy, humdrum and safe. There never was anything
  10043. so perilous or so exciting as orthodoxy.%@NL@%
  10044. %@CR:CONFORChesterton@%%@NL@%
  10045.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  10046.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10047. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10048. %@NL@%
  10049. %@NL@%
  10050. %@2@%I think it would be terrific if everybody was alike.%@NL@%
  10051. %@CR:CONFORWarhol    @%%@NL@%
  10052.                                                    Andy Warhol (1930-1987)%@NL@%
  10053.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  10054. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10055. %@NL@%
  10056. %@NL@%
  10057. %@2@%When all think alike, then no one is thinking.%@NL@%
  10058. %@CR:CONFORLippmann  @%%@NL@%
  10059.                                                Walter Lippmann (1889-1974)%@NL@%
  10060.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  10061. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10062. %@NL@%
  10063. %@NL@%
  10064. %@2@%The strongest bulwark of authority is uniformity; the least%@EH@%
  10065. divergence from it is the greatest crime.%@NL@%
  10066. %@CR:CONFORGoldman   @%%@NL@%
  10067.                                                   Emma Goldman (1869-1940)%@NL@%
  10068.                                                         American anarchist%@NL@%
  10069. %@AS@%                                                                Conformity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10070. %@NL@%
  10071. %@NL@%
  10072. %@NL@%
  10073. %@1@%%@AS@%Conscience%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10074. %@CR:CONSCIENCE      @%%@NL@%
  10075. %@2@%See:%@QR:Conscience@%%@NL@%
  10076.      Deliberation: %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:           a2582@%%@NL@%
  10077.      The English: %@AB@%de Madariaga%@AE@%%@BO:           cd8c5@%%@NL@%
  10078.      Love: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          18089c@%%@NL@%
  10079.      Principles: %@AB@%Howells%@AE@%%@BO:          2032e2@%%@NL@%
  10080.      The Soul: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          262ec4@%%@NL@%
  10081. %@NL@%
  10082. %@2@%Conscience is a sickness.%@NL@%
  10083. %@CR:CONSCIUnamuno   @%%@NL@%
  10084.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  10085.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  10086. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10087. %@NL@%
  10088. %@NL@%
  10089. %@2@%Conscience: the inner voice which warns us that someone may%@EH@%
  10090. be looking.%@NL@%
  10091. %@CR:CONSCIMencken   @%%@NL@%
  10092.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  10093.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  10094. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10095. %@NL@%
  10096. %@NL@%
  10097. %@2@%Conscience is, in most men, an anticipation of the opinion%@EH@%
  10098. of others.%@NL@%
  10099. %@CR:CONSCITaylor5   @%%@NL@%
  10100.                                               Sir Henry Taylor (1800-1886)%@NL@%
  10101.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10102. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10103. %@NL@%
  10104. %@NL@%
  10105. %@2@%A man's conscience and his judgement is the same thing, and%@EH@%
  10106. as the judgement, so also the conscience, may be erroneous.%@NL@%
  10107. %@CR:CONSCIHobbes    @%%@NL@%
  10108.                                                  Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)%@NL@%
  10109.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  10110. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10111. %@NL@%
  10112. %@NL@%
  10113. %@2@%The Non-Conformist Conscience makes cowards of us all.%@NL@%
  10114. %@CR:CONSCIBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  10115.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  10116.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  10117. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10118. %@NL@%
  10119. %@NL@%
  10120. %@2@%Conscience is thoroughly well-bred and soon leaves off talking%@EH@%
  10121. to those who do not wish to hear it.%@NL@%
  10122. %@CR:CONSCIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  10123.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  10124.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10125. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10126. %@NL@%
  10127. %@NL@%
  10128. %@2@%Conscience has no more to do with gallantry than it has with%@EH@%
  10129. politics.%@NL@%
  10130. %@CR:CONSCISheridan  @%%@NL@%
  10131.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  10132.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  10133. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10134. %@NL@%
  10135. %@NL@%
  10136. %@2@%At times, although one is perfectly in the right, one's legs%@EH@%
  10137. tremble; at other times, although one is completely in the wrong,
  10138. birds sing in one's soul.%@NL@%
  10139. %@CR:CONSCIRozanov   @%%@NL@%
  10140.                                              Vasily V. Rozanov (1856-1919)%@NL@%
  10141.                                                        Russian philosopher%@NL@%
  10142. %@AS@%                                                                Conscience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10143. %@NL@%
  10144. %@NL@%
  10145. %@NL@%
  10146. %@1@%%@AS@%Consensus%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10147. %@CR:CONSENSUS       @%%@NL@%
  10148. %@2@%%@QR:Consensus@%It is not much matter which we say, but mind, we must all say%@EH@%
  10149. the same.%@NL@%
  10150. %@CR:CONSENMelbourne @%%@NL@%
  10151.                                                 Lord Melbourne (1779-1848)%@NL@%
  10152.                                          English statesman, Prime Minister%@NL@%
  10153. %@AS@%                                                                 Consensus%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10154. %@NL@%
  10155. %@NL@%
  10156. %@2@%We must indeed all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall%@EH@%
  10157. all hang separately.%@NL@%
  10158. %@CR:CONSENFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  10159.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  10160.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  10161. %@AS@%                                                                 Consensus%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10162. %@NL@%
  10163. %@NL@%
  10164. %@NL@%
  10165. %@1@%%@AS@%Consequences%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10166. %@CR:CONSEQUENCES    @%%@NL@%
  10167. %@2@%See:%@QR:Consequences@%%@NL@%
  10168.      Nature: %@AB@%Ingersoll%@AE@%%@BO:          1b6df6@%%@NL@%
  10169. %@NL@%
  10170. %@2@%There's no limit to how complicated things can get, on account%@EH@%
  10171. of one thing always leading to another.%@NL@%
  10172. %@CR:CONSEQWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  10173.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  10174.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  10175. %@AS@%                                                              Consequences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10176. %@NL@%
  10177. %@NL@%
  10178. %@2@%Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons%@EH@%
  10179. of wise men.%@NL@%
  10180. %@CR:CONSEQHuxley2   @%%@NL@%
  10181.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  10182.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  10183. %@AS@%                                                              Consequences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10184. %@NL@%
  10185. %@NL@%
  10186. %@2@%Nothing is worth doing unless the consequences may be serious.%@NL@%
  10187. %@CR:CONSEQShaw      @%%@NL@%
  10188.                                                       Hypatia, %@AI@%Misalliance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10189.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  10190.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  10191. %@AS@%                                                              Consequences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10192. %@NL@%
  10193. %@NL@%
  10194. %@2@%That's the penalty we have to pay for our acts of foolishness - someone%@EH@%
  10195. else always suffers for them.%@NL@%
  10196. %@CR:CONSEQSutro     @%%@NL@%
  10197.                                                   Alfred Sutro (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  10198.                                                          British dramatist%@NL@%
  10199. %@AS@%                                                              Consequences%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10200. %@NL@%
  10201. %@NL@%
  10202. %@NL@%
  10203. %@1@%%@AS@%Conservatives%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10204. %@CR:CONSERVATIVES   @%%@NL@%
  10205. %@2@%See:%@QR:Conservatives@%%@NL@%
  10206.      Doubt: %@AB@%Strindberg%@AE@%%@BO:           b4780@%%@NL@%
  10207.      Political Parties: %@AB@%Amis%@AE@%%@BO:          1e997c@%; %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          1e9d77@%%@NL@%
  10208.      %@AB@%Tradition%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          28fbc5@%%@NL@%
  10209. %@NL@%
  10210. %@2@%One of the greatest pains to human nature is the pain of a%@EH@%
  10211. new idea.%@NL@%
  10212. %@CR:CONSERBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  10213.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  10214.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  10215. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10216. %@NL@%
  10217. %@NL@%
  10218. %@2@%What is conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried,%@EH@%
  10219. against the new and untried?%@NL@%
  10220. %@CR:CONSERLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  10221.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  10222.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  10223. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10224. %@NL@%
  10225. %@NL@%
  10226. %@2@%When it is not necessary to change, it is necessary not to%@EH@%
  10227. change.%@NL@%
  10228. %@CR:CONSERFalkland  @%%@NL@%
  10229.                                                  Lord Falkland (1610-1643)%@NL@%
  10230.                                                  English statesman, patron%@NL@%
  10231. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10232. %@NL@%
  10233. %@NL@%
  10234. %@2@%Conservative. A statesman who is enamored of existing evils,%@EH@%
  10235. as distinguished from a Liberal, who wishes to replace them with
  10236. others.%@NL@%
  10237. %@CR:CONSERBierce    @%%@NL@%
  10238.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  10239.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  10240. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10241. %@NL@%
  10242. %@NL@%
  10243. %@2@%A conservative is a man who is too cowardly to fight and too%@EH@%
  10244. fat to run.%@NL@%
  10245. %@CR:CONSERHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  10246.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  10247.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  10248. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10249. %@NL@%
  10250. %@NL@%
  10251. %@2@%Men are conservatives when they are least vigorous, or when%@EH@%
  10252. they are most luxurious. They are conservatives after dinner.%@NL@%
  10253. %@CR:CONSEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  10254.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  10255.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  10256. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10257. %@NL@%
  10258. %@NL@%
  10259.      %@2@%That man's the true Conservative%@NL@%
  10260.      Who lops the moulder'd branch away.%@NL@%
  10261. %@CR:CONSERTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  10262.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  10263.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10264. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10265. %@NL@%
  10266. %@NL@%
  10267. %@2@%The English never abolish anything. They put it in cold storage.%@NL@%
  10268. %@CR:CONSERWhitehead @%%@NL@%
  10269.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  10270.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  10271. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10272. %@NL@%
  10273. %@NL@%
  10274. %@2@%When a nation's young men are conservative, its funeral bell%@EH@%
  10275. is already rung.%@NL@%
  10276. %@CR:CONSERBeecher1  @%%@NL@%
  10277.                                             Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887)%@NL@%
  10278.                                         American clergyman, editor, writer%@NL@%
  10279. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10280. %@NL@%
  10281. %@NL@%
  10282. %@2@%Sir, we must beware of needless innovation, especially when%@EH@%
  10283. guided by logic.%@NL@%
  10284. %@CR:CONSERChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  10285.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  10286.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  10287. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10288. %@NL@%
  10289. %@NL@%
  10290. %@2@%Some fellows get credit for being conservative when they are%@EH@%
  10291. only stupid.%@NL@%
  10292. %@CR:CONSERHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  10293.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  10294.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  10295. %@AS@%                                                             Conservatives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10296. %@NL@%
  10297. %@NL@%
  10298. %@NL@%
  10299. %@1@%%@AS@%Consistency%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10300. %@CR:CONSISTENCY     @%%@NL@%
  10301. %@2@%%@QR:Consistency@%Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative.%@NL@%
  10302. %@CR:CONSISWilde     @%%@NL@%
  10303.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  10304.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  10305. %@AS@%                                                               Consistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10306. %@NL@%
  10307. %@NL@%
  10308. %@2@%A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored%@EH@%
  10309. by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.%@NL@%
  10310. %@CR:CONSISEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  10311.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  10312.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  10313. %@AS@%                                                               Consistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10314. %@NL@%
  10315. %@NL@%
  10316. %@2@%Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only%@EH@%
  10317. completely consistent people are the dead.%@NL@%
  10318. %@CR:CONSISHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  10319.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  10320.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10321. %@AS@%                                                               Consistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10322. %@NL@%
  10323. %@NL@%
  10324. %@NL@%
  10325. %@1@%%@AS@%The Constitution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10326. %@CR:THECONSTITUTION @%%@NL@%
  10327. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Constitution@%%@NL@%
  10328.      Inconsistency: %@AB@%Hardy%@AE@%%@BO:          149339@%%@NL@%
  10329. %@NL@%
  10330. %@2@%A Constitution should be short and obscure.%@NL@%
  10331. %@CR:THECONNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  10332.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  10333.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  10334. %@AS@%                                                          The Constitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10335. %@NL@%
  10336. %@NL@%
  10337. %@2@%Our constitution is an actual operation; everything appears%@EH@%
  10338. to promise that it will last; but in this world nothing is certain
  10339. but death and taxes.%@NL@%
  10340. %@CR:THECONFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  10341.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  10342.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  10343. %@AS@%                                                          The Constitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10344. %@NL@%
  10345. %@NL@%
  10346. %@2@%In questions of power, let no more be heard of confidence in%@EH@%
  10347. man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the constitution.%@NL@%
  10348. %@CR:THECONJefferson @%%@NL@%
  10349.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  10350.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  10351. %@AS@%                                                          The Constitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10352. %@NL@%
  10353. %@NL@%
  10354. %@NL@%
  10355. %@1@%%@AS@%The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10356. %@CR:THECONSUMERSOCIE@%%@NL@%
  10357. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Consumer Society@%%@NL@%
  10358.      Property: %@AB@%Lerner%@AE@%%@BO:          20aad4@%%@NL@%
  10359. %@NL@%
  10360. %@2@%Conspicuous consumption of valuable goods is a means of reputability%@EH@%
  10361. to the gentleman of leisure.%@NL@%
  10362. %@CR:THECONVeblen    @%%@NL@%
  10363.                                               Thorstein Veblen (1857-1929)%@NL@%
  10364.                                                  American social scientist%@NL@%
  10365. %@AS@%                                                      The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10366. %@NL@%
  10367. %@NL@%
  10368. %@2@%The power of consumer goods  . . .  has been engendered by the%@EH@%
  10369. so-called liberal and progressive demands of freedom, and, by appropriating
  10370. them, has emptied them of their meaning, and changed their nature.%@NL@%
  10371. %@CR:THECONPasolini  @%%@NL@%
  10372.                                            Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975)%@NL@%
  10373.                                            Italian film director, essayist%@NL@%
  10374. %@AS@%                                                      The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10375. %@NL@%
  10376. %@NL@%
  10377.      %@2@% . . .  Everything from toy guns that spark%@NL@%
  10378.      To flesh-colored Christs that glow in the dark%@NL@%
  10379.      It's easy to see without looking too far%@NL@%
  10380.      That not much is really sacred.%@NL@%
  10381. %@CR:THECONDylan     @%%@NL@%
  10382.                                                        Bob Dylan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  10383.                                                American singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  10384. %@AS@%                                                      The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10385. %@NL@%
  10386. %@NL@%
  10387. %@2@%With the supermarket as our temple and the singing commercial%@EH@%
  10388. as our litany, are we likely to fire the world with an irresistible
  10389. vision of America's exalted purposes and inspiring way of life?%@NL@%
  10390. %@CR:THECONStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  10391.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  10392.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  10393. %@AS@%                                                      The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10394. %@NL@%
  10395. %@NL@%
  10396. %@2@%Nowadays people know the price of everything and the value%@EH@%
  10397. of nothing.%@NL@%
  10398. %@CR:THECONWilde     @%%@NL@%
  10399.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  10400.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  10401. %@AS@%                                                      The Consumer Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10402. %@NL@%
  10403. %@NL@%
  10404. %@NL@%
  10405. %@1@%%@AS@%Contemporaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10406. %@CR:CONTEMPORARIES  @%%@NL@%
  10407. %@2@%%@QR:Contemporaries@%To have been alive with him was to have dined at the table%@EH@%
  10408. of history.%@NL@%
  10409. %@CR:CONTEMConnor    @%%@NL@%
  10410.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  10411.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  10412.                                                   of Sir Winston Churchill%@NL@%
  10413. %@AS@%                                                            Contemporaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10414. %@NL@%
  10415. %@NL@%
  10416. %@NL@%
  10417. %@1@%%@AS@%Contentment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10418. %@CR:CONTENTMENT     @%%@NL@%
  10419. %@2@%See:%@QR:Contentment@%%@NL@%
  10420.      %@AB@%Happiness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          120053@%%@NL@%
  10421. %@NL@%
  10422.      %@2@%That blessed mood%@NL@%
  10423.      In which the burthen of the mystery,%@NL@%
  10424.      In which the heavy and the weary weight%@NL@%
  10425.      Of all this unintelligible world%@NL@%
  10426.      Is lightened.%@NL@%
  10427. %@CR:CONTENWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  10428.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  10429.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10430. %@AS@%                                                               Contentment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10431. %@NL@%
  10432. %@NL@%
  10433.      %@2@%Tomorrow, do thy worst, for I have lived today.%@NL@%
  10434. %@CR:CONTENDryden    @%%@NL@%
  10435.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  10436.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  10437. %@AS@%                                                               Contentment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10438. %@NL@%
  10439. %@NL@%
  10440.      %@2@%%@AI@%Y mientras miserablemente%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10441.      %@AI@%se estan los otros abrasando%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10442.      %@AI@%en sed insaciable%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10443.      %@AI@%del no durable mando,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10444.      %@AI@%tendido yo a la sombra este cantando.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10445. %@NL@%
  10446. %@2@%And so, while others miserably pledge themselves to the
  10447. insatiable pursuit of ambition and brief power, I will be stretched
  10448. out in the shade, singing.%@NL@%
  10449. %@CR:CONTENLeon      @%%@NL@%
  10450.                                           Fray Luis de Leon (c. 1527-1591)%@NL@%
  10451.                                                               Spanish poet%@NL@%
  10452. %@AS@%                                                               Contentment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10453. %@NL@%
  10454. %@NL@%
  10455. %@2@%I have a most peaceable disposition. My desires are for a modest%@EH@%
  10456. hut, a thatched roof, but a good bed, good food, very fresh milk
  10457. and butter, flowers in front of my window and a few pretty trees
  10458. by my door. And should the good Lord wish to make me really happy,
  10459. he will allow me the pleasure of seeing about six or seven of
  10460. my enemies hanged upon those trees.%@NL@%
  10461. %@CR:CONTENHeine     @%%@NL@%
  10462.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  10463.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  10464. %@AS@%                                                               Contentment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10465. %@NL@%
  10466. %@NL@%
  10467. %@NL@%
  10468. %@1@%%@AS@%Controversy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10469. %@CR:CONTROVERSY     @%%@NL@%
  10470. %@2@%See:%@QR:Controversy@%%@NL@%
  10471.      Abuse: %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:            1b9c@%%@NL@%
  10472. %@NL@%
  10473. %@2@%Abuse is often of service. There is nothing so dangerous to%@EH@%
  10474. an author as silence. His name, like the shuttlecock, must be beat
  10475. backward and forward, or it falls to the ground.%@NL@%
  10476. %@CR:CONTROJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  10477.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  10478.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  10479. %@AS@%                                                               Controversy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10480. %@NL@%
  10481. %@NL@%
  10482. %@2@%When a thing ceases to be a subject of controversy, it ceases%@EH@%
  10483. to be a subject of interest.%@NL@%
  10484. %@CR:CONTROHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  10485.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  10486.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  10487. %@AS@%                                                               Controversy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10488. %@NL@%
  10489. %@NL@%
  10490. %@2@%Impartial. Unable to perceive any promise of personal advantage%@EH@%
  10491. from espousing either side of a controversy.%@NL@%
  10492. %@CR:CONTROBierce    @%%@NL@%
  10493.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  10494.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  10495. %@AS@%                                                               Controversy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10496. %@NL@%
  10497. %@NL@%
  10498. %@NL@%
  10499. %@1@%%@AS@%Convention%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10500. %@CR:CONVENTION      @%%@NL@%
  10501. %@2@%%@QR:Convention@%Nobody can live in society without conventions. The reason%@EH@%
  10502. why sensible people are as conventional as they can bear to be
  10503. is that conventionality saves so much time and thought and trouble
  10504. and social friction of one sort or another that it leaves them
  10505. much more leisure for freedom than unconventionality does.%@NL@%
  10506. %@CR:CONVENShaw      @%%@NL@%
  10507.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  10508.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  10509. %@AS@%                                                                Convention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10510. %@NL@%
  10511. %@NL@%
  10512. %@2@%Conventional people are roused to fury by departure from convention,%@EH@%
  10513. largely because they regard such departure as a criticism of themselves.%@NL@%
  10514. %@CR:CONVENRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  10515.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  10516.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  10517. %@AS@%                                                                Convention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10518. %@NL@%
  10519. %@NL@%
  10520. %@2@%There is nothing more conventional than the convention of 
  10521. unconventionality.%@NL@%
  10522. %@CR:CONVENBenson    @%%@NL@%
  10523.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  10524.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  10525. %@AS@%                                                                Convention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10526. %@NL@%
  10527. %@NL@%
  10528. %@NL@%
  10529. %@1@%%@AS@%Conversation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10530. %@CR:CONVERSATION    @%%@NL@%
  10531. %@2@%See:%@QR:Conversation@%%@NL@%
  10532.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@CF:DINNERBarrie1   @%; %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           a9989@%; %@AB@%Hitchcock%@AE@%%@BO:           aabd8@%%@NL@%
  10533.      Gentlemen: %@AB@%English proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          109fe1@%%@NL@%
  10534.      Dr. Johnson: %@AB@%Piozzi%@AE@%%@BO:          15f679@%%@NL@%
  10535.      Nostalgia: %@AB@%Cory%@AE@%%@BO:          1bf3d2@%%@NL@%
  10536.      Silence: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          252760@%%@NL@%
  10537.      Speeches: %@AB@%Moliere%@AE@%%@BO:          2670c8@%%@NL@%
  10538.      Wit: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:          2b7f46@%%@NL@%
  10539. %@NL@%
  10540. %@2@%With thee conversing I forget all time.%@NL@%
  10541. %@CR:CONVERMilton    @%%@NL@%
  10542.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  10543.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10544. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10545. %@NL@%
  10546. %@NL@%
  10547. %@2@%Talk to every woman as if you loved her, and to every man as%@EH@%
  10548. if he bored you, and at the end of your first season you will have
  10549. the reputation of possessing the most perfect social tact.%@NL@%
  10550. %@CR:CONVERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  10551.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  10552.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  10553. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10554. %@NL@%
  10555. %@NL@%
  10556. %@2@%Great talkers are so constituted that they do not know their%@EH@%
  10557. own thoughts until, on the tide of their particular gift, they
  10558. hear them issuing from their mouths.%@NL@%
  10559. %@CR:CONVERWilder2   @%%@NL@%
  10560.                                                Thornton Wilder (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  10561.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  10562. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10563. %@NL@%
  10564. %@NL@%
  10565. %@2@%Say nothing good of yourself, you will be distrusted; say nothing%@EH@%
  10566. bad of yourself, you will be taken at your word.%@NL@%
  10567. %@CR:CONVERRoux      @%%@NL@%
  10568.                                                    Joseph Roux (1834-1886)%@NL@%
  10569.                                                      French priest, writer%@NL@%
  10570. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10571. %@NL@%
  10572. %@NL@%
  10573. %@2@%Inquisitive people are merely funnels of conversation. They%@EH@%
  10574. do not take in anything for their own use, but merely to pass it
  10575. on to others.%@NL@%
  10576. %@CR:CONVERSteele    @%%@NL@%
  10577.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  10578.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  10579. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10580. %@NL@%
  10581. %@NL@%
  10582. %@2@%No man would listen to you talk if he didn't know it was his%@EH@%
  10583. turn next.%@NL@%
  10584. %@CR:CONVERHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  10585.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  10586.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  10587. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10588. %@NL@%
  10589. %@NL@%
  10590. %@2@%I find we are growing serious, and then we are in great danger%@EH@%
  10591. of being dull.%@NL@%
  10592. %@CR:CONVERCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  10593.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  10594.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  10595. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10596. %@NL@%
  10597. %@NL@%
  10598. %@2@%Sir, you have but two topics, yourself and me. I am sick of%@EH@%
  10599. both.%@NL@%
  10600. %@CR:CONVERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  10601.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  10602.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  10603. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10604. %@NL@%
  10605. %@NL@%
  10606. %@2@%We often forgive those who bore us, but we cannot forgive%@EH@%
  10607. those whom we bore.%@NL@%
  10608. %@CR:CONVERLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  10609.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  10610.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  10611. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10612. %@NL@%
  10613. %@NL@%
  10614. %@2@%Your ignorance cramps my conversation.%@NL@%
  10615. %@CR:CONVERHawkins   @%%@NL@%
  10616.                                           Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  10617.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  10618. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10619. %@NL@%
  10620. %@NL@%
  10621. %@2@%Silence is the unbearable repartee.%@NL@%
  10622. %@CR:CONVERChesterton@%%@NL@%
  10623.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  10624.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10625. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10626. %@NL@%
  10627. %@NL@%
  10628. %@2@%He speaks to Me as if I was a public meeting.%@NL@%
  10629. %@CR:CONVERQueenVicto@%%@NL@%
  10630.                                      Queen Victoria of England (1819-1901)%@NL@%
  10631.                                                           of Mr. Gladstone%@NL@%
  10632. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10633. %@NL@%
  10634. %@NL@%
  10635. %@2@%When we talk in company we lose our unique tone of voice, and%@EH@%
  10636. this leads us to make statements which in no way correspond to
  10637. our real thoughts.%@NL@%
  10638. %@CR:CONVERNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  10639.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  10640.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  10641. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10642. %@NL@%
  10643. %@NL@%
  10644. %@2@%Ideally I'd like to spend two evenings a week talking to Proust%@EH@%
  10645. and another conversing with the Holy Ghost.%@NL@%
  10646. %@CR:CONVEROBrien    @%%@NL@%
  10647.                                                     Edna O'Brien (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  10648.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  10649. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10650. %@NL@%
  10651. %@NL@%
  10652.      %@2@%And when you stick on conversation's burrs,%@NL@%
  10653.      Don't strew your pathway with those dreadful urs.%@NL@%
  10654. %@CR:CONVERHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  10655.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  10656.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  10657. %@AS@%                                                              Conversation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10658. %@NL@%
  10659. %@NL@%
  10660. %@NL@%
  10661. %@1@%%@AS@%Cooking%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10662. %@CR:COOKING         @%%@NL@%
  10663. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cooking@%%@NL@%
  10664.      Artists: %@AB@%Gauguin%@AE@%%@BO:           32da0@%%@NL@%
  10665.      Humanity: %@AB@%Jerrold%@AE@%%@BO:          13981c@%%@NL@%
  10666.      Royalty: %@AB@%Duke of Edinburgh%@AE@%%@BO:          2326c6@%%@NL@%
  10667.      Wives: %@AB@%Frost%@AE@%%@BO:          2b9f20@%; %@AB@%Meredith%@AE@%%@BO:          2b9d6e@%%@NL@%
  10668.      Women: %@AB@%Wolfe%@AE@%%@BO:          2be30a@%%@NL@%
  10669. %@NL@%
  10670.      %@2@%We may live without poetry, music and art;%@NL@%
  10671.      We may live without conscience, and live without heart;%@NL@%
  10672.      We may live without friends; we may live without books;%@NL@%
  10673.      But civilised man cannot live without cooks.%@NL@%
  10674. %@CR:COOKINBulwer    @%%@NL@%
  10675.                 Owen Meredith, Edward R. BulwerEarl of Lytton  (1831-1891)%@NL@%
  10676.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  10677. %@AS@%                                                                   Cooking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10678. %@NL@%
  10679. %@NL@%
  10680. %@2@%'Tis an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers.%@NL@%
  10681. %@CR:COOKINShakespear@%%@NL@%
  10682.                                                  Servant, %@AI@%Romeo and Juliet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10683.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  10684.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  10685. %@AS@%                                                                   Cooking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10686. %@NL@%
  10687. %@NL@%
  10688. %@2@%Be content to remember that those who can make omlettes properly%@EH@%
  10689. can do nothing else.%@NL@%
  10690. %@CR:COOKINBelloc    @%%@NL@%
  10691.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  10692.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  10693. %@AS@%                                                                   Cooking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10694. %@NL@%
  10695. %@NL@%
  10696. %@NL@%
  10697. %@1@%%@AS@%Correspondence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10698. %@CR:CORRESPONDENCE  @%%@NL@%
  10699. %@2@%See:%@QR:Correspondence@%%@NL@%
  10700.      Courtesy: %@AB@%Waugh%@AE@%%@BO:           8983c@%%@NL@%
  10701.      History: %@AB@%Acton%@AE@%%@BO:          12e6c2@%%@NL@%
  10702. %@NL@%
  10703. %@2@%As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far%@EH@%
  10704. country.%@NL@%
  10705. %@CR:CORRESBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  10706.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  10707. %@AS@%                                                            Correspondence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10708. %@NL@%
  10709. %@NL@%
  10710. %@2@%An intention to write never turns into a letter. A letter must%@EH@%
  10711. happen to one like a surprise, and one may not know where in the
  10712. day there was room for it to come into being.%@NL@%
  10713. %@CR:CORRESRilke     @%%@NL@%
  10714.                                             Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)%@NL@%
  10715.                                                                German poet%@NL@%
  10716. %@AS@%                                                            Correspondence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10717. %@NL@%
  10718. %@NL@%
  10719. %@2@%Letters give us great lives at their most characteristic, their%@EH@%
  10720. most glorious, and their most terrible moments. Here history and
  10721. biography meet.%@NL@%
  10722. %@CR:CORRESSchuster  @%%@NL@%
  10723.                                                        W. Lincoln Schuster%@NL@%
  10724.                                                         American publisher%@NL@%
  10725. %@AS@%                                                            Correspondence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10726. %@NL@%
  10727. %@NL@%
  10728. %@2@%His letters teach the morals of a whore, and the manners of%@EH@%
  10729. a dancing master.%@NL@%
  10730. %@CR:CORRESJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  10731.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  10732.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  10733.                                                       of Lord Chesterfield%@NL@%
  10734. %@AS@%                                                            Correspondence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10735. %@NL@%
  10736. %@NL@%
  10737. %@NL@%
  10738. %@1@%%@AS@%Corruption%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10739. %@CR:CORRUPTION      @%%@NL@%
  10740. %@2@%See:%@QR:Corruption@%%@NL@%
  10741.      Elections: %@AB@%Kennedy%@AE@%%@BO:           c43b9@%%@NL@%
  10742.      Journalism: %@AB@%Wolfe%@AE@%%@BO:          161b81@%%@NL@%
  10743.      Secrets: %@AB@%Wilson%@AE@%%@BO:          240818@%%@NL@%
  10744.      Tradition: %@AB@%Book of Common Prayer%@AE@%%@BO:          290640@%%@NL@%
  10745.      Wealth: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          2ae509@%%@NL@%
  10746. %@NL@%
  10747. %@2@%God is merciful and men are bribable, and that's how his will%@EH@%
  10748. is done on earth as it is in Heaven. Corruption is our only hope.
  10749. As long as there's corruption, there'll be merciful judges and
  10750. even the innocent may get off.%@NL@%
  10751. %@CR:CORRUPBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  10752.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  10753.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  10754.                                                        trans. Eric Bentley%@NL@%
  10755. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10756. %@NL@%
  10757. %@NL@%
  10758. %@2@%The jingling of the guinea helps the hurt that honour feels.%@NL@%
  10759. %@CR:CORRUPTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  10760.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  10761.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10762. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10763. %@NL@%
  10764. %@NL@%
  10765. %@2@%When I want to buy up any politician I always find the anti-monopolists%@EH@%
  10766. the most purchasable - they don't come so high.%@NL@%
  10767. %@CR:CORRUPVanderbilt@%%@NL@%
  10768.                                             William Vanderbilt (1821-1885)%@NL@%
  10769.                                                     American industrialist%@NL@%
  10770. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10771. %@NL@%
  10772. %@NL@%
  10773. %@2@%Don't take a nickel, just hand them your business card.%@NL@%
  10774. %@CR:CORRUPDaley     @%%@NL@%
  10775.                                               Richard M. Daley (1902-1975)%@NL@%
  10776.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  10777. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10778. %@NL@%
  10779. %@NL@%
  10780. %@2@%An upright minister asks what recommends a man; a corrupt minister,%@EH@%
  10781. who.%@NL@%
  10782. %@CR:CORRUPColton    @%%@NL@%
  10783.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  10784.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  10785. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10786. %@NL@%
  10787. %@NL@%
  10788. %@2@%I am against government by crony.%@NL@%
  10789. %@CR:CORRUPIckes     @%%@NL@%
  10790.                                                Harold L. Ickes (1874-1952)%@NL@%
  10791.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  10792.                                                         resignation speech%@NL@%
  10793. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10794. %@NL@%
  10795. %@NL@%
  10796. %@2@%Corruption  . . .  the most infallible symptom of constitutional%@EH@%
  10797. liberty.%@NL@%
  10798. %@CR:CORRUPGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  10799.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  10800.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  10801. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10802. %@NL@%
  10803. %@NL@%
  10804. %@2@%I have often noticed that a bribe  . . .  has that effect - it%@EH@%
  10805. changes a relation. The man who offers a bribe gives away a little
  10806. of his own importance; the bribe once accepted, he becomes the
  10807. inferior, like a man who has paid for a woman.%@NL@%
  10808. %@CR:CORRUPGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  10809.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  10810.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  10811. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10812. %@NL@%
  10813. %@NL@%
  10814. %@2@%The sun shineth upon the dunghill, and is not corrupted.%@NL@%
  10815. %@CR:CORRUPLyly      @%%@NL@%
  10816.                                                      John Lyly (1554-1606)%@NL@%
  10817.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10818. %@AS@%                                                                Corruption%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10819. %@NL@%
  10820. %@NL@%
  10821. %@NL@%
  10822. %@1@%%@AS@%The Cosmos%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10823. %@CR:THECOSMOS       @%%@NL@%
  10824. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Cosmos@%%@NL@%
  10825.      Chess: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:           5f1ec@%%@NL@%
  10826.      Coincidence: %@AB@%Priestley%@AE@%%@BO:           73083@%%@NL@%
  10827. %@NL@%
  10828. %@2@%The cosmos is about the smallest hole that a man can hide his%@EH@%
  10829. head in.%@NL@%
  10830. %@CR:THECOSChesterton@%%@NL@%
  10831.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  10832.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10833. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10834. %@NL@%
  10835. %@NL@%
  10836. %@2@%Nothing puzzles me more than time and space; and yet nothing%@EH@%
  10837. troubles me less, as I never think about them.%@NL@%
  10838. %@CR:THECOSLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  10839.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  10840.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  10841. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10842. %@NL@%
  10843. %@NL@%
  10844. %@2@%I don't pretend to understand the universe, it is a great deal%@EH@%
  10845. bigger than I am.%@NL@%
  10846. %@CR:THECOSCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  10847.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  10848.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  10849. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10850. %@NL@%
  10851. %@NL@%
  10852. %@2@%The universe is one of God's thoughts.%@NL@%
  10853. %@CR:THECOSSchiller  @%%@NL@%
  10854.                                         Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805)%@NL@%
  10855.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  10856. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10857. %@NL@%
  10858. %@NL@%
  10859. %@2@%Law rules throughout the universe, a Law which is not intelligent%@EH@%
  10860. but Intelligence.%@NL@%
  10861. %@CR:THECOSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  10862.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  10863.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  10864. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10865. %@NL@%
  10866. %@NL@%
  10867.      %@2@%Thou canst not stir a flower%@NL@%
  10868.      Without troubling of a star.%@NL@%
  10869. %@CR:THECOSThompson1 @%%@NL@%
  10870.                                               Francis Thompson (1859-1907)%@NL@%
  10871.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10872. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10873. %@NL@%
  10874. %@NL@%
  10875. %@2@%I rather feel that deep in the soul of mankind there is a reflection%@EH@%
  10876. as on the surface of a mirror, of a mirror-calm lake, of the beauty
  10877. and harmony of the universe.%@NL@%
  10878. %@CR:THECOSPrinceOfWa@%%@NL@%
  10879.                                         Charles, Prince of Wales (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  10880. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10881. %@NL@%
  10882. %@NL@%
  10883. %@2@%The cosmos is a gigantic fly-wheel making ten thousand revolutions%@EH@%
  10884. a minute. Man is a sick fly taking a dizzy ride on it. Religion
  10885. is the theory that the wheel was designed and set spinning to
  10886. give him the ride.%@NL@%
  10887. %@CR:THECOSMencken   @%%@NL@%
  10888.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  10889.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  10890. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10891. %@NL@%
  10892. %@NL@%
  10893.      %@2@%'Tis very puzzling on the brink%@NL@%
  10894.      Of what is called Eternity to stare,%@NL@%
  10895.      And know more of what is %@AI@%here,%@AE@% than %@AI@%there.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10896. %@CR:THECOSByron2    @%%@NL@%
  10897.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  10898.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10899. %@AS@%                                                                The Cosmos%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10900. %@NL@%
  10901. %@NL@%
  10902. %@NL@%
  10903. %@1@%%@AS@%Country Life%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10904. %@CR:COUNTRYLIFE     @%%@NL@%
  10905. %@2@%See:%@QR:Country Life@%%@NL@%
  10906.      City Life: %@AB@%Colton%@AE@%%@BO:           6da6e@%; %@AB@%Cowley%@AE@%%@BO:           6cd89@%%@NL@%
  10907. %@NL@%
  10908.      %@2@%I live not in myself, but I become%@NL@%
  10909.      Portion of that around me; and to me%@NL@%
  10910.      High mountains are a feeling, but the hum%@NL@%
  10911.      Of human cities torture.%@NL@%
  10912. %@CR:COUNTRByron2    @%%@NL@%
  10913.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  10914.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  10915. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10916. %@NL@%
  10917. %@NL@%
  10918. %@2@%Our present city populations are so savage that they drive%@EH@%
  10919. even the most public-spirited country people to put up barbed wire
  10920. all over the place. They are no more to be trusted with trees and
  10921. animals than a baby can be trusted with a butterfly.%@NL@%
  10922. %@CR:COUNTRShaw      @%%@NL@%
  10923.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  10924.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  10925. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10926. %@NL@%
  10927. %@NL@%
  10928. %@2@%I have no relish for the country; it is a kind of healthy grave.%@NL@%
  10929. %@CR:COUNTRSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  10930.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  10931.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  10932. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10933. %@NL@%
  10934. %@NL@%
  10935. %@2@%Anybody can be good in the country; there are no temptations%@EH@%
  10936. there.%@NL@%
  10937. %@CR:COUNTRWilde     @%%@NL@%
  10938.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  10939.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  10940. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10941. %@NL@%
  10942. %@NL@%
  10943. %@2@%The lowest and vilest alleys of London do not present a more%@EH@%
  10944. dreadful record of sin than does the smiling and beautiful countryside.%@NL@%
  10945. %@CR:COUNTRDoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  10946.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  10947.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  10948. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10949. %@NL@%
  10950. %@NL@%
  10951. %@2@%There is nothing good to be had in the country, or, if there%@EH@%
  10952. is, they will not let you have it.%@NL@%
  10953. %@CR:COUNTRHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  10954.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  10955.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  10956. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10957. %@NL@%
  10958. %@NL@%
  10959. %@2@%I nauseate walking; 'tis a country diversion; I loathe the%@EH@%
  10960. country.%@NL@%
  10961. %@CR:COUNTRCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  10962.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  10963.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  10964. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10965. %@NL@%
  10966. %@NL@%
  10967. %@2@%Separate from the pleasure of your company, I don't much care%@EH@%
  10968. if I never see another mountain in my life.%@NL@%
  10969. %@CR:COUNTRLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  10970.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  10971.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  10972.                                                              to Wordsworth%@NL@%
  10973. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10974. %@NL@%
  10975. %@NL@%
  10976. %@2@%Oh lord! I don't know which is the worst of the country, the%@EH@%
  10977. walking or the sitting at home with nothing to do.%@NL@%
  10978. %@CR:COUNTRShaw      @%%@NL@%
  10979.                                      Mrs. Warren, %@AI@%Mrs. Warren's Profession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10980.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  10981.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  10982. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10983. %@NL@%
  10984. %@NL@%
  10985. %@2@%It is quiet here and restful and the air is delicious. There%@EH@%
  10986. are gardens everywhere, nightingales sing in the gardens and police
  10987. spies lie in the bushes.%@NL@%
  10988. %@CR:COUNTRGorky     @%%@NL@%
  10989.                                                    Maxim Gorky (1868-1936)%@NL@%
  10990.                                                             Russian writer%@NL@%
  10991. %@AS@%                                                              Country Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  10992. %@NL@%
  10993. %@NL@%
  10994. %@NL@%
  10995. %@1@%%@AS@%Country Music%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  10996. %@CR:COUNTRYMUSIC    @%%@NL@%
  10997. %@2@%%@QR:Country Music@%I have long harboured a suspicion that most country songwriters%@EH@%
  10998. moonlight as speechwriters for President Reagan or scriptwriters
  10999. for "Dallas," since they share a desire to reduce all life to
  11000. the dimensions of a B-movie.%@NL@%
  11001. %@CR:COUNTRLashmar   @%%@NL@%
  11002.                                                               Paul Lashmar%@NL@%
  11003.                                                             %@AB@%Observer,%@AE@% 1986%@NL@%
  11004. %@AS@%                                                             Country Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11005. %@NL@%
  11006. %@NL@%
  11007. %@NL@%
  11008. %@1@%%@AS@%Courage%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11009. %@CR:COURAGE         @%%@NL@%
  11010. %@2@%%@QR:Courage@%Courage is almost a contradiction in terms. It means a strong%@EH@%
  11011. desire to live taking the form of a readiness to die.%@NL@%
  11012. %@CR:COURAGChesterton@%%@NL@%
  11013.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  11014.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11015. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11016. %@NL@%
  11017. %@NL@%
  11018. %@2@%There is no such thing as bravery; only degrees of fear.%@NL@%
  11019. %@CR:COURAGWainwright@%%@NL@%
  11020.                                                  John Wainwright (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  11021.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  11022. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11023. %@NL@%
  11024. %@NL@%
  11025. %@2@%A great part of courage is the courage of having done the thing%@EH@%
  11026. before.%@NL@%
  11027. %@CR:COURAGEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  11028.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  11029.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  11030. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11031. %@NL@%
  11032. %@NL@%
  11033. %@2@%Perfect courage is to do without witnesses what one would be%@EH@%
  11034. capable of doing with the world looking on.%@NL@%
  11035. %@CR:COURAGLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  11036.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  11037.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  11038. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11039. %@NL@%
  11040. %@NL@%
  11041. %@2@%Courage is a quality so necessary for maintaining virtue that%@EH@%
  11042. it is always respected, even when it is associated with vice.%@NL@%
  11043. %@CR:COURAGJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  11044.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  11045.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  11046. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11047. %@NL@%
  11048. %@NL@%
  11049. %@2@%Fortunately for themselves and the world, nearly all men are%@EH@%
  11050. cowards and dare not act on what they believe. Nearly all our disasters
  11051. come of a few fools having the "courage of their convictions."%@NL@%
  11052. %@CR:COURAGPatmore   @%%@NL@%
  11053.                                               Coventry Patmore (1823-1896)%@NL@%
  11054.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11055. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11056. %@NL@%
  11057. %@NL@%
  11058. %@2@%"I'm very brave generally," he went on in a low voice: "only%@EH@%
  11059. today I happen to have a headache."%@NL@%
  11060. %@CR:COURAGCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  11061.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  11062.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  11063. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11064. %@NL@%
  11065. %@NL@%
  11066. %@2@%Until the day of his death, no man can be sure of his courage.%@NL@%
  11067. %@CR:COURAGAnouilh   @%%@NL@%
  11068.                                                   Jean Anouilh (1910-1987)%@NL@%
  11069.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  11070. %@AS@%                                                                   Courage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11071. %@NL@%
  11072. %@NL@%
  11073. %@NL@%
  11074. %@1@%%@AS@%Courtesy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11075. %@CR:COURTESY        @%%@NL@%
  11076. %@2@%See:%@QR:Courtesy@%%@NL@%
  11077.      %@AB@%Manners%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          190cf1@%%@NL@%
  11078. %@NL@%
  11079. %@2@%We cannot always oblige, but we can always speak obligingly.%@NL@%
  11080. %@CR:COURTEVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  11081.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  11082.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  11083. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11084. %@NL@%
  11085. %@NL@%
  11086. %@2@%Politeness is good nature regulated by good sense.%@NL@%
  11087. %@CR:COURTESmith8    @%%@NL@%
  11088.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  11089.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  11090. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11091. %@NL@%
  11092. %@NL@%
  11093. %@2@%Politeness is the art of choosing among one's real thoughts.%@NL@%
  11094. %@CR:COURTEStevens1  @%%@NL@%
  11095.                                                   Abel Stevens (1815-1897)%@NL@%
  11096.                                                 American clergyman, editor%@NL@%
  11097. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11098. %@NL@%
  11099. %@NL@%
  11100. %@2@%There can be no defence like elaborate courtesy.%@NL@%
  11101. %@CR:COURTELucas1    @%%@NL@%
  11102.                                                    E. V. Lucas (1868-1938)%@NL@%
  11103.                                               British journalist, essayist%@NL@%
  11104. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11105. %@NL@%
  11106. %@NL@%
  11107. %@2@%The civilities of the great are never thrown away.%@NL@%
  11108. %@CR:COURTEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  11109.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  11110.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  11111. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11112. %@NL@%
  11113. %@NL@%
  11114. %@2@%It is true there are many very polite men, but none that I%@EH@%
  11115. ever heard of who were not either fascinating women or obeying
  11116. them.%@NL@%
  11117. %@CR:COURTEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  11118.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  11119.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11120. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11121. %@NL@%
  11122. %@NL@%
  11123. %@2@%It is wise to apply the oil of refined politeness to the mechanism%@EH@%
  11124. of friendship.%@NL@%
  11125. %@CR:COURTEColette   @%%@NL@%
  11126.                                                        Colette (1873-1954)%@NL@%
  11127.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  11128. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11129. %@NL@%
  11130. %@NL@%
  11131. %@2@%The English are polite by telling lies. The Americans are polite%@EH@%
  11132. by telling the truth.%@NL@%
  11133. %@CR:COURTEBradbury  @%%@NL@%
  11134.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  11135.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  11136. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11137. %@NL@%
  11138. %@NL@%
  11139. %@2@%His courtesy was somewhat extravagant. He would write and thank%@EH@%
  11140. people who wrote to thank him for wedding presents and when he
  11141. encountered anyone as punctilious as himself the correspondence
  11142. ended only with death.%@NL@%
  11143. %@CR:COURTEWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  11144.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  11145.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  11146. %@AS@%                                                                  Courtesy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11147. %@NL@%
  11148. %@NL@%
  11149. %@NL@%
  11150. %@1@%%@AS@%Cowardice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11151. %@CR:COWARDICE       @%%@NL@%
  11152. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cowardice@%%@NL@%
  11153.      Heroes: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          12b08f@%%@NL@%
  11154.      Humility: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          13c2a3@%%@NL@%
  11155.      Temptation: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          285024@%%@NL@%
  11156. %@NL@%
  11157. %@2@%A cowardly act! What do I care about that? You may be sure%@EH@%
  11158. that I should never fear to commit one if it were to my advantage.%@NL@%
  11159. %@CR:COWARDNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  11160.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  11161.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  11162. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11163. %@NL@%
  11164. %@NL@%
  11165. %@2@%For all men would be cowards if they durst.%@NL@%
  11166. %@CR:COWARDWilmot    @%%@NL@%
  11167.                                 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680)%@NL@%
  11168.                                                     English courtier, poet%@NL@%
  11169. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11170. %@NL@%
  11171. %@NL@%
  11172. %@2@%Cowardice, as distinguished from panic, is almost always simply%@EH@%
  11173. a lack of ability to suspend the functioning of the imagination.%@NL@%
  11174. %@CR:COWARDHemingway @%%@NL@%
  11175.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  11176.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  11177. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11178. %@NL@%
  11179. %@NL@%
  11180. %@2@%I'm a hero with coward's legs.%@NL@%
  11181. %@CR:COWARDMilligan  @%%@NL@%
  11182.                                                   Spike Milligan (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  11183.                                          British comedian, humorous writer%@NL@%
  11184. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11185. %@NL@%
  11186. %@NL@%
  11187. %@2@%The last thing a woman will consent to discover in a man whom%@EH@%
  11188. she loves or on whom she simply depends, is want of courage.%@NL@%
  11189. %@CR:COWARDConrad    @%%@NL@%
  11190.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  11191.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  11192. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11193. %@NL@%
  11194. %@NL@%
  11195. %@2@%If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.%@NL@%
  11196. %@CR:COWARDTruman    @%%@NL@%
  11197.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  11198.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  11199. %@AS@%                                                                 Cowardice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11200. %@NL@%
  11201. %@NL@%
  11202. %@NL@%
  11203. %@1@%%@AS@%Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11204. %@CR:CRAFTSMANSHIP   @%%@NL@%
  11205. %@2@%See:%@QR:Craftsmanship@%%@NL@%
  11206.      Doctors: %@AB@%Hippocrates%@AE@%%@BO:           b2084@%%@NL@%
  11207. %@NL@%
  11208. %@2@%Nothing should be made by man's labour which is not worth making,%@EH@%
  11209. or which must be made by labour degrading to the makers.%@NL@%
  11210. %@CR:CRAFTSMorris2   @%%@NL@%
  11211.                                                 William Morris (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  11212.                                            English artist, writer, printer%@NL@%
  11213. %@AS@%                                                             Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11214. %@NL@%
  11215. %@NL@%
  11216. %@2@%There is hardly anything in the world that some man cannot%@EH@%
  11217. make a little worse and sell a little cheaper.%@NL@%
  11218. %@CR:CRAFTSRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  11219.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  11220.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  11221. %@AS@%                                                             Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11222. %@NL@%
  11223. %@NL@%
  11224. %@2@%A man cannot make a pair of shoes rightly unless he do it in%@EH@%
  11225. a devout manner.%@NL@%
  11226. %@CR:CRAFTSCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  11227.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  11228.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  11229. %@AS@%                                                             Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11230. %@NL@%
  11231. %@NL@%
  11232. %@2@%Mastery is not something that strikes in an instant, like a%@EH@%
  11233. thunderbolt, but a gathering power that moves steadily through
  11234. time, like weather.%@NL@%
  11235. %@CR:CRAFTSGardner2  @%%@NL@%
  11236.                                                   John Gardner (1933-1982)%@NL@%
  11237.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  11238. %@AS@%                                                             Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11239. %@NL@%
  11240. %@NL@%
  11241. %@2@%No man who is occupied in doing a very difficult thing, and%@EH@%
  11242. doing it very well, ever loses his self-respect.%@NL@%
  11243. %@CR:CRAFTSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  11244.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  11245.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  11246. %@AS@%                                                             Craftsmanship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11247. %@NL@%
  11248. %@NL@%
  11249. %@NL@%
  11250. %@1@%%@AS@%Creation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11251. %@CR:CREATION        @%%@NL@%
  11252. %@2@%%@QR:Creation@%God's first creature, which was light.%@NL@%
  11253. %@CR:CREATIBacon     @%%@NL@%
  11254.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  11255.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  11256. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11257. %@NL@%
  11258. %@NL@%
  11259. %@2@%And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and%@EH@%
  11260. breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a
  11261. living soul.%@NL@%
  11262. %@CR:CREATIBibleGenes@%%@NL@%
  11263.                                                             Bible, Genesis%@NL@%
  11264. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11265. %@NL@%
  11266. %@NL@%
  11267. %@2@%God created Adam lord of all living creatures, but Eve spoiled%@EH@%
  11268. it all.%@NL@%
  11269. %@CR:CREATILuther    @%%@NL@%
  11270.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  11271.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  11272. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11273. %@NL@%
  11274. %@NL@%
  11275. %@2@%The world is a botched job.%@NL@%
  11276. %@CR:CREATIMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  11277.                                           Gabriel Garcia Marquez (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  11278.                                                           Colombian writer%@NL@%
  11279. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11280. %@NL@%
  11281. %@NL@%
  11282. %@2@%Man was created a little lower than the angels, and has been%@EH@%
  11283. getting a little lower ever since.%@NL@%
  11284. %@CR:CREATIBillings  @%%@NL@%
  11285.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  11286.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  11287. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11288. %@NL@%
  11289. %@NL@%
  11290.      %@2@%God made man merely to hear some praise%@NL@%
  11291.      Of what he'd done on those Five%@NL@%
  11292.      Days.%@NL@%
  11293. %@CR:CREATIMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  11294.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  11295.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  11296. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11297. %@NL@%
  11298. %@NL@%
  11299. %@2@%If God hadn't rested on Sunday, he might have had time to finish%@EH@%
  11300. off the world.%@NL@%
  11301. %@CR:CREATIMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  11302.                                           Gabriel Garcia Marquez (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  11303.                                                           Colombian writer%@NL@%
  11304. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11305. %@NL@%
  11306. %@NL@%
  11307.      %@2@%Thou didst create the night, but I made the lamp.%@NL@%
  11308.      Thou didst create clay, but I made the cup.%@NL@%
  11309.      Thou didst create the deserts, mountains and forests,%@NL@%
  11310.      I produced the orchards, gardens and groves.%@NL@%
  11311.      It is I who made the glass out of stone,%@NL@%
  11312.      And it is I who turn a poison into an antidote.%@NL@%
  11313. %@CR:CREATIMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  11314.                                                        Urdu poet (unknown)%@NL@%
  11315. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11316. %@NL@%
  11317. %@NL@%
  11318. %@2@%Everyone is as God made him, and often a great deal worse.%@NL@%
  11319. %@CR:CREATICervantes @%%@NL@%
  11320.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  11321.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11322. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11323. %@NL@%
  11324. %@NL@%
  11325. %@2@%I sometimes think that God in creating man somewhat overestimated%@EH@%
  11326. his ability.%@NL@%
  11327. %@CR:CREATIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  11328.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  11329.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  11330. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11331. %@NL@%
  11332. %@NL@%
  11333. %@2@%We have no reason to suppose that we are the Creator's last%@EH@%
  11334. word.%@NL@%
  11335. %@CR:CREATIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  11336.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  11337.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  11338. %@AS@%                                                                  Creation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11339. %@NL@%
  11340. %@NL@%
  11341. %@NL@%
  11342. %@1@%%@AS@%Creeds%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11343. %@CR:CREEDS          @%%@NL@%
  11344. %@2@%See:%@QR:Creeds@%%@NL@%
  11345.      %@AB@%Belief%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3cdd4@%%@NL@%
  11346.      Science: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          23c4ac@%%@NL@%
  11347. %@NL@%
  11348. %@2@%I believe in one God and no more, and I hope for happiness%@EH@%
  11349. beyond this life. I believe in the equality of man; and I believe
  11350. that religious duties consist in doing justice, loving mercy, and
  11351. endeavoring to make our fellow-creatures happy.%@NL@%
  11352. %@CR:CREEDSPaine     @%%@NL@%
  11353.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  11354.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  11355. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11356. %@NL@%
  11357. %@NL@%
  11358. %@2@%We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created%@EH@%
  11359. equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
  11360. rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
  11361. happiness.%@NL@%
  11362. %@CR:CREEDSJefferson @%%@NL@%
  11363.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  11364.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  11365. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11366. %@NL@%
  11367. %@NL@%
  11368. %@2@%A man must not swallow more beliefs than he can digest.%@NL@%
  11369. %@CR:CREEDSEllis     @%%@NL@%
  11370.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  11371.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  11372. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11373. %@NL@%
  11374. %@NL@%
  11375. %@2@%I believe in Michelangelo, Velasquez, and Rembrandt; in the%@EH@%
  11376. might of design, the mystery of colour, the redemption of all things
  11377. by Beauty everlasting; and the message of Art that has made these
  11378. hands blessed. Amen. Amen.%@NL@%
  11379. %@CR:CREEDSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  11380.                                              Dubedat, %@AI@%The Doctor's Dilemma%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11381.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  11382.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  11383. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11384. %@NL@%
  11385. %@NL@%
  11386. %@2@%What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed,%@EH@%
  11387. but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.%@NL@%
  11388. %@CR:CREEDSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  11389.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  11390.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  11391. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11392. %@NL@%
  11393. %@NL@%
  11394.      %@2@%When suave politeness, tempering bigot zeal,%@NL@%
  11395.      Corrected "I believe" to "One does feel."%@NL@%
  11396. %@CR:CREEDSKnox1     @%%@NL@%
  11397.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  11398.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  11399. %@AS@%                                                                    Creeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11400. %@NL@%
  11401. %@NL@%
  11402. %@NL@%
  11403. %@1@%%@AS@%Cricket%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11404. %@CR:CRICKET         @%%@NL@%
  11405. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cricket@%%@NL@%
  11406.      Sport: %@AB@%Stoppard%@AE@%%@BO:          269b1d@%%@NL@%
  11407. %@NL@%
  11408. %@2@%Casting a ball at three straight sticks and defending the same%@EH@%
  11409. with a fourth.%@NL@%
  11410. %@CR:CRICKEKipling   @%%@NL@%
  11411.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  11412.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11413. %@AS@%                                                                   Cricket%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11414. %@NL@%
  11415. %@NL@%
  11416. %@2@%If Stalin had learned to play cricket the world might now be%@EH@%
  11417. a better place to live in.%@NL@%
  11418. %@CR:CRICKEDowney    @%%@NL@%
  11419.                                                  Dr. R. Downey (1881-1953)%@NL@%
  11420.                                                    Archbishop of Liverpool%@NL@%
  11421. %@AS@%                                                                   Cricket%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11422. %@NL@%
  11423. %@NL@%
  11424. %@NL@%
  11425. %@1@%%@AS@%Crime%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11426. %@CR:CRIME           @%%@NL@%
  11427. %@2@%See:%@QR:Crime@%%@NL@%
  11428.      Honesty: %@AB@%Shenstone%@AE@%%@BO:          133483@%%@NL@%
  11429.      Poverty: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:          1f4ff5@%%@NL@%
  11430.      Property: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          20b19a@%%@NL@%
  11431.      Sin: %@AB@%Fletcher%@AE@%%@BO:          253530@%%@NL@%
  11432.      Villains: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          2a207b@%%@NL@%
  11433. %@NL@%
  11434. %@2@%Money is the fruit of evil as often as the root of it.%@NL@%
  11435. %@CR:CRIME Fielding  @%%@NL@%
  11436.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  11437.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  11438. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11439. %@NL@%
  11440. %@NL@%
  11441. %@2@%Crimes, like virtues, are their own rewards.%@NL@%
  11442. %@CR:CRIME Farquhar  @%%@NL@%
  11443.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  11444.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  11445. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11446. %@NL@%
  11447. %@NL@%
  11448. %@2@%There are crimes which become innocent and even glorious through%@EH@%
  11449. their splendour, number, and excess.%@NL@%
  11450. %@CR:CRIME LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  11451.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  11452.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  11453. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11454. %@NL@%
  11455. %@NL@%
  11456. %@2@%Successful crimes alone are justified.%@NL@%
  11457. %@CR:CRIME Dryden    @%%@NL@%
  11458.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  11459.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  11460. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11461. %@NL@%
  11462. %@NL@%
  11463. %@2@%He threatens many that hath injured one.%@NL@%
  11464. %@CR:CRIME Jonson    @%%@NL@%
  11465.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  11466.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11467. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11468. %@NL@%
  11469. %@NL@%
  11470. %@2@%Abscond. To "move" in a mysterious way, commonly with the%@EH@%
  11471. property of another.%@NL@%
  11472. %@CR:CRIME Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  11473.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  11474.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  11475. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11476. %@NL@%
  11477. %@NL@%
  11478. %@2@%The thief. Once committed beyond a certain point he should%@EH@%
  11479. not worry himself too much about not being a thief any more. Thieving
  11480. is God's message to him. Let him try and be a good thief.%@NL@%
  11481. %@CR:CRIME Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  11482.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  11483.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11484. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11485. %@NL@%
  11486. %@NL@%
  11487. %@2@%A thief believes everybody steals.%@NL@%
  11488. %@CR:CRIME Howe1     @%%@NL@%
  11489.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  11490.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  11491. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11492. %@NL@%
  11493. %@NL@%
  11494. %@2@%A burglar who respects his art always takes his time before%@EH@%
  11495. taking anything else.%@NL@%
  11496. %@CR:CRIME Henry1    @%%@NL@%
  11497.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  11498.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  11499. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11500. %@NL@%
  11501. %@NL@%
  11502. %@2@%%@AI@%Crimine ab uno disce omnis.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  11503. From a single crime know the nation.%@NL@%
  11504. %@CR:CRIME Virgil    @%%@NL@%
  11505.                                                          Virgil (70-19 BC)%@NL@%
  11506.                                                                 Roman poet%@NL@%
  11507. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11508. %@NL@%
  11509. %@NL@%
  11510. %@2@%Crimes of which a people is ashamed constitute its real history.%@EH@%
  11511. The same is true of man.%@NL@%
  11512. %@CR:CRIME Genet     @%%@NL@%
  11513.                                                     Jean Genet (1910-1986)%@NL@%
  11514.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  11515. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11516. %@NL@%
  11517. %@NL@%
  11518. %@2@%Far more university graduates are becoming criminals every%@EH@%
  11519. year than are becoming policemen.%@NL@%
  11520. %@CR:CRIME Goodhart1 @%%@NL@%
  11521.                                                  Philip Goodhart (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  11522.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  11523. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11524. %@NL@%
  11525. %@NL@%
  11526. %@2@%When rich villains have need of poor villains, poor ones may%@EH@%
  11527. make what price they will.%@NL@%
  11528. %@CR:CRIME Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  11529.                                           Borachio, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11530.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  11531.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11532. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11533. %@NL@%
  11534. %@NL@%
  11535. %@2@%If weakness may excuse, what murderer, what traitor, parricide,%@EH@%
  11536. incestuous, sacrilegious, but may plead it? All wickedness is weakness.%@NL@%
  11537. %@CR:CRIME Milton    @%%@NL@%
  11538.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  11539.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11540. %@AS@%                                                                     Crime%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11541. %@NL@%
  11542. %@NL@%
  11543. %@NL@%
  11544. %@1@%%@AS@%Crises%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11545. %@CR:CRISES          @%%@NL@%
  11546. %@2@%%@QR:Crises@%The time is out of joint. O cursed spite,%@NL@%
  11547.      That ever I was born to set it right!%@NL@%
  11548. %@CR:CRISESShakespear@%%@NL@%
  11549.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11550.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  11551.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11552. %@AS@%                                                                    Crises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11553. %@NL@%
  11554. %@NL@%
  11555. %@2@%There can't be a crisis next week. My schedule is already full.%@NL@%
  11556. %@CR:CRISESKissinger @%%@NL@%
  11557.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  11558.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  11559. %@AS@%                                                                    Crises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11560. %@NL@%
  11561. %@NL@%
  11562. %@2@%The situation in Germany is serious but not hopeless; the situation%@EH@%
  11563. in Austria is hopeless but not serious.%@NL@%
  11564. %@CR:CRISESKissinger @%%@NL@%
  11565.                Austrian proverb collected by Franklin P. Adams (1881-1960)%@NL@%
  11566. %@AS@%                                                                    Crises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11567. %@NL@%
  11568. %@NL@%
  11569. %@2@%When written in Chinese the word crisis is composed of two%@EH@%
  11570. characters. One represents danger and the other represents opportunity.%@NL@%
  11571. %@CR:CRISESKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  11572.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  11573.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  11574. %@AS@%                                                                    Crises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11575. %@NL@%
  11576. %@NL@%
  11577. %@NL@%
  11578. %@1@%%@AS@%Criticism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11579. %@CR:CRITICISM       @%%@NL@%
  11580. %@2@%See:%@QR:Criticism@%%@NL@%
  11581.      Actors/Actresses: %@AB@%Welles%@AE@%%@BO:            4fe0@%%@NL@%
  11582.      Artists: %@AB@%Cocteau%@AE@%%@BO:           31446@%%@NL@%
  11583.      Censorship: %@AB@%Browne%@AE@%%@BO:           57006@%%@NL@%
  11584.      Fame: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:           e2725@%%@NL@%
  11585.      South Africa: %@AB@%Vorster%@AE@%%@BO:          264214@%%@NL@%
  11586. %@NL@%
  11587. %@2@%Criticism is the endeavour to find, to know, to love, to recommend,%@EH@%
  11588. not only the best, but all the good, that has been known and thought
  11589. and written in the world.%@NL@%
  11590. %@CR:CRITICSaintsbury@%%@NL@%
  11591.                                              George Saintsbury (1845-1933)%@NL@%
  11592.                                                    English literary critic%@NL@%
  11593. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11594. %@NL@%
  11595. %@NL@%
  11596. %@2@%Of all the cants which are canted in this canting world, - though%@EH@%
  11597. the cant of hypocrites may be the worst, - the cant of criticism
  11598. is the most tormenting!%@NL@%
  11599. %@CR:CRITICSterne    @%%@NL@%
  11600.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  11601.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11602. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11603. %@NL@%
  11604. %@NL@%
  11605. %@2@%It is the nature of the artist to mind excessively what is%@EH@%
  11606. said about him. Literature is strewn with the wreckage of men who
  11607. have minded beyond reason the opinions of others.%@NL@%
  11608. %@CR:CRITICWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  11609.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  11610.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  11611. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11612. %@NL@%
  11613. %@NL@%
  11614. %@2@%A blind man will not thank you for a looking-glass.%@NL@%
  11615. %@CR:CRITICWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  11616.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  11617. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11618. %@NL@%
  11619. %@NL@%
  11620. %@2@%You should not say it is not good. You should say you do not%@EH@%
  11621. like it; and then, you know, you're perfectly safe.%@NL@%
  11622. %@CR:CRITICWhistler  @%%@NL@%
  11623.                                         James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)%@NL@%
  11624.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  11625. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11626. %@NL@%
  11627. %@NL@%
  11628. %@2@%On an occasion of this kind it becomes more than a moral duty%@EH@%
  11629. to speak one's mind. It becomes a pleasure.%@NL@%
  11630. %@CR:CRITICWilde     @%%@NL@%
  11631.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  11632.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  11633. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11634. %@NL@%
  11635. %@NL@%
  11636. %@2@%I like criticism, but it must be my way.%@NL@%
  11637. %@CR:CRITICTwain     @%%@NL@%
  11638.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  11639.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  11640. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11641. %@NL@%
  11642. %@NL@%
  11643. %@2@%Do not use a hatchet to remove a fly from your friend's forehead.%@NL@%
  11644. %@CR:CRITICTwain     @%%@NL@%
  11645.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  11646. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11647. %@NL@%
  11648. %@NL@%
  11649. %@2@%To many people dramatic criticism must seem like an attempt%@EH@%
  11650. to tattoo soap bubbles.%@NL@%
  11651. %@CR:CRITICBrown4    @%%@NL@%
  11652.                                               John Mason Brown (1900-1969)%@NL@%
  11653.                                                  American essayist, critic%@NL@%
  11654. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11655. %@NL@%
  11656. %@NL@%
  11657. %@2@%I find that when I dislike what I see on the stage I can be%@EH@%
  11658. vastly amusing, but when I write about something I like I find
  11659. that I am appallingly dull.%@NL@%
  11660. %@CR:CRITICBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  11661.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  11662.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  11663. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11664. %@NL@%
  11665. %@NL@%
  11666. %@2@%Your manuscript is both good and original; but the part that%@EH@%
  11667. is good is not original, and the part that is original is not good.%@NL@%
  11668. %@CR:CRITICJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  11669.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  11670.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  11671. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11672. %@NL@%
  11673. %@NL@%
  11674. %@2@%As a work of art it has the same status as a long conversation%@EH@%
  11675. between two not very bright drunks.%@NL@%
  11676. %@CR:CRITICJames1    @%%@NL@%
  11677.                                                      Clive James (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  11678.                                                  Australian writer, critic%@NL@%
  11679.                                         of %@AI@%Princess Daisy%@AE@% by Judith Krantz%@NL@%
  11680. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11681. %@NL@%
  11682. %@NL@%
  11683. %@2@%Join it.%@NL@%
  11684. %@CR:CRITICWilde     @%%@NL@%
  11685.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  11686.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  11687.                                     advice to a writer who complained of a%@NL@%
  11688.                                      conspiracy of silence about his books%@NL@%
  11689. %@AS@%                                                                 Criticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11690. %@NL@%
  11691. %@NL@%
  11692. %@NL@%
  11693. %@1@%%@AS@%Critics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11694. %@CR:CRITICS         @%%@NL@%
  11695. %@2@%See:%@QR:Critics@%%@NL@%
  11696.      Writers: %@AB@%Bovee%@AE@%%@BO:          2c9e97@%%@NL@%
  11697. %@NL@%
  11698. %@2@%Reviewers, with some rare exceptions, are a most stupid and%@EH@%
  11699. malignant race. As a bankrupt thief turns thief-taker in despair,
  11700. so an unsuccessful author turns critic.%@NL@%
  11701. %@CR:CRITICShelley   @%%@NL@%
  11702.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  11703.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11704. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11705. %@NL@%
  11706. %@NL@%
  11707. %@2@%Nature, when she invented, manufactured, and patented her authors,%@EH@%
  11708. contrived to make critics of the chips that were left.%@NL@%
  11709. %@CR:CRITICHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  11710.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  11711.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  11712. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11713. %@NL@%
  11714. %@NL@%
  11715. %@2@%A louse in the locks of literature.%@NL@%
  11716. %@CR:CRITICTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  11717.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  11718.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11719.                                                      of J. Churton Collins%@NL@%
  11720. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11721. %@NL@%
  11722. %@NL@%
  11723. %@2@%A critic is a bundle of biases held loosely together by a sense%@EH@%
  11724. of taste.%@NL@%
  11725. %@CR:CRITICBalliet   @%%@NL@%
  11726.                                                  Whitney Balliet (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  11727.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  11728. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11729. %@NL@%
  11730. %@NL@%
  11731. %@2@%It is impossible to think of a man of any actual force and%@EH@%
  11732. originality  . . .  who spent his whole life appraising and describing
  11733. the work of other men.%@NL@%
  11734. %@CR:CRITICMencken   @%%@NL@%
  11735.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  11736.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  11737. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11738. %@NL@%
  11739. %@NL@%
  11740. %@2@%Asking a working writer what he thinks about critics is like%@EH@%
  11741. asking a lamp-post what it feels about dogs.%@NL@%
  11742. %@CR:CRITICHampton   @%%@NL@%
  11743.                                              Christopher Hampton (b. 1946)%@NL@%
  11744.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  11745. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11746. %@NL@%
  11747. %@NL@%
  11748. %@2@%As long as there are readers to be delighted with calumny,%@EH@%
  11749. there will be found reviewers to calumniate.%@NL@%
  11750. %@CR:CRITICColeridge @%%@NL@%
  11751.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  11752.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11753. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11754. %@NL@%
  11755. %@NL@%
  11756. %@2@%I would rather be attacked than unnoticed. For the worst thing%@EH@%
  11757. you can do to an author is to be silent as to his works.%@NL@%
  11758. %@CR:CRITICJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  11759.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  11760.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  11761. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11762. %@NL@%
  11763. %@NL@%
  11764.      %@2@%Though by whim, envy, or resentment led,%@NL@%
  11765.      They damn those authors whom they never read.%@NL@%
  11766. %@CR:CRITICChurchill1@%%@NL@%
  11767.                                              Charles Churchill (1731-1764)%@NL@%
  11768.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  11769. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11770. %@NL@%
  11771. %@NL@%
  11772. %@2@%I never read a book before reviewing it; it prejudices one%@EH@%
  11773. so.%@NL@%
  11774. %@CR:CRITICSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  11775.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  11776.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  11777. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11778. %@NL@%
  11779. %@NL@%
  11780. %@2@%There are two kinds of dramatic critics: destructive and constructive.%@EH@%
  11781. I am a destructive. There are two kinds of guns: Krupp and pop.%@NL@%
  11782. %@CR:CRITICNathan    @%%@NL@%
  11783.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  11784.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  11785. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11786. %@NL@%
  11787. %@NL@%
  11788. %@2@%A good drama critic is one who perceives what is happening%@EH@%
  11789. in the theatre of his time. A great drama critic also perceives
  11790. what is not happening.%@NL@%
  11791. %@CR:CRITICTynan     @%%@NL@%
  11792.                                                  Kenneth Tynan (1927-1980)%@NL@%
  11793.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  11794. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11795. %@NL@%
  11796. %@NL@%
  11797. %@2@%Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function%@EH@%
  11798. of the critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it.%@NL@%
  11799. %@CR:CRITICLawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  11800.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  11801.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11802. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11803. %@NL@%
  11804. %@NL@%
  11805. %@2@%What we ask of him is that he should find out for us more than%@EH@%
  11806. we can find out for ourselves.%@NL@%
  11807. %@CR:CRITICSymons    @%%@NL@%
  11808.                                                  Arthur Symons (1865-1945)%@NL@%
  11809.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  11810. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11811. %@NL@%
  11812. %@NL@%
  11813.      %@2@%A man must serve his time to every trade%@NL@%
  11814.      Save censure - critics all are ready made.%@NL@%
  11815. %@CR:CRITICByron2    @%%@NL@%
  11816.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  11817.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11818. %@AS@%                                                                   Critics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11819. %@NL@%
  11820. %@NL@%
  11821. %@NL@%
  11822. %@1@%%@AS@%Cruelty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11823. %@CR:CRUELTY         @%%@NL@%
  11824. %@2@%%@QR:Cruelty@%The impulse to cruelty is, in many people, almost as violent%@EH@%
  11825. as the impulse to sexual love - almost as violent and much
  11826. more mischievous.%@NL@%
  11827. %@CR:CRUELTHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  11828.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  11829.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  11830. %@AS@%                                                                   Cruelty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11831. %@NL@%
  11832. %@NL@%
  11833. %@2@%The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight%@EH@%
  11834. to moralists.%@NL@%
  11835. %@CR:CRUELTRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  11836.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  11837.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  11838. %@AS@%                                                                   Cruelty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11839. %@NL@%
  11840. %@NL@%
  11841. %@2@%Weak men are apt to be cruel.%@NL@%
  11842. %@CR:CRUELTSavile    @%%@NL@%
  11843.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  11844.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  11845. %@AS@%                                                                   Cruelty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11846. %@NL@%
  11847. %@NL@%
  11848. %@NL@%
  11849. %@1@%%@AS@%Crying%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11850. %@CR:CRYING          @%%@NL@%
  11851. %@2@%%@QR:Crying@%I wept not, so to stone within I grew.%@NL@%
  11852. %@CR:CRYINGDante     @%%@NL@%
  11853.                                                          Dante (1265-1321)%@NL@%
  11854.                                                               Italian poet%@NL@%
  11855. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11856. %@NL@%
  11857. %@NL@%
  11858.      %@2@%I have full cause of weeping; but this heart%@NL@%
  11859.      Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws,%@NL@%
  11860.      Or ere I'll weep.%@NL@%
  11861. %@CR:CRYINGShakespear@%%@NL@%
  11862.                                                            Lear, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11863.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  11864.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11865. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11866. %@NL@%
  11867. %@NL@%
  11868. %@2@%It is only to the happy that tears are a luxury.%@NL@%
  11869. %@CR:CRYINGMoore5    @%%@NL@%
  11870.                                                   Thomas Moore (1779-1852)%@NL@%
  11871.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  11872. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11873. %@NL@%
  11874. %@NL@%
  11875. %@2@%There are people who laugh to show their fine teeth; and there%@EH@%
  11876. are those who cry to show their good hearts.%@NL@%
  11877. %@CR:CRYINGRoux      @%%@NL@%
  11878.                                                    Joseph Roux (1834-1886)%@NL@%
  11879.                                                      French priest, writer%@NL@%
  11880. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11881. %@NL@%
  11882. %@NL@%
  11883. %@2@%Women's weapons, water-drops.%@NL@%
  11884. %@CR:CRYINGShakespear@%%@NL@%
  11885.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  11886.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  11887. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11888. %@NL@%
  11889. %@NL@%
  11890.      %@2@%Oh! too convincing - dangerously dear -%@NL@%
  11891.      In woman's eye the unanswerable tear!%@NL@%
  11892. %@CR:CRYINGByron2    @%%@NL@%
  11893.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  11894.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  11895. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11896. %@NL@%
  11897. %@NL@%
  11898. %@2@%Crying is the refuge of plain women, but the ruin of pretty%@EH@%
  11899. ones.%@NL@%
  11900. %@CR:CRYINGWilde     @%%@NL@%
  11901.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  11902.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  11903. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11904. %@NL@%
  11905. %@NL@%
  11906. %@2@%"It opens the lungs, washes the countenance, exercises the%@EH@%
  11907. eyes, and softens down the temper," said Mr. Bumble. "So cry
  11908. away."%@NL@%
  11909. %@CR:CRYINGDickens   @%%@NL@%
  11910.                                                               Oliver Twist%@NL@%
  11911.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  11912.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  11913. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11914. %@NL@%
  11915. %@NL@%
  11916. %@2@%Whatever tears one may shed, in the end one always blows one's%@EH@%
  11917. nose.%@NL@%
  11918. %@CR:CRYINGHeine     @%%@NL@%
  11919.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  11920.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  11921. %@AS@%                                                                    Crying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11922. %@NL@%
  11923. %@NL@%
  11924. %@NL@%
  11925. %@1@%%@AS@%Cults%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11926. %@CR:CULTS           @%%@NL@%
  11927. %@2@%%@QR:Cults@%What is a cult? It just means not enough people to make a minority.%@NL@%
  11928. %@CR:CULTS Altman    @%%@NL@%
  11929.                                                    Robert Altman (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  11930.                                                     American film director%@NL@%
  11931. %@AS@%                                                                     Cults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11932. %@NL@%
  11933. %@NL@%
  11934. %@2@%A cult is a religion with no political power.%@NL@%
  11935. %@CR:CULTS Wolfe3    @%%@NL@%
  11936.                                                        Tom Wolfe (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  11937.                                                American author, journalist%@NL@%
  11938. %@AS@%                                                                     Cults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11939. %@NL@%
  11940. %@NL@%
  11941. %@NL@%
  11942. %@1@%%@AS@%Culture%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  11943. %@CR:CULTURE         @%%@NL@%
  11944. %@2@%See:%@QR:Culture@%%@NL@%
  11945.      Status: %@AB@%McCarthy%@AE@%%@BO:          26dd3b@%%@NL@%
  11946. %@NL@%
  11947. %@2@%Culture, the acquainting ourselves with the best that has been%@EH@%
  11948. known and said in the world, and thus with the history of the human
  11949. spirit.%@NL@%
  11950. %@CR:CULTURArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  11951.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  11952.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  11953. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11954. %@NL@%
  11955. %@NL@%
  11956. %@2@%Instead of dirt and poison, we have rather chosen to fill our%@EH@%
  11957. hives with honey and wax; thus furnishing mankind with the two
  11958. noblest of things, which are sweetness and light.%@NL@%
  11959. %@CR:CULTURSwift     @%%@NL@%
  11960.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  11961.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  11962. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11963. %@NL@%
  11964. %@NL@%
  11965. %@2@%Culture is the bed-rock, the final wall, against which one%@EH@%
  11966. leans one's back in a god-forsaken chaos.%@NL@%
  11967. %@CR:CULTURPowys     @%%@NL@%
  11968.                                              John Cowper Powys (1872-1963)%@NL@%
  11969.                                                       British author, poet%@NL@%
  11970. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11971. %@NL@%
  11972. %@NL@%
  11973. %@2@%One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read%@EH@%
  11974. a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak
  11975. a few reasonable words.%@NL@%
  11976. %@CR:CULTURGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  11977.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  11978.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  11979. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11980. %@NL@%
  11981. %@NL@%
  11982. %@2@%The poor have no business with culture and should beware of%@EH@%
  11983. it. They cannot eat it; they cannot sell it; they can only pass
  11984. it on to others and that is why the world is full of hungry people
  11985. ready to teach us anything under the sun.%@NL@%
  11986. %@CR:CULTURMenen     @%%@NL@%
  11987.                                                     Aubrey Menen (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  11988.                                                 British novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  11989. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11990. %@NL@%
  11991. %@NL@%
  11992. %@2@%Culture is an instrument wielded by professors to manufacture%@EH@%
  11993. professors, who, when their turn comes, will manufacture professors.%@NL@%
  11994. %@CR:CULTURWeil      @%%@NL@%
  11995.                                                    Simone Weil (1909-1943)%@NL@%
  11996.                                                 French mystic, philosopher%@NL@%
  11997. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  11998. %@NL@%
  11999. %@NL@%
  12000. %@2@%Mrs Ballinger is one of the ladies who pursue Culture in bands,%@EH@%
  12001. as though it were dangerous to meet it alone.%@NL@%
  12002. %@CR:CULTURWharton   @%%@NL@%
  12003.                                                  Edith Wharton (1862-1937)%@NL@%
  12004.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  12005. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12006. %@NL@%
  12007. %@NL@%
  12008. %@2@%One of the surest signs of the Philistine is his reverence%@EH@%
  12009. for the superior tastes of those who put him down.%@NL@%
  12010. %@CR:CULTURKael      @%%@NL@%
  12011.                                                     Pauline Kael (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  12012.                                                       American film critic%@NL@%
  12013. %@AS@%                                                                   Culture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12014. %@NL@%
  12015. %@NL@%
  12016. %@NL@%
  12017. %@1@%%@AS@%Cunning%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12018. %@CR:CUNNING         @%%@NL@%
  12019. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cunning@%%@NL@%
  12020.      %@AB@%Discretion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           ade0e@%%@NL@%
  12021. %@NL@%
  12022. %@2@%"Frank and explicit" - that is the right line to take%@EH@%
  12023. when you wish to conceal your own mind and to confuse the minds
  12024. of others.%@NL@%
  12025. %@CR:CUNNINDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  12026.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  12027.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  12028. %@AS@%                                                                   Cunning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12029. %@NL@%
  12030. %@NL@%
  12031. %@2@%With foxes we must play the fox.%@NL@%
  12032. %@CR:CUNNINFuller3   @%%@NL@%
  12033.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  12034.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  12035. %@AS@%                                                                   Cunning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12036. %@NL@%
  12037. %@NL@%
  12038. %@2@%The greatest cunning is to have none at all.%@NL@%
  12039. %@CR:CUNNINSandburg  @%%@NL@%
  12040.                                                  Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  12041.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  12042. %@AS@%                                                                   Cunning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12043. %@NL@%
  12044. %@NL@%
  12045. %@2@%And all your future lies beneath your hat.%@NL@%
  12046. %@CR:CUNNINOldham    @%%@NL@%
  12047.                                                    John Oldham (1653-1683)%@NL@%
  12048.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12049. %@AS@%                                                                   Cunning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12050. %@NL@%
  12051. %@NL@%
  12052. %@NL@%
  12053. %@1@%%@AS@%Curiosity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12054. %@CR:CURIOSITY       @%%@NL@%
  12055. %@2@%%@QR:Curiosity@%Curiosity is one of the most permanent and certain characteristics%@EH@%
  12056. of a vigorous intellect.%@NL@%
  12057. %@CR:CURIOSJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  12058.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  12059.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  12060. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12061. %@NL@%
  12062. %@NL@%
  12063. %@2@%Disinterested intellectual curiosity is the life blood of real%@EH@%
  12064. civilization.%@NL@%
  12065. %@CR:CURIOSTrevelyan @%%@NL@%
  12066.                                                G. M. Trevelyan (1876-1962)%@NL@%
  12067.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  12068. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12069. %@NL@%
  12070. %@NL@%
  12071. %@2@%We never stop investigating. We are never satisfied that we%@EH@%
  12072. know enough to get by. Every question we answer leads on to another
  12073. question. This has become the greatest survival trick of our species.%@NL@%
  12074. %@CR:CURIOSMorris1   @%%@NL@%
  12075.                                                   Desmond Morris (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  12076.                                                     British anthropologist%@NL@%
  12077. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12078. %@NL@%
  12079. %@NL@%
  12080.      %@2@%The thirst to know and understand,%@NL@%
  12081.      A large and liberal discontent.%@NL@%
  12082. %@CR:CURIOSWatson    @%%@NL@%
  12083.                                             Sir William Watson (1858-1935)%@NL@%
  12084.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  12085. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12086. %@NL@%
  12087. %@NL@%
  12088. %@2@%Be not curious in unnecessary matters: for more things are%@EH@%
  12089. shewed unto thee than men understand.%@NL@%
  12090. %@CR:CURIOSApocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  12091.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  12092. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12093. %@NL@%
  12094. %@NL@%
  12095. %@2@%He that breaks a thing to find out what it is has left the%@EH@%
  12096. path of wisdom.%@NL@%
  12097. %@CR:CURIOSTolkien   @%%@NL@%
  12098.                                               J. R. R. Tolkien (1892-1973)%@NL@%
  12099.                                                  British novelist, scholar%@NL@%
  12100. %@AS@%                                                                 Curiosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12101. %@NL@%
  12102. %@NL@%
  12103. %@NL@%
  12104. %@1@%%@AS@%Cynics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12105. %@CR:CYNICS          @%%@NL@%
  12106. %@2@%See:%@QR:Cynics@%%@NL@%
  12107.      Honesty: %@AB@%Berkeley%@AE@%%@BO:          133b27@%%@NL@%
  12108. %@NL@%
  12109. %@2@%What is the use of straining after an amiable view of things,%@EH@%
  12110. when a cynical view is most likely to be the true one?%@NL@%
  12111. %@CR:CYNICSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  12112.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  12113.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  12114. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12115. %@NL@%
  12116. %@NL@%
  12117. %@2@%Cynicism is intellectual dandyism.%@NL@%
  12118. %@CR:CYNICSMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  12119.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  12120.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12121. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12122. %@NL@%
  12123. %@NL@%
  12124. %@2@%A cynic is just a man who found out when he was about ten that%@EH@%
  12125. there wasn't any Santa Claus, and he's still upset.%@NL@%
  12126. %@CR:CYNICSCozzens   @%%@NL@%
  12127.                                            James Gould Cozzens (1903-1978)%@NL@%
  12128.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12129. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12130. %@NL@%
  12131. %@NL@%
  12132. %@2@%A cynic is not merely one who reads bitter lessons from the%@EH@%
  12133. past, he is one who is prematurely disappointed in the future.%@NL@%
  12134. %@CR:CYNICSHarris    @%%@NL@%
  12135.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  12136.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  12137. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12138. %@NL@%
  12139. %@NL@%
  12140. %@2@%It takes a clever man to turn cynic, and a wise man to be clever%@EH@%
  12141. enough not so.%@NL@%
  12142. %@CR:CYNICSHurst     @%%@NL@%
  12143.                                                   Fannie Hurst (1889-1968)%@NL@%
  12144.                                              American novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  12145. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12146. %@NL@%
  12147. %@NL@%
  12148. %@2@%What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and%@EH@%
  12149. the value of nothing.%@NL@%
  12150. %@CR:CYNICSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  12151.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  12152.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  12153. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12154. %@NL@%
  12155. %@NL@%
  12156. %@2@%Cynics are only happy in making the world as barren for others%@EH@%
  12157. as they have made it for themselves.%@NL@%
  12158. %@CR:CYNICSMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  12159.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  12160.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12161. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12162. %@NL@%
  12163. %@NL@%
  12164. %@2@%Cynic. A blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they%@EH@%
  12165. are, not as they ought to be.%@NL@%
  12166. %@CR:CYNICSBierce    @%%@NL@%
  12167.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  12168.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12169. %@AS@%                                                                    Cynics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12170. %@NL@%
  12171. %@NL@%
  12172. %@NL@%
  12173. %@1@%%@AS@%Dancing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12174. %@CR:DANCING         @%%@NL@%
  12175. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dancing@%%@NL@%
  12176.      Capital Punishment: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           50358@%%@NL@%
  12177. %@NL@%
  12178. %@2@%Dancing with abandon, turning a tango into a fertility rite.%@NL@%
  12179. %@CR:DANCINPugh      @%%@NL@%
  12180.                                                    Marshall Pugh (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  12181.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  12182. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12183. %@NL@%
  12184. %@NL@%
  12185. %@2@%I just put my feet in the air and move them around.%@NL@%
  12186. %@CR:DANCINAstaire   @%%@NL@%
  12187.                                                   Fred Astaire (1899-1987)%@NL@%
  12188.                                                            American dancer%@NL@%
  12189. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12190. %@NL@%
  12191. %@NL@%
  12192. %@2@%Custom has made dancing sometimes necessary for a young man;%@EH@%
  12193. therefore mind it while you learn it that you may learn to do it
  12194. well, and not be ridiculous, though in a ridiculous act.%@NL@%
  12195. %@CR:DANCINChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  12196.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  12197.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  12198.                                                                 to his son%@NL@%
  12199. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12200. %@NL@%
  12201. %@NL@%
  12202. %@2@%Dancing is a wonderful training for girls, it's the first way%@EH@%
  12203. you learn to guess what a man is going to do before he does it.%@NL@%
  12204. %@CR:DANCINMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  12205.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  12206.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  12207. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12208. %@NL@%
  12209. %@NL@%
  12210. %@2@%These sort of boobies think that people come to balls to do%@EH@%
  12211. nothing but dance; whereas everyone knows that the real business
  12212. of balls is either to look out for a wife, to look after a wife,
  12213. or to look after somebody else's wife.%@NL@%
  12214. %@CR:DANCINSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  12215.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  12216.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  12217. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12218. %@NL@%
  12219. %@NL@%
  12220. %@2@%How inimitably graceful children are in general - before%@EH@%
  12221. they learn to dance.%@NL@%
  12222. %@CR:DANCINColeridge @%%@NL@%
  12223.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  12224.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12225. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12226. %@NL@%
  12227. %@NL@%
  12228. %@2@%%@AI@%Neminem saltare sobrius, nisi forte insanit.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12229. No sober man dances, unless he happens to be mad.%@NL@%
  12230. %@CR:DANCINCicero    @%%@NL@%
  12231.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  12232.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  12233. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12234. %@NL@%
  12235. %@NL@%
  12236. %@2@%The greater the fool the better the dancer.%@NL@%
  12237. %@CR:DANCINHook      @%%@NL@%
  12238.                                                  Theodore Hook (1788-1841)%@NL@%
  12239.                                                      English novelist, wit%@NL@%
  12240. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12241. %@NL@%
  12242. %@NL@%
  12243. %@2@%The body never lies.%@NL@%
  12244. %@CR:DANCINGraham    @%%@NL@%
  12245.                                                    Martha Graham (b. 1894)%@NL@%
  12246.                                             American dancer, choreographer%@NL@%
  12247. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12248. %@NL@%
  12249. %@NL@%
  12250. %@2@%Ballet is the ectoplasm of music.%@NL@%
  12251. %@CR:DANCINGreen2    @%%@NL@%
  12252.                                                              Russell Green%@NL@%
  12253. %@AS@%                                                                   Dancing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12254. %@NL@%
  12255. %@NL@%
  12256. %@NL@%
  12257. %@1@%%@AS@%The Dead%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12258. %@CR:THEDEAD         @%%@NL@%
  12259. %@2@%%@QR:The Dead@%He has out-soared the shadow of our night;%@NL@%
  12260.      Envy and calumny, and hate and pain,%@NL@%
  12261.      And that unrest which men miscall delight,%@NL@%
  12262.      Can touch him not, and torture not again;%@NL@%
  12263.      From the contagion of the world's slow stain,%@NL@%
  12264.      He is secure.%@NL@%
  12265. %@CR:THEDEAShelley   @%%@NL@%
  12266.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  12267.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12268.                                                of John Keats, died aged 25%@NL@%
  12269. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12270. %@NL@%
  12271. %@NL@%
  12272. %@2@%To the living we owe respect, but to the dead we owe only the%@EH@%
  12273. truth.%@NL@%
  12274. %@CR:THEDEAVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  12275.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  12276.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  12277. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12278. %@NL@%
  12279. %@NL@%
  12280. %@2@%The living are the dead on holiday.%@NL@%
  12281. %@CR:THEDEAdeMaeterli@%%@NL@%
  12282.                                         Maurice de Maeterlinck (1862-1949)%@NL@%
  12283.                                                             Belgian author%@NL@%
  12284. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12285. %@NL@%
  12286. %@NL@%
  12287.      %@2@%Each in his narrow cell for ever laid,%@NL@%
  12288.      The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep.%@NL@%
  12289. %@CR:THEDEAGray      @%%@NL@%
  12290.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  12291.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12292. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12293. %@NL@%
  12294. %@NL@%
  12295. %@2@%The graveyards are full of people the world could not do without.%@NL@%
  12296. %@CR:THEDEAHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  12297.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  12298.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12299. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12300. %@NL@%
  12301. %@NL@%
  12302.      %@2@%No motion has she now, no force,%@NL@%
  12303.      She neither hears nor sees;%@NL@%
  12304.      Rolled around in earth's diurnal course,%@NL@%
  12305.      With rocks and stones, and trees.%@NL@%
  12306. %@CR:THEDEAWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  12307.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  12308.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12309. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12310. %@NL@%
  12311. %@NL@%
  12312.      %@2@%Be the green grass above me%@NL@%
  12313.      With showers and dewdrops wet;%@NL@%
  12314.      And if thou wilt, remember,%@NL@%
  12315.      And if thou wilt, forget.%@NL@%
  12316. %@CR:THEDEARossetti  @%%@NL@%
  12317.                                             Christina Rossetti (1830-1894)%@NL@%
  12318.                                                     English poet, lyricist%@NL@%
  12319. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12320. %@NL@%
  12321. %@NL@%
  12322.      %@2@%After life's fitful fever, he sleeps well;%@NL@%
  12323.      Treason has done his worst: nor steel, nor poison,%@NL@%
  12324.      Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing%@NL@%
  12325.      Can touch him further.%@NL@%
  12326. %@CR:THEDEAShakespear@%%@NL@%
  12327.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12328.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12329.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12330. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12331. %@NL@%
  12332. %@NL@%
  12333.      %@2@%An orphan's curse would drag to hell%@NL@%
  12334.      A spirit from on high;%@NL@%
  12335.      But oh! more horrible than that%@NL@%
  12336.      Is the curse in a dead man's eye.%@NL@%
  12337. %@CR:THEDEAColeridge @%%@NL@%
  12338.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  12339.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12340. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12341. %@NL@%
  12342. %@NL@%
  12343. %@2@%I do not make war against the dead.%@NL@%
  12344. %@CR:THEDEAHomer     @%%@NL@%
  12345.                                                  Homer (b. 8th century BC)%@NL@%
  12346.                                                                 Greek poet%@NL@%
  12347. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12348. %@NL@%
  12349. %@NL@%
  12350. %@2@%%@AI@%Abiit ad plures.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  12351. He has gone over to the majority.%@NL@%
  12352. %@CR:THEDEAPetronius @%%@NL@%
  12353.                                              Petronius (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  12354.                                                             Roman satirist%@NL@%
  12355. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12356. %@NL@%
  12357. %@NL@%
  12358. %@2@%Either he's dead or my watch has stopped.%@NL@%
  12359. %@CR:THEDEAMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  12360.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  12361.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  12362. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12363. %@NL@%
  12364. %@NL@%
  12365. %@2@%We therefore commit his body to the ground; earth to earth,%@EH@%
  12366. ashes to ashes, dust to dust.%@NL@%
  12367. %@CR:THEDEAMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  12368.                                                      Book of Common Prayer%@NL@%
  12369. %@AS@%                                                                  The Dead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12370. %@NL@%
  12371. %@NL@%
  12372. %@NL@%
  12373. %@1@%%@AS@%Death%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12374. %@CR:DEATH           @%%@NL@%
  12375. %@2@%See:%@QR:Death@%%@NL@%
  12376.      The Afterlife: %@AB@%Allen%@AE@%%@BO:            c777@%%@NL@%
  12377.      Genocide: %@AB@%Stalin%@AE@%%@BO:          109a2e@%%@NL@%
  12378.      Life: %@AB@%Maurois%@AE@%%@BO:          176c78@%%@NL@%
  12379.      Lovers: %@AB@%Bridges%@AE@%%@BO:          18711b@%%@NL@%
  12380.      Philosophy: %@AB@%Saint Anselm%@AE@%%@BO:          1d90bf@%%@NL@%
  12381.      Science: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          23ba77@%%@NL@%
  12382.      War: %@AB@%Bright%@AE@%%@BO:          2a8b33@%%@NL@%
  12383. %@NL@%
  12384. %@2@%The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.%@NL@%
  12385. %@CR:DEATH SaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  12386.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  12387.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  12388. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12389. %@NL@%
  12390. %@NL@%
  12391. %@2@%All man think all men mortal, but themselves.%@NL@%
  12392. %@CR:DEATH Young3    @%%@NL@%
  12393.                                                   Edward Young (1683-1765)%@NL@%
  12394.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  12395. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12396. %@NL@%
  12397. %@NL@%
  12398.      %@2@%Teach me to live that I may dread%@NL@%
  12399.      The grave as little as my bed.%@NL@%
  12400. %@CR:DEATH Ken       @%%@NL@%
  12401.                                                     Thomas Ken (1637-1711)%@NL@%
  12402.                                             English churchman, hymn-writer%@NL@%
  12403. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12404. %@NL@%
  12405. %@NL@%
  12406. %@2@%Christianity has made of death a terror which was unknown to%@EH@%
  12407. the gay calmness of the Pagan.%@NL@%
  12408. %@CR:DEATH laRamee   @%%@NL@%
  12409.                                Ouida, Marie Louise de la Ramee (1839-1908)%@NL@%
  12410.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  12411. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12412. %@NL@%
  12413. %@NL@%
  12414. %@2@%It is impossible that anything so natural, so necessary, and%@EH@%
  12415. so universal as death should ever have been designed by Providence
  12416. as an evil to mankind.%@NL@%
  12417. %@CR:DEATH Swift     @%%@NL@%
  12418.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  12419.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  12420. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12421. %@NL@%
  12422. %@NL@%
  12423. %@2@%It is as natural to die as to be born; and to a little infant,%@EH@%
  12424. perhaps, the one is as painful as the other.%@NL@%
  12425. %@CR:DEATH Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  12426.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  12427.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  12428. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12429. %@NL@%
  12430. %@NL@%
  12431. %@2@%We all labour against our own cure, for death is the cure of%@EH@%
  12432. all diseases.%@NL@%
  12433. %@CR:DEATH Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  12434.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  12435.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  12436. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12437. %@NL@%
  12438. %@NL@%
  12439.      %@2@%But I will be a bridegroom in my death%@NL@%
  12440.      And run into't as to a lover's bed.%@NL@%
  12441. %@CR:DEATH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  12442.                                               Antony, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12443.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12444.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12445. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12446. %@NL@%
  12447. %@NL@%
  12448.      %@2@%How gladly would I meet%@NL@%
  12449.      Mortality, my sentence, and be earth%@NL@%
  12450.      Insensible! how glad would lay me down,%@NL@%
  12451.      As in my mother's lap! There I should rest%@NL@%
  12452.      And sleep secure.%@NL@%
  12453. %@CR:DEATH Milton    @%%@NL@%
  12454.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  12455.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12456. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12457. %@NL@%
  12458. %@NL@%
  12459. %@2@%How often are we to die before we go right off this stage?%@EH@%
  12460. In every friend we lose a part of ourselves, and the best part.%@NL@%
  12461. %@CR:DEATH Pope      @%%@NL@%
  12462.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  12463.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12464. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12465. %@NL@%
  12466. %@NL@%
  12467. %@2@%Whoever has lived long enough to find out what life is, knows%@EH@%
  12468. how deep a debt of gratitude we owe to Adam, the first great benefactor
  12469. of our race. He brought death into the world.%@NL@%
  12470. %@CR:DEATH Twain     @%%@NL@%
  12471.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  12472.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12473. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12474. %@NL@%
  12475. %@NL@%
  12476.      %@2@%Death is the veil which those who live call life:%@NL@%
  12477.      They sleep, and it is lifted.%@NL@%
  12478. %@CR:DEATH Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  12479.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  12480.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12481. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12482. %@NL@%
  12483. %@NL@%
  12484. %@2@%Winter is on my head, but eternal spring is in my heart. The%@EH@%
  12485. nearer I approach the end the plainer I hear around me the immortal
  12486. symphonies of the worlds which invite me.%@NL@%
  12487. %@CR:DEATH Hugo      @%%@NL@%
  12488.                                                    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)%@NL@%
  12489.                                           French poet, dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  12490. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12491. %@NL@%
  12492. %@NL@%
  12493.      %@2@%The grave's a fine and private place,%@NL@%
  12494.      But none, I think, do there embrace.%@NL@%
  12495. %@CR:DEATH Marvell   @%%@NL@%
  12496.                                                 Andrew Marvell (1621-1678)%@NL@%
  12497.                                                  English metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  12498. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12499. %@NL@%
  12500. %@NL@%
  12501.      %@2@%Though lovers be lost love shall not;%@NL@%
  12502.      And death shall have no dominion.%@NL@%
  12503. %@CR:DEATH Thomas1   @%%@NL@%
  12504.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  12505.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  12506. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12507. %@NL@%
  12508. %@NL@%
  12509. %@2@%Man is a noble animal, splendid in ashes, and pompous in the%@EH@%
  12510. grave.%@NL@%
  12511. %@CR:DEATH Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  12512.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  12513.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  12514. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12515. %@NL@%
  12516. %@NL@%
  12517. %@2@%I am a temporary enclosure for a temporary purpose; that served,%@EH@%
  12518. my skull and teeth, my idiosyncrasy and desire, will disperse,
  12519. I believe, like the timbers of a booth after the fair.%@NL@%
  12520. %@CR:DEATH Wells     @%%@NL@%
  12521.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  12522.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  12523. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12524. %@NL@%
  12525. %@NL@%
  12526. %@2@%Death, which ends the feuds of unimportant persons, lets loose%@EH@%
  12527. the tongue over the characters of the great. Kings are especially
  12528. sufferers.%@NL@%
  12529. %@CR:DEATH Froude    @%%@NL@%
  12530.                                                   J. A. Froude (1818-1894)%@NL@%
  12531.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12532. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12533. %@NL@%
  12534. %@NL@%
  12535.      %@2@%I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.%@NL@%
  12536.      The evil that men do lives after them,%@NL@%
  12537.      The good is oft interred with their bones.%@NL@%
  12538. %@CR:DEATH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  12539.                                                 Mark Antony, %@AI@%Julius Caesar%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12540.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12541.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12542. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12543. %@NL@%
  12544. %@NL@%
  12545.      %@2@%Death hath a thousand doors to let out life;%@NL@%
  12546.      I shall find one.%@NL@%
  12547. %@CR:DEATH Massinger @%%@NL@%
  12548.                                               Philip Massinger (1583-1640)%@NL@%
  12549.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  12550. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12551. %@NL@%
  12552. %@NL@%
  12553.      %@2@%Like figures on an ancient clock,%@NL@%
  12554.      Warrior, or saint, or clown%@NL@%
  12555.      (All's one to the machine), that wake%@NL@%
  12556.      When each stale hour is done,%@NL@%
  12557.      And with preliminary whirr%@NL@%
  12558.      Play their allotted role,%@NL@%
  12559.      Stiffly advance, engage, retire%@NL@%
  12560.      Trembling a little still,%@NL@%
  12561.      So blandly nodding Death and I%@NL@%
  12562.      Nearer and nearer march,%@NL@%
  12563.      At the click of night and the click of day%@NL@%
  12564.      - Click-clack! We approach, we approach!%@NL@%
  12565. %@CR:DEATH Andrews   @%%@NL@%
  12566.                                                    C. D. Andrews (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  12567.                                                      British poet, scholar%@NL@%
  12568. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12569. %@NL@%
  12570. %@NL@%
  12571.      %@2@%Men must endure%@NL@%
  12572.      Their going hence, even as their coming hither:%@NL@%
  12573.      Ripeness is all.%@NL@%
  12574. %@CR:DEATH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  12575.                                                           Edgar, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12576.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12577.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12578. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12579. %@NL@%
  12580. %@NL@%
  12581.      %@2@%Yet nightly pitch my moving tent%@NL@%
  12582.      A day's march nearer home.%@NL@%
  12583. %@CR:DEATH Montgomery@%%@NL@%
  12584.                                               James Montgomery (1771-1854)%@NL@%
  12585.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12586. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12587. %@NL@%
  12588. %@NL@%
  12589.      %@2@%I have a rendez-vous with Death%@NL@%
  12590.      At some disputed barricade.%@NL@%
  12591. %@CR:DEATH Seeger    @%%@NL@%
  12592.                                                    Alan Seeger (1888-1916)%@NL@%
  12593.                                                      British soldier, poet%@NL@%
  12594. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12595. %@NL@%
  12596. %@NL@%
  12597. %@2@%O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?%@NL@%
  12598. %@CR:DEATH SaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  12599.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  12600.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  12601. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12602. %@NL@%
  12603. %@NL@%
  12604. %@2@%The hour of departure has arrived, and we go our ways - I%@EH@%
  12605. to die and you to live. Which is the better, only God knows.%@NL@%
  12606. %@CR:DEATH Socrates  @%%@NL@%
  12607.                                                      Socrates (469-399 BC)%@NL@%
  12608.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  12609. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12610. %@NL@%
  12611. %@NL@%
  12612. %@2@%Death never takes the wise man by surprise, he is always ready%@EH@%
  12613. to go.%@NL@%
  12614. %@CR:DEATH laFontaine@%%@NL@%
  12615.                                            Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695)%@NL@%
  12616.                                                      French poet, fabulist%@NL@%
  12617. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12618. %@NL@%
  12619. %@NL@%
  12620. %@2@%Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than%@EH@%
  12621. it ceases to be serious when people laugh.%@NL@%
  12622. %@CR:DEATH Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  12623.                                              Ridgeon, %@AI@%The Doctor's Dilemma%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12624.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  12625.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  12626. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12627. %@NL@%
  12628. %@NL@%
  12629. %@2@%I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have%@EH@%
  12630. kept the faith.%@NL@%
  12631. %@CR:DEATH SaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  12632.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  12633.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  12634. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12635. %@NL@%
  12636. %@NL@%
  12637. %@2@%And I saw, and behold, a pale horse: and he that sat upon him,%@EH@%
  12638. his name was Death.%@NL@%
  12639. %@CR:DEATH JohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  12640.                                        John the Divine (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  12641.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  12642. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12643. %@NL@%
  12644. %@NL@%
  12645. %@2@%Cheerio, see you soon.%@NL@%
  12646. %@CR:DEATH JohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  12647.                                                    epitaph on a gravestone%@NL@%
  12648. %@AS@%                                                                     Death%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12649. %@NL@%
  12650. %@NL@%
  12651. %@1@%%@AS@%Death: Dying%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12652. %@CR:DYING           @%%@NL@%
  12653. %@2@%%@QR:Death: Dying@%It is not death, but dying, which is terrible.%@NL@%
  12654. %@CR:DYING Fielding  @%%@NL@%
  12655.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  12656.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  12657. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12658. %@NL@%
  12659. %@NL@%
  12660. %@2@%I do not believe that any man fears to be dead, but only the%@EH@%
  12661. stroke of death.%@NL@%
  12662. %@CR:DYING Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  12663.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  12664.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  12665. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12666. %@NL@%
  12667. %@NL@%
  12668. %@2@%It's not that I'm afraid to die. I just don't want to be there%@EH@%
  12669. when it happens.%@NL@%
  12670. %@CR:DYING Allen4    @%%@NL@%
  12671.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  12672.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  12673. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12674. %@NL@%
  12675. %@NL@%
  12676. %@2@%It is certain that to most men the preparation for death has%@EH@%
  12677. been a greater torment than the suffering of it.%@NL@%
  12678. %@CR:DYING Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  12679.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  12680.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  12681. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12682. %@NL@%
  12683. %@NL@%
  12684. %@2@%To die is to leave off dying and do the thing once for all.%@NL@%
  12685. %@CR:DYING Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  12686.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  12687.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12688. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12689. %@NL@%
  12690. %@NL@%
  12691.      %@2@%I warmed both hands before the fire of life;%@NL@%
  12692.      It sinks and I am ready to depart.%@NL@%
  12693. %@CR:DYING Landor    @%%@NL@%
  12694.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  12695.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12696. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12697. %@NL@%
  12698. %@NL@%
  12699. %@2@%I am prepared to meet my Maker. Whether my Maker is prepared%@EH@%
  12700. for the great ordeal of meeting me is another matter.%@NL@%
  12701. %@CR:DYING Churchill3@%%@NL@%
  12702.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  12703.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  12704.                                            on the eve of his 75th birthday%@NL@%
  12705. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12706. %@NL@%
  12707. %@NL@%
  12708.      %@2@%Do not go gentle into that good night,%@NL@%
  12709.      Old age should burn and rage at close of day;%@NL@%
  12710.      Rage, rage, against the dying of the light.%@NL@%
  12711. %@CR:DYING Thomas1   @%%@NL@%
  12712.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  12713.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  12714. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12715. %@NL@%
  12716. %@NL@%
  12717. %@2@%I will be conquered; I will not capitulate.%@NL@%
  12718. %@CR:DYING Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  12719.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  12720.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  12721.                                                        in his last illness%@NL@%
  12722. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12723. %@NL@%
  12724. %@NL@%
  12725. %@2@%I die hard. But I am not afraid to go.%@NL@%
  12726. %@CR:DYING Washington@%%@NL@%
  12727.                                              George Washington (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  12728.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  12729. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12730. %@NL@%
  12731. %@NL@%
  12732. %@2@%Truth sits upon the lips of dying men.%@NL@%
  12733. %@CR:DYING Arnold2   @%%@NL@%
  12734.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  12735.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  12736. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12737. %@NL@%
  12738. %@NL@%
  12739. %@2@%A certain amount of research on Last Dispatches from the edge%@EH@%
  12740. of the tomb has been made, but I feel that there has always been
  12741. a tendency on the part of the imminent mourner to tart the script
  12742. up a bit.%@NL@%
  12743. %@CR:DYING Connor    @%%@NL@%
  12744.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  12745.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  12746. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12747. %@NL@%
  12748. %@NL@%
  12749.      %@2@%Nothing in his life%@NL@%
  12750.      Became him like the leaving it; he died%@NL@%
  12751.      As one that had been studied in his death%@NL@%
  12752.      To throw away the dearest thing he owed,%@NL@%
  12753.      As 'twere a careless trifle.%@NL@%
  12754. %@CR:DYING Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  12755.                                                           Malcolm, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12756.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12757.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12758. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12759. %@NL@%
  12760. %@NL@%
  12761. %@2@%So that he seemed not to relinquish life, but to leave one%@EH@%
  12762. home for another.%@NL@%
  12763. %@CR:DYING CorneliusN@%%@NL@%
  12764.                                        Cornelius Nepos (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  12765.                                                Roman historian, biographer%@NL@%
  12766. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12767. %@NL@%
  12768. %@NL@%
  12769. %@2@%Many men on the point of an edifying death would be furious%@EH@%
  12770. if they were suddenly restored to health.%@NL@%
  12771. %@CR:DYING Pavese    @%%@NL@%
  12772.                                                  Cesare Pavese (1908-1950)%@NL@%
  12773.                                                           Italian novelist%@NL@%
  12774. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12775. %@NL@%
  12776. %@NL@%
  12777. %@2@%It matters not how a man dies, but how he lives. The act of%@EH@%
  12778. dying is not of importance, it lasts so short a time.%@NL@%
  12779. %@CR:DYING Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  12780.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  12781.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  12782. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12783. %@NL@%
  12784. %@NL@%
  12785. %@2@%He had been, he said, an unconscionable time dying; but he%@EH@%
  12786. hoped that they would excuse it.%@NL@%
  12787. %@CR:DYING CharlesII @%%@NL@%
  12788.                                                     Charles II (1630-1685)%@NL@%
  12789.                                                      King of Great Britain%@NL@%
  12790. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12791. %@NL@%
  12792. %@NL@%
  12793. %@2@%Authority forgets a dying king.%@NL@%
  12794. %@CR:DYING Tennyson  @%%@NL@%
  12795.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  12796.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  12797. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12798. %@NL@%
  12799. %@NL@%
  12800. %@2@%We all of us waited for him to die. The family sent him a cheque%@EH@%
  12801. every month, and hoped he'd get on with it quietly, without too
  12802. much vulgar fuss.%@NL@%
  12803. %@CR:DYING Osborne   @%%@NL@%
  12804.                                                  Jimmy, %@AI@%Look Back in Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12805.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  12806.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  12807. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12808. %@NL@%
  12809. %@NL@%
  12810.      %@2@%As virtuous men pass mildly away,%@NL@%
  12811.      And whisper to their souls to go,%@NL@%
  12812.      Whilst some of their sad friends do say%@NL@%
  12813.      The breath goes now, and some say no.%@NL@%
  12814. %@CR:DYING Donne     @%%@NL@%
  12815.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  12816.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  12817. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12818. %@NL@%
  12819. %@NL@%
  12820.      %@2@%I feel no pain dear mother now%@NL@%
  12821.      But oh, I am so dry!%@NL@%
  12822.      O take me to a brewery%@NL@%
  12823.      And leave me there to die.%@NL@%
  12824. %@CR:DYING Donne     @%%@NL@%
  12825.                                                    anonymous, 19th century%@NL@%
  12826. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12827. %@NL@%
  12828. %@NL@%
  12829. %@2@%We often congratulate ourselves at the moment of waking from%@EH@%
  12830. a troubled dream; it may be so at the moment of death.%@NL@%
  12831. %@CR:DYING Hawthorne @%%@NL@%
  12832.                                            Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)%@NL@%
  12833.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  12834. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12835. %@NL@%
  12836. %@NL@%
  12837. %@2@%Die, my dear doctor! That's the last thing I shall do!%@NL@%
  12838. %@CR:DYING Palmerston@%%@NL@%
  12839.                                                Lord Palmerston (1784-1865)%@NL@%
  12840.                                         English politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  12841. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12842. %@NL@%
  12843. %@NL@%
  12844. %@2@%He that dies pays all debts.%@NL@%
  12845. %@CR:DYING Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  12846.                                                      Stephano, %@AI@%The Tempest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12847.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  12848.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  12849. %@AS@%                                                              Death: Dying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12850. %@NL@%
  12851. %@NL@%
  12852. %@NL@%
  12853. %@1@%%@AS@%Debauchery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12854. %@CR:DEBAUCHERY      @%%@NL@%
  12855. %@2@%See:%@QR:Debauchery@%%@NL@%
  12856.      %@AB@%Orgies%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c8427@%%@NL@%
  12857.      Punishment: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          213330@%%@NL@%
  12858. %@NL@%
  12859. %@2@%It is the hour to be drunken! to escape being the martyred%@EH@%
  12860. slaves of time, be ceaselessly drunk. On wine, on poetry, or on
  12861. virtue, as you wish.%@NL@%
  12862. %@CR:DEBAUCBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  12863.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  12864.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  12865. %@AS@%                                                                Debauchery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12866. %@NL@%
  12867. %@NL@%
  12868. %@2@%My main problem is reconciling my gross habits with my net%@EH@%
  12869. income.%@NL@%
  12870. %@CR:DEBAUCFlynn     @%%@NL@%
  12871.                                                    Errol Flynn (1909-1959)%@NL@%
  12872.                                                  Irish-American film actor%@NL@%
  12873. %@AS@%                                                                Debauchery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12874. %@NL@%
  12875. %@NL@%
  12876. %@2@%An improper mind is a perpetual feast.%@NL@%
  12877. %@CR:DEBAUCSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  12878.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  12879.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  12880. %@AS@%                                                                Debauchery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12881. %@NL@%
  12882. %@NL@%
  12883. %@2@%His face was filled with broken commandments.%@NL@%
  12884. %@CR:DEBAUCMasefield @%%@NL@%
  12885.                                                 John Masefield (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  12886.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  12887. %@AS@%                                                                Debauchery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12888. %@NL@%
  12889. %@NL@%
  12890. %@2@%Not joy, but joylessness, is the mother of debauchery.%@NL@%
  12891. %@CR:DEBAUCNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  12892.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  12893.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  12894. %@AS@%                                                                Debauchery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12895. %@NL@%
  12896. %@NL@%
  12897. %@NL@%
  12898. %@1@%%@AS@%Debts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  12899. %@CR:DEBTS           @%%@NL@%
  12900. %@2@%See:%@QR:Debts@%%@NL@%
  12901.      Death: Dying: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           9e6da@%%@NL@%
  12902. %@NL@%
  12903. %@2@%In the midst of life we are in debt.%@NL@%
  12904. %@CR:DEBTS Mumford1  @%%@NL@%
  12905.                                            Ethel Watts Mumford (1878-1940)%@NL@%
  12906.                                         American novelist, humorous writer%@NL@%
  12907. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12908. %@NL@%
  12909. %@NL@%
  12910. %@2@%Small debts are like small shot; they are rattling on every%@EH@%
  12911. side, and can scarcely be escaped without a wound; great debts
  12912. are like cannon, of loud noise but little danger.%@NL@%
  12913. %@CR:DEBTS Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  12914.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  12915.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  12916. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12917. %@NL@%
  12918. %@NL@%
  12919. %@2@%Some people use one half their ingenuity to get into debt,%@EH@%
  12920. and the other half to avoid paying it.%@NL@%
  12921. %@CR:DEBTS Prentice  @%%@NL@%
  12922.                                             George D. Prentice (1802-1870)%@NL@%
  12923.                                                  American poet, journalist%@NL@%
  12924. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12925. %@NL@%
  12926. %@NL@%
  12927. %@2@%Everybody in Vanity Fair must have remarked how well those%@EH@%
  12928. live who are comfortably and thoroughly in debt; how they deny
  12929. themselves nothing; how jolly and easy they are in their minds.%@NL@%
  12930. %@CR:DEBTS Thackeray @%%@NL@%
  12931.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  12932.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  12933. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12934. %@NL@%
  12935. %@NL@%
  12936. %@2@%Creditor. One of a tribe of savages dwelling beyond the Financial%@EH@%
  12937. Straits and dreaded for their desolating incursions.%@NL@%
  12938. %@CR:DEBTS Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  12939.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  12940.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12941. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12942. %@NL@%
  12943. %@NL@%
  12944. %@2@%A creditor is worse than a slave-owner; for the master owns%@EH@%
  12945. only your person, but a creditor owns your dignity, and can command
  12946. it.%@NL@%
  12947. %@CR:DEBTS Hugo      @%%@NL@%
  12948.                                                    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)%@NL@%
  12949.                                           French poet, dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  12950. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12951. %@NL@%
  12952. %@NL@%
  12953. %@2@%They hired the money, didn't they?%@NL@%
  12954. %@CR:DEBTS Coolidge  @%%@NL@%
  12955.                                                Calvin Coolidge (1872-1933)%@NL@%
  12956.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  12957.                                               on Allies' repaying war debt%@NL@%
  12958. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12959. %@NL@%
  12960. %@NL@%
  12961. %@2@%Creditors have better memories than debtors.%@NL@%
  12962. %@CR:DEBTS Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  12963.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  12964.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  12965. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12966. %@NL@%
  12967. %@NL@%
  12968. %@2@%Forgetfulness. A gift of God bestowed upon debtors in compensation%@EH@%
  12969. for their destitution of conscience.%@NL@%
  12970. %@CR:DEBTS Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  12971.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  12972.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  12973. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12974. %@NL@%
  12975. %@NL@%
  12976. %@2@%No man's credit is as good as his money.%@NL@%
  12977. %@CR:DEBTS Howe1     @%%@NL@%
  12978.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  12979.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  12980. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12981. %@NL@%
  12982. %@NL@%
  12983. %@2@%There are but two ways of paying debt - increase of industry%@EH@%
  12984. in raising income, increase of thrift in laying it out.%@NL@%
  12985. %@CR:DEBTS Carlyle   @%%@NL@%
  12986.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  12987.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  12988. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12989. %@NL@%
  12990. %@NL@%
  12991.      %@2@%To John I ow'd great obligation;%@NL@%
  12992.      But John, unhappily, thought fit%@NL@%
  12993.      To publish it to all the nation:%@NL@%
  12994.      Sure John and I are more than quit.%@NL@%
  12995. %@CR:DEBTS Prior     @%%@NL@%
  12996.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  12997.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  12998. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  12999. %@NL@%
  13000. %@NL@%
  13001. %@2@%Speak not of my debts unless you mean to pay them.%@NL@%
  13002. %@CR:DEBTS Prior     @%%@NL@%
  13003.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  13004. %@AS@%                                                                     Debts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13005. %@NL@%
  13006. %@NL@%
  13007. %@NL@%
  13008. %@1@%%@AS@%Decisions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13009. %@CR:DECISIONS       @%%@NL@%
  13010. %@2@%See:%@QR:Decisions@%%@NL@%
  13011.      Conferences: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:           7aa3d@%%@NL@%
  13012.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:           a9df3@%%@NL@%
  13013.      %@AB@%Indecision%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          149648@%%@NL@%
  13014. %@NL@%
  13015. %@2@%It is always thus, impelled by a state of mind which is destined%@EH@%
  13016. not to last, that we make our irrevocable decisions.%@NL@%
  13017. %@CR:DECISIProust    @%%@NL@%
  13018.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  13019.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  13020. %@AS@%                                                                 Decisions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13021. %@NL@%
  13022. %@NL@%
  13023. %@2@%Some of his decisions were accurate. A stopped watch is right%@EH@%
  13024. twice a day.%@NL@%
  13025. %@CR:DECISIProust    @%%@NL@%
  13026.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  13027. %@AS@%                                                                 Decisions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13028. %@NL@%
  13029. %@NL@%
  13030. %@2@%Decide promptly, but never give any reasons. Your decisions%@EH@%
  13031. may be right, but your reasons are sure to be wrong.%@NL@%
  13032. %@CR:DECISIMansfield3@%%@NL@%
  13033.                                                 Lord Mansfield (1705-1793)%@NL@%
  13034.                                                             Scottish judge%@NL@%
  13035. %@AS@%                                                                 Decisions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13036. %@NL@%
  13037. %@NL@%
  13038. %@2@%The wrong way always seems the more reasonable.%@NL@%
  13039. %@CR:DECISIMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  13040.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  13041.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  13042. %@AS@%                                                                 Decisions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13043. %@NL@%
  13044. %@NL@%
  13045. %@2@%Decisiveness is often the art of timely cruelty.%@NL@%
  13046. %@CR:DECISIBecque    @%%@NL@%
  13047.                                                   Henri Becque (1837-1899)%@NL@%
  13048.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  13049. %@AS@%                                                                 Decisions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13050. %@NL@%
  13051. %@NL@%
  13052. %@NL@%
  13053. %@1@%%@AS@%Decline%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13054. %@CR:DECLINE         @%%@NL@%
  13055. %@2@%See:%@QR:Decline@%%@NL@%
  13056.      Stardom: %@AB@%Addison%@AE@%%@BO:          26b897@%%@NL@%
  13057. %@NL@%
  13058. %@2@%Statesmen and beauties are very rarely sensible of the gradations%@EH@%
  13059. of their decay.%@NL@%
  13060. %@CR:DECLINChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  13061.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  13062.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  13063. %@AS@%                                                                   Decline%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13064. %@NL@%
  13065. %@NL@%
  13066. %@2@%As favor and riches forsake a man, we discover in him the foolishness%@EH@%
  13067. they concealed, and which no one perceived before.%@NL@%
  13068. %@CR:DECLINlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  13069.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  13070.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  13071. %@AS@%                                                                   Decline%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13072. %@NL@%
  13073. %@NL@%
  13074.      %@2@%Like our shadows,%@NL@%
  13075.      Our wishes lengthen as the sun declines.%@NL@%
  13076. %@CR:DECLINYoung3    @%%@NL@%
  13077.                                                   Edward Young (1683-1765)%@NL@%
  13078.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  13079. %@AS@%                                                                   Decline%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13080. %@NL@%
  13081. %@NL@%
  13082. %@NL@%
  13083. %@1@%%@AS@%Decolonization%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13084. %@CR:DECOLONIZATION  @%%@NL@%
  13085. %@2@%See:%@QR:Decolonization@%%@NL@%
  13086.      Empire: %@AB@%Nehru%@AE@%%@BO:           c71b0@%%@NL@%
  13087. %@NL@%
  13088. %@2@%Many politicians lay it down as a self-evident proposition%@EH@%
  13089. that no people ought to be free until they are fit to use their
  13090. freedom. The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story who
  13091. resolved not to go into the water until he had learned to swim.%@NL@%
  13092. %@CR:DECOLOMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  13093.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  13094.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  13095. %@AS@%                                                            Decolonization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13096. %@NL@%
  13097. %@NL@%
  13098. %@2@%To subtract from your own sovereignty in favour of a friend%@EH@%
  13099. is much wiser than losing it all to an enemy.%@NL@%
  13100. %@CR:DECOLOMenzies   @%%@NL@%
  13101.                                             Sir Robert Menzies (1894-1978)%@NL@%
  13102.                                      Australian politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  13103. %@AS@%                                                            Decolonization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13104. %@NL@%
  13105. %@NL@%
  13106. %@2@%The wind of change is blowing through the continent. Whether%@EH@%
  13107. we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political
  13108. fact.%@NL@%
  13109. %@CR:DECOLOMacmillan @%%@NL@%
  13110.                                Harold Macmillan, Lord Stockton (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  13111.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  13112.                                                                  of Africa%@NL@%
  13113. %@AS@%                                                            Decolonization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13114. %@NL@%
  13115. %@NL@%
  13116. %@2@%It is  . . .  nauseating to see Mr Gandhi, a seditious Middle%@EH@%
  13117. Temple lawyer now posing as a fakir of a type well known in the
  13118. East, striding half-naked up the steps of the Vice-regal Palace,
  13119. while he is still organising and conducting a defiant campaign
  13120. of civil disobedience, to parley on equal terms with the representative
  13121. of the King Emperor.%@NL@%
  13122. %@CR:DECOLOChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  13123.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  13124.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  13125. %@AS@%                                                            Decolonization%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13126. %@NL@%
  13127. %@NL@%
  13128. %@NL@%
  13129. %@1@%%@AS@%Defecation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13130. %@CR:DEFECATION      @%%@NL@%
  13131. %@2@%%@QR:Defecation@%Where there is a stink of shit there is a smell of being.%@NL@%
  13132. %@CR:DEFECAArtaud    @%%@NL@%
  13133.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  13134.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  13135. %@AS@%                                                                Defecation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13136. %@NL@%
  13137. %@NL@%
  13138. %@NL@%
  13139. %@1@%%@AS@%Defiance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13140. %@CR:DEFIANCE        @%%@NL@%
  13141. %@2@%%@QR:Defiance@%Though I sit down now, the time will come when you will hear%@EH@%
  13142. me.%@NL@%
  13143. %@CR:DEFIANDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  13144.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  13145.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  13146. %@AS@%                                                                  Defiance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13147. %@NL@%
  13148. %@NL@%
  13149. %@NL@%
  13150. %@1@%%@AS@%Deliberation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13151. %@CR:DELIBERATION    @%%@NL@%
  13152. %@2@%%@QR:Deliberation@%Deliberation. The act of examining one's bread to determine%@EH@%
  13153. which side it is buttered on.%@NL@%
  13154. %@CR:DELIBEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  13155.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  13156.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  13157. %@AS@%                                                              Deliberation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13158. %@NL@%
  13159. %@NL@%
  13160. %@2@%If you think before you speak, the other fellow gets in his%@EH@%
  13161. joke first.%@NL@%
  13162. %@CR:DELIBEHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  13163.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  13164.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  13165. %@AS@%                                                              Deliberation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13166. %@NL@%
  13167. %@NL@%
  13168. %@2@%It is often said that second thoughts are best. So they are%@EH@%
  13169. in matters of judgement, but not in matters of conscience.%@NL@%
  13170. %@CR:DELIBENewman1   @%%@NL@%
  13171.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  13172.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  13173. %@AS@%                                                              Deliberation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13174. %@NL@%
  13175. %@NL@%
  13176. %@NL@%
  13177. %@1@%%@AS@%Delinquency%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13178. %@CR:DELINQUENCY     @%%@NL@%
  13179. %@2@%See:%@QR:Delinquency@%%@NL@%
  13180.      Style: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          270bee@%%@NL@%
  13181. %@NL@%
  13182. %@2@%I would there were no age between sixteen and three-and-twenty,%@EH@%
  13183. or that youth would sleep out the rest; for there is nothing in
  13184. the between but getting wenches with child, wronging the ancientry,
  13185. stealing, fighting.%@NL@%
  13186. %@CR:DELINQShakespear@%%@NL@%
  13187.                                                Shepherd, %@AI@%The Winter's Tale%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13188.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  13189.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  13190. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13191. %@NL@%
  13192. %@NL@%
  13193. %@2@%He that seeks trouble never misses.%@NL@%
  13194. %@CR:DELINQShakespear@%%@NL@%
  13195.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  13196. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13197. %@NL@%
  13198. %@NL@%
  13199. %@2@%You go to other people's grounds, you run 'em, it's just enjoyment%@EH@%
  13200. all the time . . .  Like a tennis player gets all geared up to play,
  13201. we get geared up to fight . . .  Tribal, innit? Football is one
  13202. tribe onto another  . . .  We fight 'cos we like fighting. If they
  13203. banned drink we'd still fight.%@NL@%
  13204. %@CR:DELINQShakespear@%%@NL@%
  13205.                                                 English football fan, 1985%@NL@%
  13206. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13207. %@NL@%
  13208. %@NL@%
  13209. %@2@%It would surely be far better for them and for the community%@EH@%
  13210. at large if they all stayed at home and read a little light pornography.%@NL@%
  13211. %@CR:DELINQGilmour   @%%@NL@%
  13212.                                                  Sir Ian Gilmour (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  13213.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  13214. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13215. %@NL@%
  13216. %@NL@%
  13217. %@2@%Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his%@EH@%
  13218. hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.%@NL@%
  13219. %@CR:DELINQMencken   @%%@NL@%
  13220.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  13221.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  13222. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13223. %@NL@%
  13224. %@NL@%
  13225.      %@2@%Gentleman-rankers out on the spree,%@NL@%
  13226.      Damned from here to Eternity.%@NL@%
  13227. %@CR:DELINQKipling   @%%@NL@%
  13228.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  13229.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  13230. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13231. %@NL@%
  13232. %@NL@%
  13233. %@2@%Certain lewd fellows of the baser sort.%@NL@%
  13234. %@CR:DELINQBibleActs @%%@NL@%
  13235.                                                                Bible, Acts%@NL@%
  13236. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13237. %@NL@%
  13238. %@NL@%
  13239. %@2@%There is a public mischief in your mirth.%@NL@%
  13240. %@CR:DELINQCowper    @%%@NL@%
  13241.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  13242.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13243. %@AS@%                                                               Delinquency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13244. %@NL@%
  13245. %@NL@%
  13246. %@NL@%
  13247. %@1@%%@AS@%Demagogues%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13248. %@CR:DEMAGOGUES      @%%@NL@%
  13249. %@2@%%@QR:Demagogues@%There have been many great men that have flattered the people,%@EH@%
  13250. who ne'er loved them.%@NL@%
  13251. %@CR:DEMAGOShakespear@%%@NL@%
  13252.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  13253.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  13254. %@AS@%                                                                Demagogues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13255. %@NL@%
  13256. %@NL@%
  13257. %@2@%A demagogue is a person with whom we disagree as to which gang%@EH@%
  13258. should mismanage the country.%@NL@%
  13259. %@CR:DEMAGOMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  13260.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  13261.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  13262. %@AS@%                                                                Demagogues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13263. %@NL@%
  13264. %@NL@%
  13265. %@2@%The secret of the demagogue is to make himself as stupid as%@EH@%
  13266. his audience so that they believe they are as clever as he.%@NL@%
  13267. %@CR:DEMAGOKraus     @%%@NL@%
  13268.                                                     Karl Kraus (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  13269.                                                  Austrian poet, journalist%@NL@%
  13270. %@AS@%                                                                Demagogues%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13271. %@NL@%
  13272. %@NL@%
  13273. %@NL@%
  13274. %@1@%%@AS@%Democracy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13275. %@CR:DEMOCRACY       @%%@NL@%
  13276. %@2@%See:%@QR:Democracy@%%@NL@%
  13277.      %@AB@%Elections%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c3b3f@%%@NL@%
  13278. %@NL@%
  13279. %@2@%An institution in which the whole is equal to the scum of the%@EH@%
  13280. parts.%@NL@%
  13281. %@CR:DEMOCRPreston   @%%@NL@%
  13282.                                                  Keith Preston (1884-1927)%@NL@%
  13283.                                                    American poet, humorist%@NL@%
  13284. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13285. %@NL@%
  13286. %@NL@%
  13287. %@2@%Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of%@EH@%
  13288. the people are right more than half of the time.%@NL@%
  13289. %@CR:DEMOCRWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  13290.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  13291.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  13292. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13293. %@NL@%
  13294. %@NL@%
  13295. %@2@%The most dangerous foe to truth and freedom in our midst is%@EH@%
  13296. the compact majority, yes, the damned, compact, liberal majority.%@NL@%
  13297. %@CR:DEMOCRIbsen     @%%@NL@%
  13298.                                                   Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)%@NL@%
  13299.                                                        Norwegian dramatist%@NL@%
  13300. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13301. %@NL@%
  13302. %@NL@%
  13303. %@2@%I do not believe in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance.%@NL@%
  13304. %@CR:DEMOCRCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  13305.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  13306.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  13307. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13308. %@NL@%
  13309. %@NL@%
  13310.      %@2@%Nor is the people's judgement always true;%@NL@%
  13311.      The most may err as grossly as the few.%@NL@%
  13312. %@CR:DEMOCRDryden    @%%@NL@%
  13313.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  13314.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  13315. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13316. %@NL@%
  13317. %@NL@%
  13318. %@2@%Democracy is the power of equal votes for unequal minds.%@NL@%
  13319. %@CR:DEMOCRCharlesI  @%%@NL@%
  13320.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  13321.                                King Charles I of Great Britain (1600-1649)%@NL@%
  13322. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13323. %@NL@%
  13324. %@NL@%
  13325. %@2@%Democracy is only an experiment in government, and it has the%@EH@%
  13326. obvious disadvantage of merely counting votes instead of weighing
  13327. them.%@NL@%
  13328. %@CR:DEMOCRInge      @%%@NL@%
  13329.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  13330.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  13331. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13332. %@NL@%
  13333. %@NL@%
  13334. %@2@%It's not the voting that's democracy, it's the counting.%@NL@%
  13335. %@CR:DEMOCRStoppard  @%%@NL@%
  13336.                                                     Tom Stoppard (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  13337.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  13338. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13339. %@NL@%
  13340. %@NL@%
  13341. %@2@%When great changes occur in history, when great principles%@EH@%
  13342. are involved, as a rule the majority are wrong.%@NL@%
  13343. %@CR:DEMOCRDebs      @%%@NL@%
  13344.                                                 Eugene V. Debs (1855-1926)%@NL@%
  13345.                                                    American trade unionist%@NL@%
  13346. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13347. %@NL@%
  13348. %@NL@%
  13349. %@2@%The majority never has the right on its side. Never I say!%@EH@%
  13350. That is one of the social lies that a free, thinking man is bound
  13351. to rebel against. Who makes up the majority in any given country?
  13352. Is it the wise men or the fools? I think we must agree that the
  13353. fools are in a terrible overwhelming majority, all the wide world
  13354. over.%@NL@%
  13355. %@CR:DEMOCRIbsen     @%%@NL@%
  13356.                                                   Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)%@NL@%
  13357.                                                        Norwegian dramatist%@NL@%
  13358. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13359. %@NL@%
  13360. %@NL@%
  13361. %@2@%No man is good enough to govern another man without that other's%@EH@%
  13362. consent.%@NL@%
  13363. %@CR:DEMOCRLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  13364.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  13365.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  13366. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13367. %@NL@%
  13368. %@NL@%
  13369. %@2@%As I would not be a %@AI@%slave,%@AE@% so I would not be a %@AI@%master.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  13370. This expresses my idea of democracy.%@NL@%
  13371. %@CR:DEMOCRLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  13372.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  13373.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  13374. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13375. %@NL@%
  13376. %@NL@%
  13377. %@2@%Two cheers for democracy: one because it admits variety and%@EH@%
  13378. two because it permits criticism.%@NL@%
  13379. %@CR:DEMOCRForster   @%%@NL@%
  13380.                                                  E. M. Forster (1879-1970)%@NL@%
  13381.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  13382. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13383. %@NL@%
  13384. %@NL@%
  13385. %@2@%Man's capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man's%@EH@%
  13386. inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary.%@NL@%
  13387. %@CR:DEMOCRNiebuhr   @%%@NL@%
  13388.                                               Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971)%@NL@%
  13389.                                             American theologian, historian%@NL@%
  13390. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13391. %@NL@%
  13392. %@NL@%
  13393.      %@2@%The freeman, casting with unpurchased hand%@NL@%
  13394.      The vote that shakes the turrets of the land.%@NL@%
  13395. %@CR:DEMOCRHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  13396.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  13397.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  13398. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13399. %@NL@%
  13400. %@NL@%
  13401. %@2@%The ballot is stronger than the bullet.%@NL@%
  13402. %@CR:DEMOCRLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  13403.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  13404.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  13405. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13406. %@NL@%
  13407. %@NL@%
  13408. %@2@%A fanatical belief in democracy makes democratic institutions%@EH@%
  13409. impossible.%@NL@%
  13410. %@CR:DEMOCRRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  13411.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  13412.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  13413. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13414. %@NL@%
  13415. %@NL@%
  13416. %@2@%There is a limit to the application of democratic methods.%@EH@%
  13417. You can inquire of all the passengers as to what type of car they
  13418. like to ride in, but it is impossible to question them as to whether
  13419. to apply the brakes when the train is at full speed and accident
  13420. threatens.%@NL@%
  13421. %@CR:DEMOCRTrotsky   @%%@NL@%
  13422.                                                   Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  13423.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  13424. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13425. %@NL@%
  13426. %@NL@%
  13427. %@2@%Whatever democracy may be theoretically, one is sometimes tempted%@EH@%
  13428. to define it practically as standardized and commercialized melodrama.%@NL@%
  13429. %@CR:DEMOCRBabbit    @%%@NL@%
  13430.                                                  Irving Babbit (1865-1933)%@NL@%
  13431.                                                    American author, critic%@NL@%
  13432. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13433. %@NL@%
  13434. %@NL@%
  13435. %@2@%Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for%@EH@%
  13436. appointment by the corrupt few.%@NL@%
  13437. %@CR:DEMOCRShaw      @%%@NL@%
  13438.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  13439.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  13440. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13441. %@NL@%
  13442. %@NL@%
  13443. %@2@%Democracy is an abuse of statistics.%@NL@%
  13444. %@CR:DEMOCRBorges    @%%@NL@%
  13445.                                              Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986)%@NL@%
  13446.                                  Argentine poet, critic, short storywriter%@NL@%
  13447. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13448. %@NL@%
  13449. %@NL@%
  13450. %@2@%Democracy which began by liberating man politically has developed%@EH@%
  13451. a dangerous tendency to enslave him through the tyranny of majorities
  13452. and the deadly power of their opinion.%@NL@%
  13453. %@CR:DEMOCRLewisohn  @%%@NL@%
  13454.                                                Ludwig Lewisohn (1882-1956)%@NL@%
  13455.                                                    American author, critic%@NL@%
  13456. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13457. %@NL@%
  13458. %@NL@%
  13459. %@2@%Democracy becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors.%@NL@%
  13460. %@CR:DEMOCREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  13461.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  13462.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  13463. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13464. %@NL@%
  13465. %@NL@%
  13466. %@2@%Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people by the%@EH@%
  13467. people for the people.%@NL@%
  13468. %@CR:DEMOCRWilde     @%%@NL@%
  13469.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  13470.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  13471. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13472. %@NL@%
  13473. %@NL@%
  13474. %@2@%Democracy: in which you say what you like and do what you're%@EH@%
  13475. told.%@NL@%
  13476. %@CR:DEMOCRBarry1    @%%@NL@%
  13477.                                                   Gerald Barry (1898-1968)%@NL@%
  13478.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  13479. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13480. %@NL@%
  13481. %@NL@%
  13482. %@2@%Let the people think they govern and they will be governed.%@NL@%
  13483. %@CR:DEMOCRPenn      @%%@NL@%
  13484.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  13485.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  13486. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13487. %@NL@%
  13488. %@NL@%
  13489. %@2@%I confess I enjoy democracy immensely. It is incomparably idiotic,%@EH@%
  13490. and hence incomparably amusing.%@NL@%
  13491. %@CR:DEMOCRMencken   @%%@NL@%
  13492.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  13493.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  13494. %@AS@%                                                                 Democracy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13495. %@NL@%
  13496. %@NL@%
  13497. %@NL@%
  13498. %@1@%%@AS@%Despair%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13499. %@CR:DESPAIR         @%%@NL@%
  13500. %@2@%%@QR:Despair@%I am in that temper that if I were under water I would scarcely%@EH@%
  13501. kick to come to the top.%@NL@%
  13502. %@CR:DESPAIKeats     @%%@NL@%
  13503.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  13504.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13505. %@AS@%                                                                   Despair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13506. %@NL@%
  13507. %@NL@%
  13508. %@2@%There is no vulture like despair.%@NL@%
  13509. %@CR:DESPAILansdowne @%%@NL@%
  13510.                                                 Lord Lansdowne (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  13511.                                                    English poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  13512. %@AS@%                                                                   Despair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13513. %@NL@%
  13514. %@NL@%
  13515. %@2@%Melancholy, indeed, should be diverted by every means but drinking.%@NL@%
  13516. %@CR:DESPAIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  13517.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  13518.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  13519. %@AS@%                                                                   Despair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13520. %@NL@%
  13521. %@NL@%
  13522. %@2@%I want to be forgotten even by God.%@NL@%
  13523. %@CR:DESPAIBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  13524.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  13525.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13526. %@AS@%                                                                   Despair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13527. %@NL@%
  13528. %@NL@%
  13529. %@NL@%
  13530. %@1@%%@AS@%Despotism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13531. %@CR:DESPOTISM       @%%@NL@%
  13532. %@2@%See:%@QR:Despotism@%%@NL@%
  13533.      History: %@AB@%Chamfort%@AE@%%@BO:          12dc06@%%@NL@%
  13534.      %@AB@%Tyranny%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2988c6@%%@NL@%
  13535. %@NL@%
  13536. %@2@%When you take a benevolent man and make him a despot, his despotism%@EH@%
  13537. survives but his benevolence rather fades away.%@NL@%
  13538. %@CR:DESPOTRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  13539.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  13540.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  13541. %@AS@%                                                                 Despotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13542. %@NL@%
  13543. %@NL@%
  13544. %@2@%The sin and sorrow of despotism is not that it does not love%@EH@%
  13545. men, but that it loves them too much and trusts them too little.%@NL@%
  13546. %@CR:DESPOTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  13547.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  13548.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  13549. %@AS@%                                                                 Despotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13550. %@NL@%
  13551. %@NL@%
  13552. %@2@%Those in possession of absolute power cannot only prophesy%@EH@%
  13553. and make their prophecies come true, but they can also lie and
  13554. make their lies come true.%@NL@%
  13555. %@CR:DESPOTHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  13556.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  13557.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  13558. %@AS@%                                                                 Despotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13559. %@NL@%
  13560. %@NL@%
  13561. %@2@%A despot doesn't fear eloquent writers preaching freedom - he%@EH@%
  13562. fears a drunken poet who may crack a joke that will take hold.%@NL@%
  13563. %@CR:DESPOTWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  13564.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  13565.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  13566. %@AS@%                                                                 Despotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13567. %@NL@%
  13568. %@NL@%
  13569. %@2@%Dictators ride to and fro upon tigers which they dare not dismount.%@EH@%
  13570. And the tigers are getting hungry.%@NL@%
  13571. %@CR:DESPOTChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  13572.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  13573.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  13574.                                                                    in 1936%@NL@%
  13575. %@AS@%                                                                 Despotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13576. %@NL@%
  13577. %@NL@%
  13578. %@NL@%
  13579. %@1@%%@AS@%Destiny%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13580. %@CR:DESTINY         @%%@NL@%
  13581. %@2@%See:%@QR:Destiny@%%@NL@%
  13582.      Coincidence: %@AB@%Priestley%@AE@%%@BO:           73083@%%@NL@%
  13583.      Life: %@AB@%Fitzgerald%@AE@%%@BO:          1774fb@%%@NL@%
  13584.      Management: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          190381@%%@NL@%
  13585.      Ronald Reagan: %@AB@%Reagan%@AE@%%@BO:          21b929@%%@NL@%
  13586. %@NL@%
  13587. %@2@%We are no more free agents than the queen of clubs when she%@EH@%
  13588. takes the knave of hearts.%@NL@%
  13589. %@CR:DESTINMontagu   @%%@NL@%
  13590.                                      Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762)%@NL@%
  13591.                                      English society figure, letter writer%@NL@%
  13592. %@AS@%                                                                   Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13593. %@NL@%
  13594. %@NL@%
  13595. %@2@%Destiny. A tyrant's authority for crime and a fool's excuse%@EH@%
  13596. for failure.%@NL@%
  13597. %@CR:DESTINBierce    @%%@NL@%
  13598.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  13599.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  13600. %@AS@%                                                                   Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13601. %@NL@%
  13602. %@NL@%
  13603. %@2@%We are not permitted to choose the frame of our destiny. But%@EH@%
  13604. what we put into it is ours.%@NL@%
  13605. %@CR:DESTINHammarskjo@%%@NL@%
  13606.                                               Dag Hammarskjold (1905-1961)%@NL@%
  13607.                                 Swedish statesman, Secretary-General of UN%@NL@%
  13608. %@AS@%                                                                   Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13609. %@NL@%
  13610. %@NL@%
  13611. %@2@%He that is born to be hanged shall never be drowned.%@NL@%
  13612. %@CR:DESTINHammarskjo@%%@NL@%
  13613.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  13614. %@AS@%                                                                   Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13615. %@NL@%
  13616. %@NL@%
  13617. %@2@%%@AI@%Ca ira.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13618. %@CR:DESTINFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  13619.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  13620.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  13621.                                                 on the American Revolution%@NL@%
  13622. %@AS@%                                                                   Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13623. %@NL@%
  13624. %@NL@%
  13625. %@NL@%
  13626. %@1@%%@AS@%The Devil%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13627. %@CR:THEDEVIL        @%%@NL@%
  13628. %@2@%%@QR:The Devil@%Better to reign in Hell, than to serve in Heaven.%@NL@%
  13629. %@CR:THEDEVMilton    @%%@NL@%
  13630.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  13631.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13632. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13633. %@NL@%
  13634. %@NL@%
  13635. %@2@%We may not pay Satan reverence, for that would be indiscreet,%@EH@%
  13636. but we can at least respect his talents.%@NL@%
  13637. %@CR:THEDEVTwain     @%%@NL@%
  13638.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  13639.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  13640. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13641. %@NL@%
  13642. %@NL@%
  13643. %@2@%An apology for the Devil - it must be remembered that we%@EH@%
  13644. have only heard one side of the case. God has written all the books.%@NL@%
  13645. %@CR:THEDEVButler4   @%%@NL@%
  13646.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  13647.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  13648. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13649. %@NL@%
  13650. %@NL@%
  13651. %@2@%The Prince of Darkness is a gentleman.%@NL@%
  13652. %@CR:THEDEVShakespear@%%@NL@%
  13653.                                                           Edgar, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13654.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  13655.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  13656. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13657. %@NL@%
  13658. %@NL@%
  13659. %@2@%It is so stupid of modern civilization to have given up believing%@EH@%
  13660. in the devil when he is the only explanation of it.%@NL@%
  13661. %@CR:THEDEVKnox1     @%%@NL@%
  13662.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  13663.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  13664. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13665. %@NL@%
  13666. %@NL@%
  13667.      %@2@%And Satan trembles when he sees%@NL@%
  13668.      The weakest saint upon his knees.%@NL@%
  13669. %@CR:THEDEVCowper    @%%@NL@%
  13670.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  13671.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13672. %@AS@%                                                                 The Devil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13673. %@NL@%
  13674. %@NL@%
  13675. %@NL@%
  13676. %@1@%%@AS@%Diaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13677. %@CR:DIARIES         @%%@NL@%
  13678. %@2@%%@QR:Diaries@%"The horror of that moment," the King went on, "I shall%@EH@%
  13679. never, never forget!" "You will, though," the Queen said, "if
  13680. you don't make a memorandum of it."%@NL@%
  13681. %@CR:DIARIECarroll   @%%@NL@%
  13682.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  13683.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  13684. %@AS@%                                                                   Diaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13685. %@NL@%
  13686. %@NL@%
  13687. %@2@%I always say, keep a diary and someday it'll keep you.%@NL@%
  13688. %@CR:DIARIEWest1     @%%@NL@%
  13689.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  13690.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  13691. %@AS@%                                                                   Diaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13692. %@NL@%
  13693. %@NL@%
  13694. %@2@%It's the good girls who keep the diaries; the bad girls never%@EH@%
  13695. have the time.%@NL@%
  13696. %@CR:DIARIEBankhead  @%%@NL@%
  13697.                                              Tallulah Bankhead (1902-1968)%@NL@%
  13698.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  13699. %@AS@%                                                                   Diaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13700. %@NL@%
  13701. %@NL@%
  13702. %@NL@%
  13703. %@1@%%@AS@%Dilettantes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13704. %@CR:DILETTANTES     @%%@NL@%
  13705. %@2@%%@QR:Dilettantes@%A smattering of everything and a knowledge of nothing.%@NL@%
  13706. %@CR:DILETTDickens   @%%@NL@%
  13707.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  13708.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  13709. %@AS@%                                                               Dilettantes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13710. %@NL@%
  13711. %@NL@%
  13712. %@2@%A man must love a thing very much if he not only practises%@EH@%
  13713. it without any hope of fame and money, but even  . . .  without any
  13714. hope of doing it well.%@NL@%
  13715. %@CR:DILETTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  13716.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  13717.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  13718. %@AS@%                                                               Dilettantes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13719. %@NL@%
  13720. %@NL@%
  13721. %@2@%Dilettante: a philanderer who seduces the several arts and%@EH@%
  13722. deserts each in turn for another.%@NL@%
  13723. %@CR:DILETTHerford   @%%@NL@%
  13724.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  13725.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  13726. %@AS@%                                                               Dilettantes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13727. %@NL@%
  13728. %@NL@%
  13729. %@NL@%
  13730. %@1@%%@AS@%Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13731. %@CR:DINNERPARTIES   @%%@NL@%
  13732. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dinner Parties@%%@NL@%
  13733.      Government: %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:          11703b@%%@NL@%
  13734.      Guests: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:          11de61@%%@NL@%
  13735.      Revolutionaries: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          22ccb9@%%@NL@%
  13736. %@NL@%
  13737. %@2@%Men that can have communication in nothing else can sympathetically%@EH@%
  13738. eat together, can still rise into some glow of brotherhood over
  13739. food and wine.%@NL@%
  13740. %@CR:DINNERCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  13741.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  13742.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  13743. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13744. %@NL@%
  13745. %@NL@%
  13746. %@2@%He showed me his bill of fare to tempt me to dine with him;%@EH@%
  13747. said I, I value not your bill of fare, give me your bill of company.%@NL@%
  13748. %@CR:DINNERSwift     @%%@NL@%
  13749.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  13750.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  13751. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13752. %@NL@%
  13753. %@NL@%
  13754. %@2@%To every man alive, one must hope, it has in some manner happened%@EH@%
  13755. that he has talked with his more fascinating friends round a table
  13756. on some night when all the numerous personalities unfolded themselves
  13757. like great tropical flowers.%@NL@%
  13758. %@CR:DINNERChesterton@%%@NL@%
  13759.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  13760.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  13761. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13762. %@NL@%
  13763. %@NL@%
  13764. %@2@%Where the guests at a gathering are well-acquainted, they eat%@EH@%
  13765. twenty percent more than they otherwise would.%@NL@%
  13766. %@CR:DINNERHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  13767.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  13768.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  13769. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13770. %@NL@%
  13771. %@NL@%
  13772. %@2@%A dinner lubricates business.%@NL@%
  13773. %@CR:DINNERStowell   @%%@NL@%
  13774.                                     Lord Stowell, WilliamScott (1745-1836)%@NL@%
  13775.                                                             English lawyer%@NL@%
  13776. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13777. %@NL@%
  13778. %@NL@%
  13779. %@2@%Take counsel in wine, but resolve afterwards in water.%@NL@%
  13780. %@CR:DINNERFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  13781.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  13782.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  13783. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13784. %@NL@%
  13785. %@NL@%
  13786. %@2@%The best number for a dinner party is two - myself and a%@EH@%
  13787. dam' good head waiter.%@NL@%
  13788. %@CR:DINNERGulbenkian@%%@NL@%
  13789.                                               Nubar Gulbenkian (1897-1972)%@NL@%
  13790.                                                            oil millionaire%@NL@%
  13791. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13792. %@NL@%
  13793. %@NL@%
  13794. %@2@%I had rather munch a crust of brown bread and an onion in a%@EH@%
  13795. corner, without ado or ceremony, than feed upon a turkey at another
  13796. man's table, where I am forced to chew slowly, drink little, wipe
  13797. my mouth every minute, and cannot sneeze or cough, or do other
  13798. things that are the privileges of liberty and solitude.%@NL@%
  13799. %@CR:DINNERCervantes @%%@NL@%
  13800.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  13801.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  13802. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13803. %@NL@%
  13804. %@NL@%
  13805. %@2@%The object of a dinner is not to eat and drink, but to join%@EH@%
  13806. in merrymaking and make a lot of noise. For that reason, he who
  13807. drinks half drinks best.%@NL@%
  13808. %@CR:DINNERLinYutang @%%@NL@%
  13809.                                                     Lin Yutang (1895-1976)%@NL@%
  13810.                                                             Chinese writer%@NL@%
  13811. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13812. %@NL@%
  13813. %@NL@%
  13814. %@2@%It isn't so much what's on the table that matters as what's%@EH@%
  13815. on the chairs.%@NL@%
  13816. %@CR:DINNERGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  13817.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  13818.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  13819. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13820. %@NL@%
  13821. %@NL@%
  13822. %@2@%In dinner talk it is perhaps allowable to fling any faggot%@EH@%
  13823. rather than let the fire go out.%@NL@%
  13824. %@CR:DINNERBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  13825.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  13826.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  13827. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13828. %@NL@%
  13829. %@NL@%
  13830. %@2@%It you want to shine as a diner-out, the best way is to know%@EH@%
  13831. something which others do not know, and not to know many things
  13832. which everybody knows. This takes much less reading, and  . . . 
  13833. makes you a really good listener.%@NL@%
  13834. %@CR:DINNERPatmore   @%%@NL@%
  13835.                                               Coventry Patmore (1823-1896)%@NL@%
  13836.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  13837. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13838. %@NL@%
  13839. %@NL@%
  13840. %@2@%Don't talk about yourself, it will be done when you leave.%@NL@%
  13841. %@CR:DINNERMizner1   @%%@NL@%
  13842.                                                 Addison Mizner (1872-1933)%@NL@%
  13843.                                                 American architect, writer%@NL@%
  13844. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13845. %@NL@%
  13846. %@NL@%
  13847. %@2@%Conversation is the enemy of good wine and food.%@NL@%
  13848. %@CR:DINNERHitchcock @%%@NL@%
  13849.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  13850.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  13851. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13852. %@NL@%
  13853. %@NL@%
  13854. %@2@%A host is like a general: calamities often reveal his genius.%@NL@%
  13855. %@CR:DINNERHorace    @%%@NL@%
  13856.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  13857.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  13858. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13859. %@NL@%
  13860. %@NL@%
  13861.      %@2@%When her guests were awash with champagne and with gin%@NL@%
  13862.      She was recklessly sober, as sharp as a pin.%@NL@%
  13863. %@CR:DINNERPlomer    @%%@NL@%
  13864.                                                 William Plomer (1903-1973)%@NL@%
  13865.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  13866. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13867. %@NL@%
  13868. %@NL@%
  13869. %@2@%This was a good enough dinner, to be sure; but it was not a%@EH@%
  13870. dinner to %@AI@%ask%@AE@% a man to.%@NL@%
  13871. %@CR:DINNERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  13872.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  13873.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  13874. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13875. %@NL@%
  13876. %@NL@%
  13877. %@2@%After a good dinner, one can forgive anybody, even one's own%@EH@%
  13878. relations.%@NL@%
  13879. %@CR:DINNERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  13880.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  13881.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  13882. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13883. %@NL@%
  13884. %@NL@%
  13885. %@2@%When at length they rose to go to bed, it struck each and as%@EH@%
  13886. he followed his neighbour upstairs that the one before him walked
  13887. very crookedly.%@NL@%
  13888. %@CR:DINNERSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  13889.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  13890.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  13891. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13892. %@NL@%
  13893. %@NL@%
  13894. %@2@%It's what the guests say as they swing out of the drive that%@EH@%
  13895. counts.%@NL@%
  13896. %@CR:DINNERSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  13897.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  13898. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13899. %@NL@%
  13900. %@NL@%
  13901. %@2@%Long meals make short lives.%@NL@%
  13902. %@CR:DINNERLubbock   @%%@NL@%
  13903.                                 Sir John Lubbock, Lord Avebury (1834-1915)%@NL@%
  13904.                                          British banker, scientist, author%@NL@%
  13905. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13906. %@NL@%
  13907. %@NL@%
  13908. %@2@%%@AI@%Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  13909. Perhaps one day this too will be pleasant to remember.%@NL@%
  13910. %@CR:DINNERVirgil    @%%@NL@%
  13911.                                                          Virgil (70-19 BC)%@NL@%
  13912.                                                                 Roman poet%@NL@%
  13913. %@AS@%                                                            Dinner Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13914. %@NL@%
  13915. %@NL@%
  13916. %@NL@%
  13917. %@1@%%@AS@%Diplomacy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  13918. %@CR:DIPLOMACY       @%%@NL@%
  13919. %@2@%See:%@QR:Diplomacy@%%@NL@%
  13920.      %@AB@%Tact%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          27b716@%%@NL@%
  13921. %@NL@%
  13922.      %@2@%Diplomacy is to do and say%@NL@%
  13923.      The nastiest things in the nicest way.%@NL@%
  13924. %@CR:DIPLOMGoldberg1 @%%@NL@%
  13925.                                                 Isaac Goldberg (1887-1938)%@NL@%
  13926.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  13927. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13928. %@NL@%
  13929. %@NL@%
  13930. %@2@%A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday%@EH@%
  13931. but never remembers her age.%@NL@%
  13932. %@CR:DIPLOMFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  13933.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  13934.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  13935. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13936. %@NL@%
  13937. %@NL@%
  13938. %@2@%A really good diplomat does not go in for victories, even when%@EH@%
  13939. he wins them.%@NL@%
  13940. %@CR:DIPLOMLippmann  @%%@NL@%
  13941.                                                Walter Lippmann (1889-1974)%@NL@%
  13942.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  13943. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13944. %@NL@%
  13945. %@NL@%
  13946. %@2@%Let us never negotiate out of fear, but let us never fear to%@EH@%
  13947. negotiate.%@NL@%
  13948. %@CR:DIPLOMKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  13949.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  13950.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  13951. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13952. %@NL@%
  13953. %@NL@%
  13954. %@2@%A man-of-war is the best ambassador.%@NL@%
  13955. %@CR:DIPLOMCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  13956.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  13957.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  13958. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13959. %@NL@%
  13960. %@NL@%
  13961. %@2@%A diplomat these days is nothing but a headwaiter who's allowed%@EH@%
  13962. to sit down occasionally.%@NL@%
  13963. %@CR:DIPLOMUstinov   @%%@NL@%
  13964.                                                    Peter Ustinov (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  13965.                                                 British author, actor, wit%@NL@%
  13966. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13967. %@NL@%
  13968. %@NL@%
  13969. %@2@%If you are to stand up for your Government you must be able%@EH@%
  13970. to stand up to your Government.%@NL@%
  13971. %@CR:DIPLOMCaccia    @%%@NL@%
  13972.                                          Sir Harold, Lord Caccia (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  13973.                                     while British ambassador at Washington%@NL@%
  13974. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13975. %@NL@%
  13976. %@NL@%
  13977. %@2@%I have discovered the art of fooling diplomats; I speak the%@EH@%
  13978. truth and they never believe me.%@NL@%
  13979. %@CR:DIPLOMCavour    @%%@NL@%
  13980.                                             Camillo  di Cavour (1810-1861)%@NL@%
  13981.                                                          Italian statesman%@NL@%
  13982. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13983. %@NL@%
  13984. %@NL@%
  13985. %@2@%Diplomacy: lying in state.%@NL@%
  13986. %@CR:DIPLOMHerford   @%%@NL@%
  13987.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  13988.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  13989. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13990. %@NL@%
  13991. %@NL@%
  13992. %@2@%Babies in silk hats playing with dynamite.%@NL@%
  13993. %@CR:DIPLOMWoollcott @%%@NL@%
  13994.                                            Alexander Woollcott (1887-1943)%@NL@%
  13995.                                                 American columnist, critic%@NL@%
  13996. %@AS@%                                                                 Diplomacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  13997. %@NL@%
  13998. %@NL@%
  13999. %@NL@%
  14000. %@1@%%@AS@%Disappointment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14001. %@CR:DISAPPOINTMENT  @%%@NL@%
  14002. %@2@%%@QR:Disappointment@%There are two tragedies in life. One is to lose your heart's%@EH@%
  14003. desire. The other is to gain it.%@NL@%
  14004. %@CR:DISAPPShaw      @%%@NL@%
  14005.                                                  Mendoza, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14006.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  14007.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  14008. %@AS@%                                                            Disappointment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14009. %@NL@%
  14010. %@NL@%
  14011.      %@2@%The world hath failed to impart%@NL@%
  14012.      The joy our youth forebodes,%@NL@%
  14013.      Failed to fill up the void which in our breasts we bear.%@NL@%
  14014. %@CR:DISAPPArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  14015.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  14016.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  14017. %@AS@%                                                            Disappointment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14018. %@NL@%
  14019. %@NL@%
  14020. %@2@%He who expects much can expect little.%@NL@%
  14021. %@CR:DISAPPMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  14022.                                           Gabriel Garcia Marquez (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  14023.                                                           Colombian writer%@NL@%
  14024. %@AS@%                                                            Disappointment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14025. %@NL@%
  14026. %@NL@%
  14027. %@2@%"Blessed is the man who expects nothing, for he shall never%@EH@%
  14028. be disappointed" was the ninth beatitude.%@NL@%
  14029. %@CR:DISAPPPope      @%%@NL@%
  14030.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  14031.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  14032. %@AS@%                                                            Disappointment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14033. %@NL@%
  14034. %@NL@%
  14035. %@NL@%
  14036. %@1@%%@AS@%Disasters%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14037. %@CR:DISASTERS       @%%@NL@%
  14038. %@2@%See:%@QR:Disasters@%%@NL@%
  14039.      Fanatics: %@AB@%Benson%@AE@%%@BO:           e5838@%%@NL@%
  14040.      The Press: %@AB@%Attlee%@AE@%%@BO:          2016a2@%%@NL@%
  14041. %@NL@%
  14042. %@2@%Our sympathy is cold to the relation of distant misery.%@NL@%
  14043. %@CR:DISASTGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  14044.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  14045.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  14046. %@AS@%                                                                 Disasters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14047. %@NL@%
  14048. %@NL@%
  14049. %@2@%Man's extremity is God's opportunity.%@NL@%
  14050. %@CR:DISASTFlavel    @%%@NL@%
  14051.                                                    John Flavel (1630-1691)%@NL@%
  14052.                                                 English evangelist, author%@NL@%
  14053. %@AS@%                                                                 Disasters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14054. %@NL@%
  14055. %@NL@%
  14056. %@2@%Calamities are of two kinds: misfortune to ourselves, and good%@EH@%
  14057. fortune to others.%@NL@%
  14058. %@CR:DISASTBierce    @%%@NL@%
  14059.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  14060.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  14061. %@AS@%                                                                 Disasters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14062. %@NL@%
  14063. %@NL@%
  14064. %@2@%Oh, dry the starting tear, for they were heavily insured.%@NL@%
  14065. %@CR:DISASTGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  14066.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  14067.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  14068. %@AS@%                                                                 Disasters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14069. %@NL@%
  14070. %@NL@%
  14071. %@2@%The collapsed slag heap looks weirdly, wickedly voluptuous%@EH@%
  14072. as you see it from a distance, for it sprawls into the village
  14073. like a reclining female monster, a wanton Negress shifting awkwardly
  14074. on her smelly hams. The sense of outrage and impotent disgust
  14075. seems to coil itself in the very walk of those who approach the
  14076. defilement, their gumboots slipslopping in the slime.%@NL@%
  14077. %@CR:DISASTPotter    @%%@NL@%
  14078.                                                    Dennis Potter (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  14079.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  14080.                                              of the Aberfan disaster, 1966%@NL@%
  14081. %@AS@%                                                                 Disasters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14082. %@NL@%
  14083. %@NL@%
  14084. %@NL@%
  14085. %@1@%%@AS@%Disc Jockeys%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14086. %@CR:DISCJOCKEYS     @%%@NL@%
  14087. %@2@%See:%@QR:Disc Jockeys@%%@NL@%
  14088.      Understanding: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          299b60@%%@NL@%
  14089. %@NL@%
  14090.      %@2@%This particularly rapid, unintelligible patter%@NL@%
  14091.      Isn't generally heard, and if it is it doesn't matter!%@NL@%
  14092. %@CR:DISCJOGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  14093.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  14094.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  14095. %@AS@%                                                              Disc Jockeys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14096. %@NL@%
  14097. %@NL@%
  14098. %@2@%Radio news is bearable. This is due to the fact that while%@EH@%
  14099. the news is being broadcast the disc jockey is not allowed to talk.%@NL@%
  14100. %@CR:DISCJOLebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  14101.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  14102.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  14103. %@AS@%                                                              Disc Jockeys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14104. %@NL@%
  14105. %@NL@%
  14106. %@NL@%
  14107. %@1@%%@AS@%Discretion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14108. %@CR:DISCRETION      @%%@NL@%
  14109. %@2@%See:%@QR:Discretion@%%@NL@%
  14110.      %@AB@%Cunning%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           94467@%%@NL@%
  14111. %@NL@%
  14112. %@2@%Nothing is more dangerous than a friend without discretion;%@EH@%
  14113. even a prudent enemy is preferable.%@NL@%
  14114. %@CR:DISCRElaFontaine@%%@NL@%
  14115.                                            Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695)%@NL@%
  14116.                                                      French poet, fabulist%@NL@%
  14117. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14118. %@NL@%
  14119. %@NL@%
  14120. %@2@%As a jewel of gold in a swine's snout, so is a fair woman which%@EH@%
  14121. is without discretion.%@NL@%
  14122. %@CR:DISCREBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  14123.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  14124. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14125. %@NL@%
  14126. %@NL@%
  14127. %@2@%A closed mouth catches no flies.%@NL@%
  14128. %@CR:DISCREBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  14129.                                                            Italian proverb%@NL@%
  14130. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14131. %@NL@%
  14132. %@NL@%
  14133.      %@2@%Give thy thoughts no tongue,%@NL@%
  14134.      Nor any unproportioned thought his act.%@NL@%
  14135.      Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar.%@NL@%
  14136.      Those friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,%@NL@%
  14137.      Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel.%@NL@%
  14138. %@CR:DISCREShakespear@%%@NL@%
  14139.                                                           Polonius, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14140.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  14141.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  14142. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14143. %@NL@%
  14144. %@NL@%
  14145. %@2@%What is called discretion in men is called cunning in animals.%@NL@%
  14146. %@CR:DISCRElaFontaine@%%@NL@%
  14147.                                            Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695)%@NL@%
  14148.                                                      French poet, fabulist%@NL@%
  14149. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14150. %@NL@%
  14151. %@NL@%
  14152. %@2@%A wise man sees as much as he ought, not as much as he can.%@NL@%
  14153. %@CR:DISCREMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  14154.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  14155.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  14156. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14157. %@NL@%
  14158. %@NL@%
  14159. %@2@%Be wiser than other people, if you can, but do not tell them%@EH@%
  14160. so.%@NL@%
  14161. %@CR:DISCREChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  14162.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  14163.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  14164. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14165. %@NL@%
  14166. %@NL@%
  14167. %@2@%He that has a secret should not only hide it, but hide that%@EH@%
  14168. he has it to hide.%@NL@%
  14169. %@CR:DISCRECarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  14170.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  14171.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  14172. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14173. %@NL@%
  14174. %@NL@%
  14175. %@2@%When the strong command, obedience is best.%@NL@%
  14176. %@CR:DISCRENewbolt   @%%@NL@%
  14177.                                              Sir Henry Newbolt (1862-1938)%@NL@%
  14178.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  14179. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14180. %@NL@%
  14181. %@NL@%
  14182. %@2@%Not right out, but stealthily, like a parson's damn.%@NL@%
  14183. %@CR:DISCREHardy     @%%@NL@%
  14184.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  14185.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  14186. %@AS@%                                                                Discretion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14187. %@NL@%
  14188. %@NL@%
  14189. %@NL@%
  14190. %@1@%%@AS@%Disgrace%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14191. %@CR:DISGRACE        @%%@NL@%
  14192. %@2@%%@QR:Disgrace@%Oh! no! we never mention her,%@NL@%
  14193.      Her name is never heard;%@NL@%
  14194.      My lips are now forbid to speak%@NL@%
  14195.      That once familiar word.%@NL@%
  14196. %@CR:DISGRABayly     @%%@NL@%
  14197.                                                Thomas H. Bayly (1797-1839)%@NL@%
  14198.                                                       English writer, poet%@NL@%
  14199. %@AS@%                                                                  Disgrace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14200. %@NL@%
  14201. %@NL@%
  14202. %@NL@%
  14203. %@1@%%@AS@%Dissatisfaction%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14204. %@CR:DISSATISFACTION @%%@NL@%
  14205. %@2@%%@QR:Dissatisfaction@%The idiot who praises with enthusiastic tone%@NL@%
  14206.      All centuries but this and every country but his own.%@NL@%
  14207. %@CR:DISSATGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  14208.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  14209.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  14210. %@AS@%                                                           Dissatisfaction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14211. %@NL@%
  14212. %@NL@%
  14213. %@2@%As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction%@EH@%
  14214. is death.%@NL@%
  14215. %@CR:DISSATShaw      @%%@NL@%
  14216.                                                         Gregory, %@AI@%Overruled%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14217.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  14218.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  14219. %@AS@%                                                           Dissatisfaction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14220. %@NL@%
  14221. %@NL@%
  14222. %@2@%With me, its just a genetic dissatisfaction with everything.%@NL@%
  14223. %@CR:DISSATAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  14224.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  14225.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  14226. %@AS@%                                                           Dissatisfaction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14227. %@NL@%
  14228. %@NL@%
  14229. %@NL@%
  14230. %@1@%%@AS@%Dissent%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14231. %@CR:DISSENT         @%%@NL@%
  14232. %@2@%%@QR:Dissent@%In a world of fugitives%@NL@%
  14233.      The person taking the opposite direction%@NL@%
  14234.      Will appear to run away.%@NL@%
  14235. %@CR:DISSENEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  14236.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  14237.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  14238. %@AS@%                                                                   Dissent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14239. %@NL@%
  14240. %@NL@%
  14241. %@2@%It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established%@EH@%
  14242. authorities are wrong.%@NL@%
  14243. %@CR:DISSENVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  14244.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  14245.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  14246. %@AS@%                                                                   Dissent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14247. %@NL@%
  14248. %@NL@%
  14249. %@2@%Discussion in America means dissent.%@NL@%
  14250. %@CR:DISSENThurber   @%%@NL@%
  14251.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  14252.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  14253. %@AS@%                                                                   Dissent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14254. %@NL@%
  14255. %@NL@%
  14256. %@2@%In a democracy dissent is an act of faith. Like medicine, the%@EH@%
  14257. test of its value is not in its taste, but its effects.%@NL@%
  14258. %@CR:DISSENFulbright @%%@NL@%
  14259.                                                  J. W. Fulbright (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  14260.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  14261. %@AS@%                                                                   Dissent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14262. %@NL@%
  14263. %@NL@%
  14264. %@NL@%
  14265. %@1@%%@AS@%Divorce%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14266. %@CR:DIVORCE         @%%@NL@%
  14267. %@2@%See:%@QR:Divorce@%%@NL@%
  14268.      Marriage: %@AB@%Storr%@AE@%%@BO:          198720@%; %@AB@%Fosdick%@AE@%%@BO:          1988c4@%%@NL@%
  14269. %@NL@%
  14270. %@2@%The only solid and lasting peace between a man and his wife%@EH@%
  14271. is doubtless a separation.%@NL@%
  14272. %@CR:DIVORCChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  14273.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  14274.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  14275. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14276. %@NL@%
  14277. %@NL@%
  14278. %@2@%Divorce is probably of nearly the same date as marriage. I%@EH@%
  14279. believe, however, that marriage is some weeks the more ancient.%@NL@%
  14280. %@CR:DIVORCVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  14281.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  14282.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  14283. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14284. %@NL@%
  14285. %@NL@%
  14286. %@2@%It is he who has broken the bond of marriage - not I. I%@EH@%
  14287. only break its bondage.%@NL@%
  14288. %@CR:DIVORCWilde     @%%@NL@%
  14289.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  14290.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  14291. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14292. %@NL@%
  14293. %@NL@%
  14294. %@2@%A Roman divorced from his wife, being highly blamed by his%@EH@%
  14295. friends, who demanded, "Was she not chaste? Was she not fair?
  14296. Was she not fruitful?" holding out his shoe, asked them whether
  14297. it was not new and well made. "Yet," added he, "none of you
  14298. can tell where it pinches me."%@NL@%
  14299. %@CR:DIVORCPlutarch  @%%@NL@%
  14300.                                                          Plutarch (46-120)%@NL@%
  14301.                                                 Greek essayist, biographer%@NL@%
  14302. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14303. %@NL@%
  14304. %@NL@%
  14305. %@2@%Judges, as a class, display, in the matter of arranging%@EH@%
  14306. alimony, that reckless generosity which is found only in men who
  14307. are giving away someone else's cash.%@NL@%
  14308. %@CR:DIVORCWodehouse @%%@NL@%
  14309.                                                P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975)%@NL@%
  14310.                                                 British novelist, humorist%@NL@%
  14311. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14312. %@NL@%
  14313. %@NL@%
  14314. %@2@%You never realize how short a month is until you pay alimony.%@NL@%
  14315. %@CR:DIVORCBarrymore2@%%@NL@%
  14316.                                                 John Barrymore (1882-1942)%@NL@%
  14317.                                              American stage and film actor%@NL@%
  14318. %@AS@%                                                                   Divorce%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14319. %@NL@%
  14320. %@NL@%
  14321. %@NL@%
  14322. %@1@%%@AS@%Doctors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14323. %@CR:DOCTORS         @%%@NL@%
  14324. %@2@%See:%@QR:Doctors@%%@NL@%
  14325.      Life: %@AB@%Piozzi%@AE@%%@BO:          1785cd@%%@NL@%
  14326.      Poverty: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          1f63ae@%%@NL@%
  14327. %@NL@%
  14328. %@2@%I wasn't driven into medicine by a social conscience but by%@EH@%
  14329. rampant curiosity.%@NL@%
  14330. %@CR:DOCTORMiller3   @%%@NL@%
  14331.                                                  Jonathan Miller (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  14332.                                                     British writer, doctor%@NL@%
  14333. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14334. %@NL@%
  14335. %@NL@%
  14336. %@2@%God heals, and the doctor takes the fee.%@NL@%
  14337. %@CR:DOCTORFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  14338.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  14339.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  14340. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14341. %@NL@%
  14342. %@NL@%
  14343. %@2@%The art of medicine consists of amusing the patient while Nature%@EH@%
  14344. cures the disease.%@NL@%
  14345. %@CR:DOCTORVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  14346.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  14347.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  14348. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14349. %@NL@%
  14350. %@NL@%
  14351. %@2@%The best doctors in the world are Doctor Diet, Doctor Quiet%@EH@%
  14352. and Doctor Merryman.%@NL@%
  14353. %@CR:DOCTORSwift     @%%@NL@%
  14354.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  14355.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  14356. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14357. %@NL@%
  14358. %@NL@%
  14359.      %@2@%A skilful leech is better far%@NL@%
  14360.      Than half a hundred men of war.%@NL@%
  14361. %@CR:DOCTORButler3   @%%@NL@%
  14362.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  14363.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  14364. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14365. %@NL@%
  14366. %@NL@%
  14367. %@2@%One finger in the throat and one in the rectum make a good%@EH@%
  14368. diagnostician.%@NL@%
  14369. %@CR:DOCTOROsler     @%%@NL@%
  14370.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  14371.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  14372. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14373. %@NL@%
  14374. %@NL@%
  14375. %@2@%Doctors think a lot of patients are cured who have simply quit%@EH@%
  14376. in disgust.%@NL@%
  14377. %@CR:DOCTORHerold    @%%@NL@%
  14378.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  14379.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  14380. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14381. %@NL@%
  14382. %@NL@%
  14383.      %@2@%While others meanly asked whole months to slay%@NL@%
  14384.      I oft dispatched the patient in a day.%@NL@%
  14385. %@CR:DOCTORGarth     @%%@NL@%
  14386.                                               Sir Samuel Garth (1661-1719)%@NL@%
  14387.                                                    English physician, poet%@NL@%
  14388. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14389. %@NL@%
  14390. %@NL@%
  14391. %@2@%He wastes no time with patients: and when you have to die,%@EH@%
  14392. he will finish the business quicker than anybody else.%@NL@%
  14393. %@CR:DOCTORMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  14394.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  14395.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  14396. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14397. %@NL@%
  14398. %@NL@%
  14399. %@2@%What I call a good patient is one who, having found a good%@EH@%
  14400. physician, sticks to him till he dies.%@NL@%
  14401. %@CR:DOCTORHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  14402.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  14403.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  14404. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14405. %@NL@%
  14406. %@NL@%
  14407.      %@2@%Cured yesterday of my disease,%@NL@%
  14408.      I died last night of my physician.%@NL@%
  14409. %@CR:DOCTORPrior     @%%@NL@%
  14410.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  14411.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  14412. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14413. %@NL@%
  14414. %@NL@%
  14415. %@2@%While the doctors consult, the patient dies.%@NL@%
  14416. %@CR:DOCTORPrior     @%%@NL@%
  14417.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  14418. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14419. %@NL@%
  14420. %@NL@%
  14421.      %@2@%The doctor found, when she was dead,%@NL@%
  14422.      Her last disorder mortal.%@NL@%
  14423. %@CR:DOCTORGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  14424.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  14425.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  14426. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14427. %@NL@%
  14428. %@NL@%
  14429. %@2@%My doctor gave me six months to live but when I couldn't pay%@EH@%
  14430. the bill be gave me six months more.%@NL@%
  14431. %@CR:DOCTORMatthau   @%%@NL@%
  14432.                                                   Walter Matthau (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  14433.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  14434. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14435. %@NL@%
  14436. %@NL@%
  14437. %@2@%There are worse occupations in the world than feeling a woman's%@EH@%
  14438. pulse . . . %@NL@%
  14439. %@CR:DOCTORSterne    @%%@NL@%
  14440.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  14441.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  14442. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14443. %@NL@%
  14444. %@NL@%
  14445. %@2@%Taking a lady's hand gives her confidence in her physician.%@NL@%
  14446. %@CR:DOCTOROsler     @%%@NL@%
  14447.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  14448.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  14449. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14450. %@NL@%
  14451. %@NL@%
  14452. %@2@%Life is short and the art is long.%@NL@%
  14453. %@CR:DOCTORHippocrate@%%@NL@%
  14454.                                             Hippocrates (c. 460-c. 370 BC)%@NL@%
  14455.                                                            Greek physician%@NL@%
  14456.                                                      of the art of healing%@NL@%
  14457. %@AS@%                                                                   Doctors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14458. %@NL@%
  14459. %@NL@%
  14460. %@NL@%
  14461. %@1@%%@AS@%Doctrine%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14462. %@CR:DOCTRINE        @%%@NL@%
  14463. %@2@%See:%@QR:Doctrine@%%@NL@%
  14464.      Teachers: %@AB@%Defoe%@AE@%%@BO:          280d7d@%%@NL@%
  14465. %@NL@%
  14466. %@2@%%@AI@%Punch%@AE@% is very much like the Church of England. It is doctrinally%@EH@%
  14467. inexplicable, but it goes on.%@NL@%
  14468. %@CR:DOCTRIMuggeridge@%%@NL@%
  14469.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  14470.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  14471. %@AS@%                                                                  Doctrine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14472. %@NL@%
  14473. %@NL@%
  14474. %@2@%There are men who would even be afraid to commit themselves%@EH@%
  14475. on the doctrine that castor oil is a laxative.%@NL@%
  14476. %@CR:DOCTRIFlammarion@%%@NL@%
  14477.                                             Camille Flammarion (1842-1925)%@NL@%
  14478.                                               French astronomer, clergyman%@NL@%
  14479. %@AS@%                                                                  Doctrine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14480. %@NL@%
  14481. %@NL@%
  14482. %@2@%Example moves the world more than doctrine.%@NL@%
  14483. %@CR:DOCTRIMiller2   @%%@NL@%
  14484.                                                   Henry Miller (1891-1980)%@NL@%
  14485.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  14486. %@AS@%                                                                  Doctrine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14487. %@NL@%
  14488. %@NL@%
  14489. %@2@%Doctrine is nothing but the skin of truth set up and stuffed.%@NL@%
  14490. %@CR:DOCTRIBeecher1  @%%@NL@%
  14491.                                             Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887)%@NL@%
  14492.                                         American clergyman, editor, writer%@NL@%
  14493. %@AS@%                                                                  Doctrine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14494. %@NL@%
  14495. %@NL@%
  14496. %@NL@%
  14497. %@1@%%@AS@%Dogmatism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14498. %@CR:DOGMATISM       @%%@NL@%
  14499. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dogmatism@%%@NL@%
  14500.      Religion: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          2243d0@%; %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:          220637@%%@NL@%
  14501. %@NL@%
  14502. %@2@%The great the ignorance the greater the dogmatism.%@NL@%
  14503. %@CR:DOGMATOsler     @%%@NL@%
  14504.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  14505.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  14506. %@AS@%                                                                 Dogmatism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14507. %@NL@%
  14508. %@NL@%
  14509. %@2@%Dogmas are fences round the mystery.%@NL@%
  14510. %@CR:DOGMATSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  14511.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  14512.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  14513. %@AS@%                                                                 Dogmatism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14514. %@NL@%
  14515. %@NL@%
  14516. %@2@%Dogmatism does not mean the absence of thought, but the end%@EH@%
  14517. of thought.%@NL@%
  14518. %@CR:DOGMATChesterton@%%@NL@%
  14519.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  14520.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  14521. %@AS@%                                                                 Dogmatism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14522. %@NL@%
  14523. %@NL@%
  14524. %@2@%Any stigma will do to beat a dogma.%@NL@%
  14525. %@CR:DOGMATGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  14526.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  14527.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  14528. %@AS@%                                                                 Dogmatism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14529. %@NL@%
  14530. %@NL@%
  14531. %@2@%Dogmatism is puppyism come to its full growth.%@NL@%
  14532. %@CR:DOGMATJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  14533.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  14534.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  14535. %@AS@%                                                                 Dogmatism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14536. %@NL@%
  14537. %@NL@%
  14538. %@NL@%
  14539. %@1@%%@AS@%Dogs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14540. %@CR:DOGS            @%%@NL@%
  14541. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dogs@%%@NL@%
  14542.      Class: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           703b5@%%@NL@%
  14543.      Loyalty: %@AB@%Kraus%@AE@%%@BO:          188404@%; %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          188247@%%@NL@%
  14544. %@NL@%
  14545. %@2@%To his dog, every man is Napoleon; hence the constant popularity%@EH@%
  14546. of dogs.%@NL@%
  14547. %@CR:DOGS  Huxley1   @%%@NL@%
  14548.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  14549.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  14550. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14551. %@NL@%
  14552. %@NL@%
  14553. %@2@%The great pleasure of a dog is that you may make a fool of%@EH@%
  14554. yourself with him and not only will he not scold you, but he will
  14555. make a fool of himself too.%@NL@%
  14556. %@CR:DOGS  Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  14557.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  14558.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  14559. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14560. %@NL@%
  14561. %@NL@%
  14562. %@2@%If your home burns down, rescue the dogs. At least they'll%@EH@%
  14563. be faithful to you.%@NL@%
  14564. %@CR:DOGS  Marvin    @%%@NL@%
  14565.                                                       Lee Marvin (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  14566.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  14567. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14568. %@NL@%
  14569. %@NL@%
  14570. %@2@%A dog teaches a boy fidelity, perseverance, and to turn around%@EH@%
  14571. three times before lying down.%@NL@%
  14572. %@CR:DOGS  Benchley  @%%@NL@%
  14573.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  14574.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  14575. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14576. %@NL@%
  14577. %@NL@%
  14578. %@2@%Well-washed and well-combed domestic pets grow dull; they miss%@EH@%
  14579. the stimulus of fleas.%@NL@%
  14580. %@CR:DOGS  Galton    @%%@NL@%
  14581.                                                 Francis Galton (1822-1911)%@NL@%
  14582.                                                          British scientist%@NL@%
  14583. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14584. %@NL@%
  14585. %@NL@%
  14586. %@2@%Near this spot are deposited the remains of one who possessed%@EH@%
  14587. Beauty without Vanity, Strength without Insolence, Courage without
  14588. Ferocity, and all the Virtues of Man, without his Vices. This
  14589. Praise, which would be unmean Flattery if inscribed over human
  14590. ashes, is but a just tribute to the Memory of Boatswain, a Dog.%@NL@%
  14591. %@CR:DOGS  Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  14592.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  14593.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  14594. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14595. %@NL@%
  14596. %@NL@%
  14597. %@2@%Dog. A king of additional or subsidiary Deity designed to catch%@EH@%
  14598. the overflow and surplus of the world's worship.%@NL@%
  14599. %@CR:DOGS  Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  14600.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  14601.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  14602. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14603. %@NL@%
  14604. %@NL@%
  14605. %@2@%If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will%@EH@%
  14606. not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and
  14607. a man.%@NL@%
  14608. %@CR:DOGS  Twain     @%%@NL@%
  14609.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  14610.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  14611. %@AS@%                                                                      Dogs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14612. %@NL@%
  14613. %@NL@%
  14614. %@NL@%
  14615. %@1@%%@AS@%Doubt%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14616. %@CR:DOUBT           @%%@NL@%
  14617. %@2@%See:%@QR:Doubt@%%@NL@%
  14618.      Faith: %@AB@%de Unamuno%@AE@%%@BO:           e0163@%%@NL@%
  14619.      Indecision: %@AB@%Bible, Kings%@AE@%%@BO:          1496a9@%%@NL@%
  14620. %@NL@%
  14621.      %@2@%Between the conception and the creation%@NL@%
  14622.      Between the emotion and the response,%@NL@%
  14623.      Falls the Shadow.%@NL@%
  14624. %@CR:DOUBT Eliot2    @%%@NL@%
  14625.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  14626.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  14627. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14628. %@NL@%
  14629. %@NL@%
  14630. %@2@%When we are not sure, we are alive.%@NL@%
  14631. %@CR:DOUBT Greene1   @%%@NL@%
  14632.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  14633.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  14634. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14635. %@NL@%
  14636. %@NL@%
  14637. %@2@%There is a vulgar incredulity, which in historical matters,%@EH@%
  14638. as well as in those of religion, finds it easier to doubt than
  14639. to examine.%@NL@%
  14640. %@CR:DOUBT Scott4    @%%@NL@%
  14641.                                               Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)%@NL@%
  14642.                                                    Scottish novelist, poet%@NL@%
  14643. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14644. %@NL@%
  14645. %@NL@%
  14646. %@2@%The first step toward philosophy is incredulity.%@NL@%
  14647. %@CR:DOUBT Diderot   @%%@NL@%
  14648.                                                  Denis Diderot (1713-1784)%@NL@%
  14649.                                         French philosopher, %@AB@%encyclopediste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14650. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14651. %@NL@%
  14652. %@NL@%
  14653. %@2@%Why do men hate and despise the doubter? Because doubt is evolution,%@EH@%
  14654. and society hates evolution because it disturbs the peace.%@NL@%
  14655. %@CR:DOUBT Strindberg@%%@NL@%
  14656.                                           J. August Strindberg (1849-1912)%@NL@%
  14657.                                                          Swedish dramatist%@NL@%
  14658. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14659. %@NL@%
  14660. %@NL@%
  14661. %@2@%I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you%@EH@%
  14662. may be mistaken.%@NL@%
  14663. %@CR:DOUBT Cromwell  @%%@NL@%
  14664.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  14665.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  14666. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14667. %@NL@%
  14668. %@NL@%
  14669. %@2@%Half the failures of this world arise from pulling in one's%@EH@%
  14670. horse as he is leaping.%@NL@%
  14671. %@CR:DOUBT Hare3     @%%@NL@%
  14672.                                                    Julius Hare (1795-1855)%@NL@%
  14673.                                                     English cleric, writer%@NL@%
  14674.                                                  Augustus Hare (1792-1834)%@NL@%
  14675.                                                     English cleric, writer%@NL@%
  14676. %@AS@%                                                                     Doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14677. %@NL@%
  14678. %@NL@%
  14679. %@NL@%
  14680. %@1@%%@AS@%Dreaming%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14681. %@CR:DREAMING        @%%@NL@%
  14682. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dreaming@%%@NL@%
  14683.      Psychoanalysis: %@AB@%Williams%@AE@%%@BO:          20e470@%%@NL@%
  14684.      Visionaries: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2a5558@%%@NL@%
  14685. %@NL@%
  14686. %@2@%We never stop seeing, perhaps this is why we dream.%@NL@%
  14687. %@CR:DREAMIGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  14688.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  14689.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  14690. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14691. %@NL@%
  14692. %@NL@%
  14693. %@2@%In bed my real love has always been the sleep that rescued%@EH@%
  14694. me by allowing me to dream%@NL@%
  14695. %@CR:DREAMIPirandello@%%@NL@%
  14696.                                               Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  14697.                                                 Italian playwright, author%@NL@%
  14698. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14699. %@NL@%
  14700. %@NL@%
  14701. %@2@%One of the characteristics of the dream is that nothing surprises%@EH@%
  14702. us in it. With no regret, we agree to live in it with strangers,
  14703. completely cut off from our habits and friends.%@NL@%
  14704. %@CR:DREAMICocteau   @%%@NL@%
  14705.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  14706.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  14707. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14708. %@NL@%
  14709. %@NL@%
  14710. %@2@%How many of our daydreams would darken into nightmares,%@EH@%
  14711. were there any danger of their becoming true.%@NL@%
  14712. %@CR:DREAMISmith6    @%%@NL@%
  14713.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  14714.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  14715. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14716. %@NL@%
  14717. %@NL@%
  14718.      %@2@%In the drowsy dark cave of the mind%@NL@%
  14719.      dreams build their nest with fragments%@NL@%
  14720.      dropped from day's caravan.%@NL@%
  14721. %@CR:DREAMITagore    @%%@NL@%
  14722.                                            Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)%@NL@%
  14723.                                                 Indian author, philosopher%@NL@%
  14724. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14725. %@NL@%
  14726. %@NL@%
  14727. %@2@%When we can't dream any longer we die.%@NL@%
  14728. %@CR:DREAMIGoldman   @%%@NL@%
  14729.                                                   Emma Goldman (1869-1940)%@NL@%
  14730.                                                         American anarchist%@NL@%
  14731. %@AS@%                                                                  Dreaming%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14732. %@NL@%
  14733. %@NL@%
  14734. %@NL@%
  14735. %@1@%%@AS@%Dress%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14736. %@CR:DRESS           @%%@NL@%
  14737. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dress@%%@NL@%
  14738.      Nudity: %@AB@%Berger%@AE@%%@BO:          1c12f5@%%@NL@%
  14739. %@NL@%
  14740. %@2@%She looked as though she had been poured into her clothes and%@EH@%
  14741. had forgotten to say "when."'%@NL@%
  14742. %@CR:DRESS Wodehouse @%%@NL@%
  14743.                                                P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975)%@NL@%
  14744.                                                 British novelist, humorist%@NL@%
  14745. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14746. %@NL@%
  14747. %@NL@%
  14748. %@2@%A fine woman shews her charms to most advantage when she seems%@EH@%
  14749. most to conceal them. The finest bosom in nature is not so fine
  14750. as imagination forms.%@NL@%
  14751. %@CR:DRESS Gregory   @%%@NL@%
  14752.                                              Dr. Gregory (b. 18th century)%@NL@%
  14753.                                    from %@AI@%A Father's Legacy to His Daughters%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14754. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14755. %@NL@%
  14756. %@NL@%
  14757. %@2@%I have heard with admiring submission the experience of the%@EH@%
  14758. lady who declared that the sense of being well-dressed gives a
  14759. feeling of inward tranquillity which religion is powerless to
  14760. bestow.%@NL@%
  14761. %@CR:DRESS Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  14762.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  14763.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  14764. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14765. %@NL@%
  14766. %@NL@%
  14767. %@2@%The prettiest dresses are worn to be taken off.%@NL@%
  14768. %@CR:DRESS Cocteau   @%%@NL@%
  14769.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  14770.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  14771. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14772. %@NL@%
  14773. %@NL@%
  14774. %@2@%The trouble about most Englishwomen is that they will dress%@EH@%
  14775. as if they had been a mouse in a previous incarnation, or hope
  14776. to be one in the next.%@NL@%
  14777. %@CR:DRESS Sitwell1  @%%@NL@%
  14778.                                             Dame Edith Sitwell (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  14779.                                                       British writer, poet%@NL@%
  14780. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14781. %@NL@%
  14782. %@NL@%
  14783. %@2@%Englishwomen's shoes look as if they had been made by someone%@EH@%
  14784. who had often heard shoes described, but had never seen any.%@NL@%
  14785. %@CR:DRESS Halsey    @%%@NL@%
  14786.                                                  Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  14787.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  14788. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14789. %@NL@%
  14790. %@NL@%
  14791. %@2@%There is not so variable a thing in nature as a lady's head-dress.%@NL@%
  14792. %@CR:DRESS Addison   @%%@NL@%
  14793.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  14794.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  14795. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14796. %@NL@%
  14797. %@NL@%
  14798. %@2@%Taking off my stays at the end of the day makes me happier%@EH@%
  14799. than anything I know.%@NL@%
  14800. %@CR:DRESS Grenfell  @%%@NL@%
  14801.                                                 Joyce Grenfell (1910-1980)%@NL@%
  14802.                                                            British actress%@NL@%
  14803. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14804. %@NL@%
  14805. %@NL@%
  14806. %@2@%All women's dresses are merely variations on the eternal struggle%@EH@%
  14807. between the admitted desire to dress and the unadmitted desire
  14808. to undress.%@NL@%
  14809. %@CR:DRESS LinYutang @%%@NL@%
  14810.                                                     Lin Yutang (1895-1976)%@NL@%
  14811.                                                             Chinese writer%@NL@%
  14812. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14813. %@NL@%
  14814. %@NL@%
  14815. %@2@%Silk was invented so that women could go naked in clothes.%@NL@%
  14816. %@CR:DRESS Muhammad  @%%@NL@%
  14817.                                                      Muhammad (c. 570-632)%@NL@%
  14818.                                                           founder of Islam%@NL@%
  14819. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14820. %@NL@%
  14821. %@NL@%
  14822.      %@2@%Where's the man could ease a heart%@NL@%
  14823.      Like a satin gown?%@NL@%
  14824. %@CR:DRESS Parker1   @%%@NL@%
  14825.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  14826.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  14827. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14828. %@NL@%
  14829. %@NL@%
  14830. %@2@%When men wish to be safely impressive, as judges, priests or%@EH@%
  14831. kings, they  . . .  wear skirts  . . . . The whole world is under
  14832. petticoat government.%@NL@%
  14833. %@CR:DRESS Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  14834.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  14835.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  14836. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14837. %@NL@%
  14838. %@NL@%
  14839. %@2@%It is an interesting question how far men would retain their%@EH@%
  14840. relative rank if they were divested of their clothes.%@NL@%
  14841. %@CR:DRESS Thoreau   @%%@NL@%
  14842.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  14843.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  14844. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14845. %@NL@%
  14846. %@NL@%
  14847. %@2@%Great men are seldom over-scrupulous in the arrangement of%@EH@%
  14848. their attire.%@NL@%
  14849. %@CR:DRESS Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  14850.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  14851.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  14852. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14853. %@NL@%
  14854. %@NL@%
  14855. %@2@%I hold that gentleman to be the best-dressed whose dress no%@EH@%
  14856. one observes.%@NL@%
  14857. %@CR:DRESS Trollope  @%%@NL@%
  14858.                                               Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)%@NL@%
  14859.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  14860. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14861. %@NL@%
  14862. %@NL@%
  14863. %@2@%You look rather rash my dear your colors don't quite match%@EH@%
  14864. your face.%@NL@%
  14865. %@CR:DRESS Ashford   @%%@NL@%
  14866.                                                  Daisy Ashford (1881-1972)%@NL@%
  14867.                               British writer of %@AI@%The Young Visiters,%@AE@% aged 9%@NL@%
  14868. %@AS@%                                                                     Dress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14869. %@NL@%
  14870. %@NL@%
  14871. %@NL@%
  14872. %@1@%%@AS@%Drink%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  14873. %@CR:DRINK           @%%@NL@%
  14874. %@2@%See:%@QR:Drink@%%@NL@%
  14875.      The Army: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:           2b01f@%%@NL@%
  14876.      %@AB@%Cocktails%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           72436@%%@NL@%
  14877.      Despair: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           a6a18@%%@NL@%
  14878.      Heroes: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          1292c2@%%@NL@%
  14879.      %@AB@%Wine%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b2464@%%@NL@%
  14880.      Work: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2c2b08@%%@NL@%
  14881. %@NL@%
  14882. %@2@%O God! that men should put an enemy in their mouths to steal%@EH@%
  14883. away their brains.%@NL@%
  14884. %@CR:DRINK Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  14885.                                                            Cassio, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14886.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  14887.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  14888. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14889. %@NL@%
  14890. %@NL@%
  14891.      %@2@%Drink! for you know not whence you came nor why:%@NL@%
  14892.      Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where.%@NL@%
  14893. %@CR:DRINK Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  14894.                                         from %@AI@%The Rubbaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14895.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  14896. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14897. %@NL@%
  14898. %@NL@%
  14899.      %@2@%Malt does more than Milton can%@NL@%
  14900.      To justify God's ways to man.%@NL@%
  14901. %@CR:DRINK Housman1  @%%@NL@%
  14902.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  14903.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  14904. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14905. %@NL@%
  14906. %@NL@%
  14907. %@2@%The sway of alcohol over mankind is unquestionably due to its%@EH@%
  14908. power to stimulate the mystical faculties of human nature.%@NL@%
  14909. %@CR:DRINK James4    @%%@NL@%
  14910.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  14911.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  14912. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14913. %@NL@%
  14914. %@NL@%
  14915.      %@2@%The heart which grief hath cankered%@NL@%
  14916.      Hath one unfailing remedy - the%@NL@%
  14917.      Tankard.%@NL@%
  14918. %@CR:DRINK Calverley @%%@NL@%
  14919.                                                C. S. Calverley (1831-1884)%@NL@%
  14920.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  14921. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14922. %@NL@%
  14923. %@NL@%
  14924.      %@2@%Ale, man, ale's the stuff to drink%@NL@%
  14925.      For fellows whom it hurts to think.%@NL@%
  14926. %@CR:DRINK Housman1  @%%@NL@%
  14927.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  14928.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  14929. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14930. %@NL@%
  14931. %@NL@%
  14932. %@2@%What two ideas are more inseparable than beer and Britannia?%@NL@%
  14933. %@CR:DRINK Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  14934.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  14935.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  14936. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14937. %@NL@%
  14938. %@NL@%
  14939. %@2@%They who drink beer will think beer.%@NL@%
  14940. %@CR:DRINK Irving    @%%@NL@%
  14941.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  14942.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  14943. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14944. %@NL@%
  14945. %@NL@%
  14946. %@2@%Bring in the bottled lightning, a clean tumbler, and a corkscrew.%@NL@%
  14947. %@CR:DRINK Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  14948.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  14949.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  14950. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14951. %@NL@%
  14952. %@NL@%
  14953. %@2@%A torchlight procession marching down your throat.%@NL@%
  14954. %@CR:DRINK OSullivan @%%@NL@%
  14955.                                                John O'Sullivan (1813-1895)%@NL@%
  14956.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  14957.                                                                  of whisky%@NL@%
  14958. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14959. %@NL@%
  14960. %@NL@%
  14961. %@2@%A sudden violent jolt of it has been known to stop the victim's%@EH@%
  14962. watch, snap his suspenders and crack his glass eye right across.%@NL@%
  14963. %@CR:DRINK Cobb      @%%@NL@%
  14964.                                                  Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944)%@NL@%
  14965.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  14966.                                                   of moonshine corn liquor%@NL@%
  14967. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14968. %@NL@%
  14969. %@NL@%
  14970. %@2@%Fill it up. I take as large draughts of liquor as I did of%@EH@%
  14971. love. I hate a flincher in either.%@NL@%
  14972. %@CR:DRINK Gay       @%%@NL@%
  14973.                                            Mrs. Trapes, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14974.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  14975.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  14976. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14977. %@NL@%
  14978. %@NL@%
  14979. %@2@%I can't say whether we had more wit amongst us than usual,%@EH@%
  14980. but I am certain we had more laughing, which answered the end just
  14981. as well.%@NL@%
  14982. %@CR:DRINK Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  14983.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  14984.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  14985. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14986. %@NL@%
  14987. %@NL@%
  14988.      %@2@%Drink not the third glass, which thou canst not tame,%@NL@%
  14989.      When once it is within thee.%@NL@%
  14990. %@CR:DRINK Herbert2  @%%@NL@%
  14991.                                                 George Herbert (1593-1633)%@NL@%
  14992.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  14993. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  14994. %@NL@%
  14995. %@NL@%
  14996.      %@2@%He smiled a kind of sickly smile, and curled up on the floor,%@NL@%
  14997.      And the subsequent proceedings interested him no more.%@NL@%
  14998. %@CR:DRINK Harte     @%%@NL@%
  14999.                                                    Brett Harte (1836-1902)%@NL@%
  15000.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15001. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15002. %@NL@%
  15003. %@NL@%
  15004. %@2@%A man who exposes himself when he is intoxicated, has not the%@EH@%
  15005. art of getting drunk.%@NL@%
  15006. %@CR:DRINK Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15007.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15008.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15009. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15010. %@NL@%
  15011. %@NL@%
  15012. %@2@%Better belly burst than good liquor be lost.%@NL@%
  15013. %@CR:DRINK Swift     @%%@NL@%
  15014.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  15015.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  15016. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15017. %@NL@%
  15018. %@NL@%
  15019. %@2@%"I wonder what pleasure men can take in making beasts of themselves!"%@EH@%
  15020. "I wonder, madam, that you have not penetration enough to see
  15021. the strong inducement to this excess; for he who makes a %@AI@%beast%@AE@%
  15022. of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man."%@NL@%
  15023. %@CR:DRINK Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15024.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15025.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15026. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15027. %@NL@%
  15028. %@NL@%
  15029. %@2@%Drunkenness is nothing but voluntary madness.%@NL@%
  15030. %@CR:DRINK Seneca    @%%@NL@%
  15031.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  15032.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  15033. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15034. %@NL@%
  15035. %@NL@%
  15036. %@2@%Drunkenness is temporary suicide.%@NL@%
  15037. %@CR:DRINK Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  15038.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  15039.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  15040. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15041. %@NL@%
  15042. %@NL@%
  15043. %@2@%When I played drunks I had to remain sober because I didn't%@EH@%
  15044. know how to play them when I was drunk.%@NL@%
  15045. %@CR:DRINK Burton1   @%%@NL@%
  15046.                                                 Richard Burton (1925-1984)%@NL@%
  15047.                                                         British film actor%@NL@%
  15048. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15049. %@NL@%
  15050. %@NL@%
  15051. %@2@%What soberness conceals, drunkenness reveals.%@NL@%
  15052. %@CR:DRINK Burton1   @%%@NL@%
  15053.                                                              Latin proverb%@NL@%
  15054. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15055. %@NL@%
  15056. %@NL@%
  15057. %@2@%An honest man, that is not quite sober, has nothing to fear.%@NL@%
  15058. %@CR:DRINK Addison   @%%@NL@%
  15059.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  15060.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  15061. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15062. %@NL@%
  15063. %@NL@%
  15064. %@2@%It provokes the desire, but it takes away the performance.%@EH@%
  15065. Therefore much drink may be said to be an equivocator with lechery.%@NL@%
  15066. %@CR:DRINK Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  15067.                                                            Porter, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15068.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  15069.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  15070. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15071. %@NL@%
  15072. %@NL@%
  15073. %@2@%There are some sluggish men who are improved by drinking, as%@EH@%
  15074. there are fruits that are not good until they are rotten.%@NL@%
  15075. %@CR:DRINK Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15076.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15077.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15078. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15079. %@NL@%
  15080. %@NL@%
  15081. %@2@%Friendships are not always preserved in alcohol.%@NL@%
  15082. %@CR:DRINK WAYSIDEPUL@%%@NL@%
  15083.                                                             wayside pulpit%@NL@%
  15084. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15085. %@NL@%
  15086. %@NL@%
  15087. %@2@%Alcohol is like love: the first kiss is magic, the second is%@EH@%
  15088. intimate, the third is routine. After that you just take the girl's
  15089. clothes off.%@NL@%
  15090. %@CR:DRINK Chandler  @%%@NL@%
  15091.                                               Raymond Chandler (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  15092.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  15093. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15094. %@NL@%
  15095. %@NL@%
  15096. %@2@%There are two things that will be believed of any man whatsoever,%@EH@%
  15097. and one of them is that he has taken to drink.%@NL@%
  15098. %@CR:DRINK Tarkington@%%@NL@%
  15099.                                               Booth Tarkington (1869-1946)%@NL@%
  15100.                                              American novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  15101. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15102. %@NL@%
  15103. %@NL@%
  15104.      %@2@%The rapturous, wild, and ineffable pleasure%@NL@%
  15105.      Of drinking at somebody else's expense.%@NL@%
  15106. %@CR:DRINK Leigh     @%%@NL@%
  15107.                                                    H. S. Leigh (1837-1883)%@NL@%
  15108.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  15109. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15110. %@NL@%
  15111. %@NL@%
  15112. %@2@%I drink for the thirst to come.%@NL@%
  15113. %@CR:DRINK Rabelais  @%%@NL@%
  15114.                                                       Rabelais (1494-1553)%@NL@%
  15115.                                                    French humanist, author%@NL@%
  15116. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15117. %@NL@%
  15118. %@NL@%
  15119.      %@2@%Drink, and be mad, then; 'tis your country bids!%@NL@%
  15120.      Gloriously drunk, obey th'important call!%@NL@%
  15121. %@CR:DRINK Cowper    @%%@NL@%
  15122.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  15123.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  15124. %@AS@%                                                                     Drink%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15125. %@NL@%
  15126. %@NL@%
  15127. %@NL@%
  15128. %@1@%%@AS@%Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15129. %@CR:ABSTINENCE      @%%@NL@%
  15130. %@2@%%@QR:Drink: Abstinence@%Total abstinence is easier to me than perfect moderation.%@NL@%
  15131. %@CR:ABSTINSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  15132.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  15133.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  15134. %@AS@%                                                         Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15135. %@NL@%
  15136. %@NL@%
  15137. %@2@%I was T.T. until prohibition.%@NL@%
  15138. %@CR:ABSTINMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  15139.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  15140.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  15141. %@AS@%                                                         Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15142. %@NL@%
  15143. %@NL@%
  15144. %@2@%I'm only a beer teetotaller, not a champagne teetotaller.%@NL@%
  15145. %@CR:ABSTINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  15146.                                                        Proserpine, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15147.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  15148.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  15149. %@AS@%                                                         Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15150. %@NL@%
  15151. %@NL@%
  15152. %@2@%I'd hate to be a teetotaller. Imagine getting up in the morning%@EH@%
  15153. and knowing that's as good as you're going to feel all day.%@NL@%
  15154. %@CR:ABSTINMartin2   @%%@NL@%
  15155.                                                      Dean Martin (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  15156.                                                     American singer, actor%@NL@%
  15157. %@AS@%                                                         Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15158. %@NL@%
  15159. %@NL@%
  15160. %@2@%Water flowed like wine.%@NL@%
  15161. %@CR:ABSTINEvarts    @%%@NL@%
  15162.                                              William M. Evarts (1818-1901)%@NL@%
  15163.                                                         American statesman%@NL@%
  15164. %@AS@%                                                         Drink: Abstinence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15165. %@NL@%
  15166. %@NL@%
  15167. %@NL@%
  15168. %@1@%%@AS@%Drugs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15169. %@CR:DRUGS           @%%@NL@%
  15170. %@2@%See:%@QR:Drugs@%%@NL@%
  15171.      %@AB@%Addicts%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            62f8@%%@NL@%
  15172.      Christianity: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:           651e6@%%@NL@%
  15173.      Suffering: %@AB@%Artaud%@AE@%%@BO:          2741cf@%%@NL@%
  15174. %@NL@%
  15175. %@2@%One man's poison is another man's drug.%@NL@%
  15176. %@CR:DRUGS Knox1     @%%@NL@%
  15177.                                             Father Ronald Knox (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  15178.                                                  British clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  15179. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15180. %@NL@%
  15181. %@NL@%
  15182.      %@2@%Thou source of all my bliss and all my woe,%@NL@%
  15183.      That found'st me poor at first, and keep'st me so.%@NL@%
  15184. %@CR:DRUGS Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  15185.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  15186.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  15187. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15188. %@NL@%
  15189. %@NL@%
  15190. %@2@%Thou hast the keys of Paradise, oh just, subtle, and mighty%@EH@%
  15191. opium!%@NL@%
  15192. %@CR:DRUGS deQuincey @%%@NL@%
  15193.                                              Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859)%@NL@%
  15194.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  15195. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15196. %@NL@%
  15197. %@NL@%
  15198. %@2@%Everything one does in life, even love, occurs in an express%@EH@%
  15199. train racing toward death. To smoke opium is to get out of the
  15200. train while it is still moving. It is to concern oneself with something
  15201. other than life, with death.%@NL@%
  15202. %@CR:DRUGS Cocteau   @%%@NL@%
  15203.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  15204.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  15205. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15206. %@NL@%
  15207. %@NL@%
  15208. %@2@%It is not opium which enables me to work, but its absence;%@EH@%
  15209. and to feel its absence it must from time to time pass through
  15210. me.%@NL@%
  15211. %@CR:DRUGS Artaud    @%%@NL@%
  15212.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  15213.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  15214. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15215. %@NL@%
  15216. %@NL@%
  15217. %@2@%Opiate. An unlocked door in the prison of Identity. It leads%@EH@%
  15218. into the jail yard.%@NL@%
  15219. %@CR:DRUGS Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  15220.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  15221.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15222. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15223. %@NL@%
  15224. %@NL@%
  15225.      %@2@%%@AI@%Ce n'est plus une ardeur dans mes veines%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15226.      %@AI@%cachee:%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15227.      %@AI@%C'est Venus tout entiere a sa proie%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15228.      %@AI@%attachee.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15229. %@NL@%
  15230. %@2@%It's no longer a warmth hidden in my veins: it's Venus entire
  15231. and whole fastening on her prey.%@NL@%
  15232. %@CR:DRUGS Racine    @%%@NL@%
  15233.                                                    Jean Racine (1639-1699)%@NL@%
  15234.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  15235. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15236. %@NL@%
  15237. %@NL@%
  15238. %@2@%They shoulda called me Little Cocaine, I was sniffing so much%@EH@%
  15239. of the stuff! My nose got big enough to back a diesel truck
  15240. in, unload it, and drive it right out again.%@NL@%
  15241. %@CR:DRUGS LittleRich@%%@NL@%
  15242.                                                   Little Richard (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  15243.                                                         American rock star%@NL@%
  15244. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15245. %@NL@%
  15246. %@NL@%
  15247. %@2@%Cocaine isn't habit-forming. I should know - I've been using%@EH@%
  15248. it for years.%@NL@%
  15249. %@CR:DRUGS Bankhead  @%%@NL@%
  15250.                                              Tallulah Bankhead (1902-1968)%@NL@%
  15251.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  15252. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15253. %@NL@%
  15254. %@NL@%
  15255. %@2@%The only reason that cocaine is such a rage today is that people%@EH@%
  15256. are too dumb and lazy to get themselves together to roll a joint.%@NL@%
  15257. %@CR:DRUGS Nicholson1@%%@NL@%
  15258.                                                   Jack Nicholson (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  15259.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  15260. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15261. %@NL@%
  15262. %@NL@%
  15263. %@2@%Is marijuana addictive? Yes, in the sense that most of the%@EH@%
  15264. really pleasant things in life are worth endlessly repeating.%@NL@%
  15265. %@CR:DRUGS Neville   @%%@NL@%
  15266.                                                  Richard Neville (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  15267.                                                      Australian journalist%@NL@%
  15268. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15269. %@NL@%
  15270. %@NL@%
  15271. %@2@%I'll die young, but it's like kissing God.%@NL@%
  15272. %@CR:DRUGS Bruce     @%%@NL@%
  15273.                                                    Lenny Bruce (1923-1966)%@NL@%
  15274.                                                          American comedian%@NL@%
  15275. %@AS@%                                                                     Drugs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15276. %@NL@%
  15277. %@NL@%
  15278. %@NL@%
  15279. %@1@%%@AS@%Dullness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15280. %@CR:DULLNESS        @%%@NL@%
  15281. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dullness@%%@NL@%
  15282.      %@AB@%Bores%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           481c5@%%@NL@%
  15283.      Certainty: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:           58907@%%@NL@%
  15284. %@NL@%
  15285.      %@2@%The midwife laid her hand on his%@NL@%
  15286.      Thick Skull,%@NL@%
  15287.      With this Prophetick blessing -%@NL@%
  15288.      Be Thou Dull.%@NL@%
  15289. %@CR:DULLNEDryden    @%%@NL@%
  15290.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  15291.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  15292. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15293. %@NL@%
  15294. %@NL@%
  15295. %@2@%Sir, he was dull in company, dull in his closet, dull everywhere.%@EH@%
  15296. He was dull in a new way, and that made people think him great.%@NL@%
  15297. %@CR:DULLNEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15298.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15299.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15300.                                                             of Thomas Gray%@NL@%
  15301. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15302. %@NL@%
  15303. %@NL@%
  15304. %@2@%He is not only dull in himself, but the cause of dullness in%@EH@%
  15305. others.%@NL@%
  15306. %@CR:DULLNEFoote     @%%@NL@%
  15307.                                                   Samuel Foote (1720-1777)%@NL@%
  15308.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  15309. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15310. %@NL@%
  15311. %@NL@%
  15312. %@2@%Prudent Dulness marked him for a mayor.%@NL@%
  15313. %@CR:DULLNEChurchill1@%%@NL@%
  15314.                                              Charles Churchill (1731-1764)%@NL@%
  15315.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  15316. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15317. %@NL@%
  15318. %@NL@%
  15319. %@2@%It is to be noted that when any of this paper appears dull,%@EH@%
  15320. there is a design in it.%@NL@%
  15321. %@CR:DULLNESteele    @%%@NL@%
  15322.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  15323.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  15324. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15325. %@NL@%
  15326. %@NL@%
  15327. %@2@%There are no uninteresting things, there are only uninterested%@EH@%
  15328. people.%@NL@%
  15329. %@CR:DULLNEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  15330.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  15331.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  15332. %@AS@%                                                                  Dullness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15333. %@NL@%
  15334. %@NL@%
  15335. %@NL@%
  15336. %@1@%%@AS@%Duty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15337. %@CR:DUTY            @%%@NL@%
  15338. %@2@%See:%@QR:Duty@%%@NL@%
  15339.      Politicians: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1edddc@%%@NL@%
  15340. %@NL@%
  15341. %@2@%God is inconceivable, immortality is unbelievable, but duty%@EH@%
  15342. is peremptory and absolute.%@NL@%
  15343. %@CR:DUTY  Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  15344.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  15345.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  15346. %@AS@%                                                                      Duty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15347. %@NL@%
  15348. %@NL@%
  15349. %@2@%The consciousness of a duty performed gives us music at midnight.%@NL@%
  15350. %@CR:DUTY  Herbert2  @%%@NL@%
  15351.                                                 George Herbert (1593-1633)%@NL@%
  15352.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  15353. %@AS@%                                                                      Duty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15354. %@NL@%
  15355. %@NL@%
  15356. %@2@%I sighed as a lover, I obeyed as a son.%@NL@%
  15357. %@CR:DUTY  Gibbon    @%%@NL@%
  15358.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  15359.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  15360. %@AS@%                                                                      Duty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15361. %@NL@%
  15362. %@NL@%
  15363. %@2@%When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of, he always%@EH@%
  15364. declares that it is his duty.%@NL@%
  15365. %@CR:DUTY  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  15366.                                          Apollodorus, %@AI@%Caesar and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15367.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  15368.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  15369. %@AS@%                                                                      Duty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15370. %@NL@%
  15371. %@NL@%
  15372. %@2@%Duty. That which sternly impels us in the direction of profit,%@EH@%
  15373. along the line of desire.%@NL@%
  15374. %@CR:DUTY  Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  15375.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  15376.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15377. %@AS@%                                                                      Duty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15378. %@NL@%
  15379. %@NL@%
  15380. %@NL@%
  15381. %@1@%%@AS@%Eccentricity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15382. %@CR:ECCENTRICITY    @%%@NL@%
  15383. %@2@%See:%@QR:Eccentricity@%%@NL@%
  15384.      Conformity: %@AB@%Mill%@AE@%%@BO:           7be2f@%%@NL@%
  15385. %@NL@%
  15386. %@2@%We might define an eccentric as a man who is a law unto himself,%@EH@%
  15387. and a crank as one who, having determined what the law is, insists
  15388. on laying it down to others.%@NL@%
  15389. %@CR:ECCENTKronenberg@%%@NL@%
  15390.                                             Louis Kronenberger (1904-1980)%@NL@%
  15391.                                            American critic, editor, author%@NL@%
  15392. %@AS@%                                                              Eccentricity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15393. %@NL@%
  15394. %@NL@%
  15395. %@2@%So long as a man rides his hobby-horse peaceably and quietly%@EH@%
  15396. along the King's highway, and neither compels you or me to get
  15397. up behind him, - pray, Sir, what have either you or I to do
  15398. with it?%@NL@%
  15399. %@CR:ECCENTSterne    @%%@NL@%
  15400.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  15401.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  15402. %@AS@%                                                              Eccentricity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15403. %@NL@%
  15404. %@NL@%
  15405. %@NL@%
  15406. %@1@%%@AS@%Ecology%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15407. %@CR:ECOLOGY         @%%@NL@%
  15408. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ecology@%%@NL@%
  15409.      Nature: %@AB@%Durrell%@AE@%%@BO:          1b6c6c@%%@NL@%
  15410.      %@AB@%Pollution%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1f1346@%%@NL@%
  15411. %@NL@%
  15412. %@2@%The nation that destorys its soil destroys itself.%@NL@%
  15413. %@CR:ECOLOGRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  15414.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  15415.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  15416. %@AS@%                                                                   Ecology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15417. %@NL@%
  15418. %@NL@%
  15419. %@2@%We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging%@EH@%
  15420. to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may
  15421. begin to use it with love and respect.%@NL@%
  15422. %@CR:ECOLOGLeopold   @%%@NL@%
  15423.                                                   Aldo Leopold (1886-1948)%@NL@%
  15424.                                                          American forester%@NL@%
  15425. %@AS@%                                                                   Ecology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15426. %@NL@%
  15427. %@NL@%
  15428. %@2@%The sun, the moon and the stars would have disappeared long%@EH@%
  15429. ago, had they happened to be within reach of predatory human hands.%@NL@%
  15430. %@CR:ECOLOGEllis     @%%@NL@%
  15431.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  15432.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  15433. %@AS@%                                                                   Ecology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15434. %@NL@%
  15435. %@NL@%
  15436. %@NL@%
  15437. %@1@%%@AS@%Economics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15438. %@CR:ECONOMICS       @%%@NL@%
  15439. %@2@%%@QR:Economics@%Only one fellow in ten thousand understands the currency question,%@EH@%
  15440. and we meet him every day.%@NL@%
  15441. %@CR:ECONOMHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  15442.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  15443.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  15444. %@AS@%                                                                 Economics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15445. %@NL@%
  15446. %@NL@%
  15447. %@2@%I learned more about economics from one South Dakota dust storm%@EH@%
  15448. than I did in all my years in college.%@NL@%
  15449. %@CR:ECONOMHumphrey  @%%@NL@%
  15450.                                                Hubert Humphrey (1911-1978)%@NL@%
  15451.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  15452. %@AS@%                                                                 Economics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15453. %@NL@%
  15454. %@NL@%
  15455. %@2@%If all economists were laid end to end, they would not reach%@EH@%
  15456. a conclusion.%@NL@%
  15457. %@CR:ECONOMShaw      @%%@NL@%
  15458.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  15459.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  15460. %@AS@%                                                                 Economics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15461. %@NL@%
  15462. %@NL@%
  15463. %@2@%In the usual (though certainly not in every) public decision%@EH@%
  15464. on economic policy, the choice is between courses that are almost
  15465. equally good or equally bad. It is the narrowest decisions that
  15466. are most ardently debated. If the world is lucky enough to enjoy
  15467. peace, it may even one day make the discovery, to the horror of
  15468. doctinaire free-enterprisers and doctrinaire planners alike, that
  15469. what is called capitalism and what is called socialism are both
  15470. capable of working quite well.%@NL@%
  15471. %@CR:ECONOMGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  15472.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  15473.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  15474. %@AS@%                                                                 Economics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15475. %@NL@%
  15476. %@NL@%
  15477. %@2@%Call a thing immoral or ugly  . . .  a peril to the peace of%@EH@%
  15478. the world or to the well-being of future generations: as long as
  15479. you have not shown it to be "uneconomic" you have not really
  15480. questioned its right to exist, grow and prosper.%@NL@%
  15481. %@CR:ECONOMSchumacher@%%@NL@%
  15482.                                               E. F. Schumacher (1911-1977)%@NL@%
  15483.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15484. %@AS@%                                                                 Economics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15485. %@NL@%
  15486. %@NL@%
  15487. %@NL@%
  15488. %@1@%%@AS@%Economizing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15489. %@CR:ECONOMIZING     @%%@NL@%
  15490. %@2@%See:%@QR:Economizing@%%@NL@%
  15491.      %@AB@%Meanness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19e4bd@%%@NL@%
  15492. %@NL@%
  15493. %@2@%Live within your income. Always have something saved at the%@EH@%
  15494. end of the year. Let your imports be more than your exports, and
  15495. you'll never go far wrong.%@NL@%
  15496. %@CR:ECONOMJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15497.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15498.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15499. %@AS@%                                                               Economizing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15500. %@NL@%
  15501. %@NL@%
  15502. %@2@%How easy it is for a man to die rich, if he will but be contented%@EH@%
  15503. to live miserable.%@NL@%
  15504. %@CR:ECONOMFielding  @%%@NL@%
  15505.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  15506.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  15507. %@AS@%                                                               Economizing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15508. %@NL@%
  15509. %@NL@%
  15510. %@2@%The timid man calls himself cautious, the sordid man thrifty.%@NL@%
  15511. %@CR:ECONOMPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  15512.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  15513.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  15514. %@AS@%                                                               Economizing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15515. %@NL@%
  15516. %@NL@%
  15517. %@2@%Frugality is a handsome income.%@NL@%
  15518. %@CR:ECONOMErasmus   @%%@NL@%
  15519.                                                        Erasmus (1466-1536)%@NL@%
  15520.                                                             Dutch humanist%@NL@%
  15521. %@AS@%                                                               Economizing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15522. %@NL@%
  15523. %@NL@%
  15524. %@2@%There is no profit in going to bed early if the result is twins.%@NL@%
  15525. %@CR:ECONOMErasmus   @%%@NL@%
  15526.                                                             country saying%@NL@%
  15527. %@AS@%                                                               Economizing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15528. %@NL@%
  15529. %@NL@%
  15530. %@NL@%
  15531. %@1@%%@AS@%The Economy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15532. %@CR:THEECONOMY      @%%@NL@%
  15533. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Economy@%%@NL@%
  15534.      War: %@AB@%Weil%@AE@%%@BO:          2a7c4a@%%@NL@%
  15535. %@NL@%
  15536. %@2@%Everyone is always in favour of general economy and particular%@EH@%
  15537. expenditure.%@NL@%
  15538. %@CR:THEECOEden      @%%@NL@%
  15539.                                               Sir Anthony Eden (1897-1977)%@NL@%
  15540.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  15541. %@AS@%                                                               The Economy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15542. %@NL@%
  15543. %@NL@%
  15544. %@2@%If you want to raise a certain cheer in the House of Commons,%@EH@%
  15545. make a general panegyric on economy; if you want to invite a sure
  15546. defeat, propose a particular saving.%@NL@%
  15547. %@CR:THEECOEden      @%%@NL@%
  15548.                                         financier quoted by Walter Bagehot%@NL@%
  15549. %@AS@%                                                               The Economy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15550. %@NL@%
  15551. %@NL@%
  15552. %@2@%Every bright spot the White House finds in the economy is like%@EH@%
  15553. the policeman bending over the body in the alley and saying cheerfully
  15554. "Two wounds are fatal. The other one is not so bad."%@NL@%
  15555. %@CR:THEECOKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  15556.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  15557.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  15558. %@AS@%                                                               The Economy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15559. %@NL@%
  15560. %@NL@%
  15561. %@2@%The notion dies hard that in some sort of way exports are patriotic%@EH@%
  15562. but imports are immoral.%@NL@%
  15563. %@CR:THEECOHarlech   @%%@NL@%
  15564.                                                   Lord Harlech (1918-1985)%@NL@%
  15565.                                           British ambassador at Washington%@NL@%
  15566. %@AS@%                                                               The Economy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15567. %@NL@%
  15568. %@NL@%
  15569. %@2@%We might come closer to balancing the budget if all of us lived%@EH@%
  15570. closer to the Commandments and the Golden Rule.%@NL@%
  15571. %@CR:THEECOReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  15572.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  15573.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  15574. %@AS@%                                                               The Economy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15575. %@NL@%
  15576. %@NL@%
  15577. %@NL@%
  15578. %@1@%%@AS@%Editing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15579. %@CR:EDITING         @%%@NL@%
  15580. %@2@%See:%@QR:Editing@%%@NL@%
  15581.      Writing: %@AB@%Quiller-Couch%@AE@%%@BO:          2cf23d@%; %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          2ce49e@%%@NL@%
  15582. %@NL@%
  15583. %@2@%Of every four words I write, I strike out three.%@NL@%
  15584. %@CR:EDITINBoileau   @%%@NL@%
  15585.                                                Nicolas Boileau (1636-1711)%@NL@%
  15586.                                                        French poet, critic%@NL@%
  15587. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15588. %@NL@%
  15589. %@NL@%
  15590. %@2@%Read your own compositions, and when you meet with a passage%@EH@%
  15591. which you think is particularly fine, strike it out.%@NL@%
  15592. %@CR:EDITINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  15593.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  15594.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  15595. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15596. %@NL@%
  15597. %@NL@%
  15598. %@2@%Art should simplify  . . .  finding what convention of form and%@EH@%
  15599. what detail one can do without and yet preserve the spirit of the
  15600. whole - so that all that one has suppressed and cut away is
  15601. there to the reader's consciousness as much as if it were in type
  15602. on the page.%@NL@%
  15603. %@CR:EDITINCather    @%%@NL@%
  15604.                                                   Willa Cather (1876-1947)%@NL@%
  15605.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15606. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15607. %@NL@%
  15608. %@NL@%
  15609. %@2@%What I have crossed out I didn't like. What I haven't crossed%@EH@%
  15610. out I'm dissatisfied with.%@NL@%
  15611. %@CR:EDITINdeMille   @%%@NL@%
  15612.                                              Cecil B. de Mille (1881-1959)%@NL@%
  15613.                                                     American film director%@NL@%
  15614.                                             attributed, attached to script%@NL@%
  15615. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15616. %@NL@%
  15617. %@NL@%
  15618. %@2@%God sends meat and the devil sends cooks.%@NL@%
  15619. %@CR:EDITINDeloney   @%%@NL@%
  15620.                                              Thomas Deloney (c. 1550-1600)%@NL@%
  15621.                                                  English balladist, writer%@NL@%
  15622. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15623. %@NL@%
  15624. %@NL@%
  15625. %@2@%I have only made this [letter] longer because I have not%@EH@%
  15626. had the time to make it shorter.%@NL@%
  15627. %@CR:EDITINPascal    @%%@NL@%
  15628.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  15629.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  15630. %@AS@%                                                                   Editing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15631. %@NL@%
  15632. %@NL@%
  15633. %@NL@%
  15634. %@1@%%@AS@%Editors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15635. %@CR:EDITORS         @%%@NL@%
  15636. %@2@%See:%@QR:Editors@%%@NL@%
  15637.      Democracy: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:           a5f3a@%%@NL@%
  15638. %@NL@%
  15639. %@2@%Editor: a person employed on a newspaper, whose business it%@EH@%
  15640. is to separate the wheat from the chaff, and to see that the chaff
  15641. gets printed.%@NL@%
  15642. %@CR:EDITORHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  15643.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  15644.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15645. %@AS@%                                                                   Editors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15646. %@NL@%
  15647. %@NL@%
  15648. %@2@%Rides in the whirlwind and directs the storm.%@NL@%
  15649. %@CR:EDITORAddison   @%%@NL@%
  15650.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  15651.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  15652. %@AS@%                                                                   Editors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15653. %@NL@%
  15654. %@NL@%
  15655. %@NL@%
  15656. %@1@%%@AS@%Education%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15657. %@CR:EDUCATION       @%%@NL@%
  15658. %@2@%See:%@QR:Education@%%@NL@%
  15659.      Class: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           703b5@%%@NL@%
  15660.      Foreigners: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           f6f96@%%@NL@%
  15661.      Play: %@AB@%Hughes%@AE@%%@BO:          1de82b@%%@NL@%
  15662.      %@AB@%Private Education%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2046ea@%%@NL@%
  15663.      Reading: %@AB@%Trevelyan%@AE@%%@BO:          21a68d@%%@NL@%
  15664.      %@AB@%School%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2397dc@%%@NL@%
  15665.      %@AB@%Students%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          26f625@%%@NL@%
  15666.      %@AB@%Teachers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          27f2ab@%%@NL@%
  15667.      %@AB@%University%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29ce12@%%@NL@%
  15668. %@NL@%
  15669.      %@2@%There's a new tribunal now, higher than God's -%@NL@%
  15670.      The educated man's!%@NL@%
  15671. %@CR:EDUCATBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  15672.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  15673.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  15674. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15675. %@NL@%
  15676. %@NL@%
  15677. %@2@%What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to the%@EH@%
  15678. soul.%@NL@%
  15679. %@CR:EDUCATAddison   @%%@NL@%
  15680.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  15681.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  15682. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15683. %@NL@%
  15684. %@NL@%
  15685. %@2@%Educate men without religion and you make them but clever devils.%@NL@%
  15686. %@CR:EDUCATDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  15687.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  15688.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  15689. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15690. %@NL@%
  15691. %@NL@%
  15692. %@2@%Why should we subsidize intellectual curiosity?%@NL@%
  15693. %@CR:EDUCATReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  15694.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  15695.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  15696. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15697. %@NL@%
  15698. %@NL@%
  15699. %@2@%Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without%@EH@%
  15700. losing your temper or your self-confidence.%@NL@%
  15701. %@CR:EDUCATFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  15702.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  15703.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  15704. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15705. %@NL@%
  15706. %@NL@%
  15707. %@2@%The first idea that the child must acquire in order to be actively%@EH@%
  15708. disciplined is that of the difference between good and evil; and
  15709. the task of the educator lies in seeing that the child does not
  15710. confound good with immobility, and evil with activity.%@NL@%
  15711. %@CR:EDUCATMontessori@%%@NL@%
  15712.                                               Maria Montessori (1870-1952)%@NL@%
  15713.                                                           Italian educator%@NL@%
  15714. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15715. %@NL@%
  15716. %@NL@%
  15717. %@2@%Education is what remains when we have forgotten all that we%@EH@%
  15718. have been taught.%@NL@%
  15719. %@CR:EDUCATSavile    @%%@NL@%
  15720.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  15721.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  15722. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15723. %@NL@%
  15724. %@NL@%
  15725. %@2@%Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember%@EH@%
  15726. from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught.%@NL@%
  15727. %@CR:EDUCATWilde     @%%@NL@%
  15728.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  15729.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  15730. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15731. %@NL@%
  15732. %@NL@%
  15733. %@2@%Education does not mean teaching people to know what they do%@EH@%
  15734. not know; it means teaching them to behave as they do not behave.%@NL@%
  15735. %@CR:EDUCATRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  15736.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  15737.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  15738. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15739. %@NL@%
  15740. %@NL@%
  15741. %@2@%The primary purpose of a liberal education is to make one's%@EH@%
  15742. mind a pleasant place in which to spend one's time.%@NL@%
  15743. %@CR:EDUCATHarris    @%%@NL@%
  15744.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  15745.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  15746. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15747. %@NL@%
  15748. %@NL@%
  15749. %@2@%No man who worships education has got the best out of education%@EH@%
  15750.  . . .  Without a gentle contempt for education no man's education
  15751. is complete.%@NL@%
  15752. %@CR:EDUCATChesterton@%%@NL@%
  15753.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  15754.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  15755. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15756. %@NL@%
  15757. %@NL@%
  15758. %@2@%British parents are very ready to call for a system of education%@EH@%
  15759. which offers equal opportunity to all children except their own.%@NL@%
  15760. %@CR:EDUCATEccles    @%%@NL@%
  15761.                                                      Lord Eccles (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  15762.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  15763. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15764. %@NL@%
  15765. %@NL@%
  15766. %@2@%True education makes for inequality; the inequality of individuality,%@EH@%
  15767. the inequality of success, the glorious inequality of talent, of
  15768. genius.%@NL@%
  15769. %@CR:EDUCATSchelling @%%@NL@%
  15770.                                             Felix E. Schelling (1858-1945)%@NL@%
  15771.                                                          American educator%@NL@%
  15772. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15773. %@NL@%
  15774. %@NL@%
  15775. %@2@%Workers of England be wise, and then you %@AI@%must%@AE@% be free, for%@EH@%
  15776. you will be %@AI@%fit%@AE@% to be free.%@NL@%
  15777. %@CR:EDUCATKingsley1 @%%@NL@%
  15778.                                               Charles Kingsley (1819-1875)%@NL@%
  15779.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  15780. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15781. %@NL@%
  15782. %@NL@%
  15783. %@2@%Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive;%@EH@%
  15784. easy to govern, but impossible to enslave.%@NL@%
  15785. %@CR:EDUCATBrougham  @%%@NL@%
  15786.                                                  Lord Brougham (1778-1868)%@NL@%
  15787.                                                   Scottish Whig politician%@NL@%
  15788. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15789. %@NL@%
  15790. %@NL@%
  15791. %@2@%It is not the insurrections of ignorance that are dangerous,%@EH@%
  15792. but the revolts of intelligence.%@NL@%
  15793. %@CR:EDUCATLowell2   @%%@NL@%
  15794.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  15795.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  15796. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15797. %@NL@%
  15798. %@NL@%
  15799. %@2@%Human history becomes more and more a race between education%@EH@%
  15800. and catastrophe.%@NL@%
  15801. %@CR:EDUCATWells     @%%@NL@%
  15802.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  15803.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  15804. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15805. %@NL@%
  15806. %@NL@%
  15807. %@2@%When a man's education is finished, he is finished.%@NL@%
  15808. %@CR:EDUCATFilene    @%%@NL@%
  15809.                                                   E. A. Filene (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  15810.                                            American businessman, financier%@NL@%
  15811. %@AS@%                                                                 Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15812. %@NL@%
  15813. %@NL@%
  15814. %@NL@%
  15815. %@1@%%@AS@%Egoism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15816. %@CR:EGOISM          @%%@NL@%
  15817. %@2@%See:%@QR:Egoism@%%@NL@%
  15818.      Actors/Actresses: %@AB@%Wilding%@AE@%%@BO:            48e1@%%@NL@%
  15819.      Bores: %@AB@%Fuller%@AE@%%@BO:           49317@%%@NL@%
  15820.      Genius: %@AB@%Webb%@AE@%%@BO:          107cf5@%%@NL@%
  15821.      %@AB@%Self%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          243702@%%@NL@%
  15822. %@NL@%
  15823. %@2@%Man can be defined as the animal that can say "I," that can%@EH@%
  15824. be aware of himself as a separate entity.%@NL@%
  15825. %@CR:EGOISMFromm     @%%@NL@%
  15826.                                                    Erich Fromm (1900-1980)%@NL@%
  15827.                                                      American psychologist%@NL@%
  15828. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15829. %@NL@%
  15830. %@NL@%
  15831. %@2@%The great act of faith is when a man decides that he is not%@EH@%
  15832. God.%@NL@%
  15833. %@CR:EGOISMHolmes2   @%%@NL@%
  15834.                                   Justice Oliver WendellHolmes (1841-1935)%@NL@%
  15835.                                                            American jurist%@NL@%
  15836. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15837. %@NL@%
  15838. %@NL@%
  15839. %@2@%Egotist. A person of low taste, more interested in himself%@EH@%
  15840. than me.%@NL@%
  15841. %@CR:EGOISMBierce    @%%@NL@%
  15842.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  15843.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15844. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15845. %@NL@%
  15846. %@NL@%
  15847. %@2@%Talk to a man about himself and he will listen for hours.%@NL@%
  15848. %@CR:EGOISMDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  15849.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  15850.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  15851. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15852. %@NL@%
  15853. %@NL@%
  15854. %@2@%A self-made man; who worships his creator.%@NL@%
  15855. %@CR:EGOISMBright    @%%@NL@%
  15856.                                                    John Bright (1811-1889)%@NL@%
  15857.                                                 English radical politician%@NL@%
  15858.                                                       of Benjamin Disraeli%@NL@%
  15859. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15860. %@NL@%
  15861. %@NL@%
  15862. %@2@%The idea that egotism is the basis of the general welfare is%@EH@%
  15863. the principle on which competitive society has been built.%@NL@%
  15864. %@CR:EGOISMFromm     @%%@NL@%
  15865.                                                    Erich Fromm (1900-1980)%@NL@%
  15866.                                                      American psychologist%@NL@%
  15867. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15868. %@NL@%
  15869. %@NL@%
  15870. %@2@%An inflated consciousness is always egocentric and conscious%@EH@%
  15871. of nothing but its own existence. It is incapable of learning from
  15872. the past, incapable of understanding contemporary events, and
  15873. incapable of drawing right conclusions about the future. It is
  15874. hypnotized by itself and therefore cannot be argued with. It inevitably
  15875. dooms itself to calamities that must strike it dead.%@NL@%
  15876. %@CR:EGOISMJung      @%%@NL@%
  15877.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  15878.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  15879. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15880. %@NL@%
  15881. %@NL@%
  15882. %@2@%Edith was a little country bounded on the north, south, east%@EH@%
  15883. and west by Edith.%@NL@%
  15884. %@CR:EGOISMOstenso   @%%@NL@%
  15885.                                                 Martha Ostenso (1900-1963)%@NL@%
  15886.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  15887. %@AS@%                                                                    Egoism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15888. %@NL@%
  15889. %@NL@%
  15890. %@NL@%
  15891. %@1@%%@AS@%Elections%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15892. %@CR:ELECTIONS       @%%@NL@%
  15893. %@2@%See:%@QR:Elections@%%@NL@%
  15894.      Government: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          117bb0@%%@NL@%
  15895. %@NL@%
  15896. %@2@%There's small choice in rotten apples.%@NL@%
  15897. %@CR:ELECTIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  15898.                                         Hortensia, %@AI@%The Taming of the Shrew%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15899.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  15900.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  15901. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15902. %@NL@%
  15903. %@NL@%
  15904. %@2@%Vote for the man who promises least. He'll be the least disappointing.%@NL@%
  15905. %@CR:ELECTIBaruch    @%%@NL@%
  15906.                                                 Bernard Baruch (1870-1965)%@NL@%
  15907.                                                         American financier%@NL@%
  15908. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15909. %@NL@%
  15910. %@NL@%
  15911. %@2@%I never vote for anyone. I always vote against.%@NL@%
  15912. %@CR:ELECTIFields    @%%@NL@%
  15913.                                                   W. C. Fields (1879-1946)%@NL@%
  15914.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  15915. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15916. %@NL@%
  15917. %@NL@%
  15918. %@2@%It doesn't matter who you vote for, the government always get%@EH@%
  15919. in.%@NL@%
  15920. %@CR:ELECTIGRAFFITO  @%%@NL@%
  15921.                                                  graffito in London, 1970s%@NL@%
  15922. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15923. %@NL@%
  15924. %@NL@%
  15925. %@2@%Bad officials are elected by good citizens who do not vote.%@NL@%
  15926. %@CR:ELECTINathan    @%%@NL@%
  15927.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  15928.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  15929. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15930. %@NL@%
  15931. %@NL@%
  15932. %@2@%I just received the following wire from my generous Daddy:%@EH@%
  15933. "Dear Jack, Don't buy a single vote more than necessary. I'll
  15934. be damned if I'm going to pay for a landslide."%@NL@%
  15935. %@CR:ELECTIKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  15936.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  15937.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  15938. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15939. %@NL@%
  15940. %@NL@%
  15941. %@2@%The Republicans have a "me too" candidate running on a "yes%@EH@%
  15942. but" platform, advised by a "has been" staff.%@NL@%
  15943. %@CR:ELECTIStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  15944.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  15945.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  15946. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15947. %@NL@%
  15948. %@NL@%
  15949. %@2@%Indeed, you won the elections, but I won the count.%@NL@%
  15950. %@CR:ELECTISomoza    @%%@NL@%
  15951.                                               Anastasio Somoza (1896-1956)%@NL@%
  15952.                                                      dictator of Nicaragua%@NL@%
  15953.                        to an opponent accusing him of rigging the election%@NL@%
  15954. %@AS@%                                                                 Elections%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15955. %@NL@%
  15956. %@NL@%
  15957. %@NL@%
  15958. %@1@%%@AS@%Eloquence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  15959. %@CR:ELOQUENCE       @%%@NL@%
  15960. %@2@%See:%@QR:Eloquence@%%@NL@%
  15961.      Persuasion: %@AB@%Inge%@AE@%%@BO:          1d718a@%; %@AB@%Junius%@AE@%%@BO:          1d7333@%%@NL@%
  15962.      Speeches: %@AB@%Moliere%@AE@%%@BO:          2670c8@%%@NL@%
  15963. %@NL@%
  15964. %@2@%%@AI@%Ah, si je pouvais pisser comme il parle!%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15965. %@CR:ELOQUEClemenceau@%%@NL@%
  15966.                                             Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929)%@NL@%
  15967.                                          French politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  15968.                                                      of David Lloyd George%@NL@%
  15969. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15970. %@NL@%
  15971. %@NL@%
  15972. %@2@%The finest eloquence is that which gets things done; the worst%@EH@%
  15973. is that which delays them.%@NL@%
  15974. %@CR:ELOQUELloydGeorg@%%@NL@%
  15975.                                             David Lloyd George (1863-1945)%@NL@%
  15976.                                   Welsh Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  15977. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15978. %@NL@%
  15979. %@NL@%
  15980. %@2@%Genuinely good remarks surprise their author as well as his%@EH@%
  15981. audience.%@NL@%
  15982. %@CR:ELOQUEJoubert   @%%@NL@%
  15983.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  15984.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  15985. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15986. %@NL@%
  15987. %@NL@%
  15988. %@2@%In the midwives' phrase, a perfect conception with an easy%@EH@%
  15989. delivery.%@NL@%
  15990. %@CR:ELOQUEPope      @%%@NL@%
  15991.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  15992.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  15993. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  15994. %@NL@%
  15995. %@NL@%
  15996. %@2@%The art of the parenthesis is one of the great secrets of eloquence%@EH@%
  15997. in Society.%@NL@%
  15998. %@CR:ELOQUEChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  15999.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  16000.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  16001. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16002. %@NL@%
  16003. %@NL@%
  16004. %@2@%To say that he was not at a loss for a word is one of the great%@EH@%
  16005. understatements of all time. He was not at a loss for 500,000 words
  16006. and we heard 'em, every one.%@NL@%
  16007. %@CR:ELOQUEConnor    @%%@NL@%
  16008.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  16009.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  16010. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16011. %@NL@%
  16012. %@NL@%
  16013. %@2@%He talked on for ever; and you wished him to talk on for ever.%@NL@%
  16014. %@CR:ELOQUEHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  16015.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  16016.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  16017.                                                               of Coleridge%@NL@%
  16018. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16019. %@NL@%
  16020. %@NL@%
  16021. %@2@%When a man gets talking about himself, he seldom fails to be%@EH@%
  16022. eloquent and often reaches the sublime.%@NL@%
  16023. %@CR:ELOQUEBillings  @%%@NL@%
  16024.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  16025.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  16026. %@AS@%                                                                 Eloquence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16027. %@NL@%
  16028. %@NL@%
  16029. %@NL@%
  16030. %@1@%%@AS@%Embarrassment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16031. %@CR:EMBARRASSMENT   @%%@NL@%
  16032. %@2@%%@QR:Embarrassment@%Man is the only animal that blushes. Or needs to.%@NL@%
  16033. %@CR:EMBARRTwain     @%%@NL@%
  16034.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  16035.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  16036. %@AS@%                                                             Embarrassment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16037. %@NL@%
  16038. %@NL@%
  16039. %@2@%We never forgive those who make us blush.%@NL@%
  16040. %@CR:EMBARRLaHarpe   @%%@NL@%
  16041.                                      Jean-Francois de La Harpe (1739-1803)%@NL@%
  16042.                                                    French poet, playwright%@NL@%
  16043. %@AS@%                                                             Embarrassment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16044. %@NL@%
  16045. %@NL@%
  16046. %@NL@%
  16047. %@1@%%@AS@%Emotion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16048. %@CR:EMOTION         @%%@NL@%
  16049. %@2@%See:%@QR:Emotion@%%@NL@%
  16050.      Religion: %@AB@%Arnold%@AE@%%@BO:          220414@%%@NL@%
  16051. %@NL@%
  16052. %@2@%Half our mistakes in life arise from feeling where we ought%@EH@%
  16053. to think, and thinking where we ought to feel.%@NL@%
  16054. %@CR:EMOTIOCollins1  @%%@NL@%
  16055.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  16056.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  16057. %@AS@%                                                                   Emotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16058. %@NL@%
  16059. %@NL@%
  16060. %@2@%The advantage of the emotions is that they lead us astray.%@NL@%
  16061. %@CR:EMOTIOWilde     @%%@NL@%
  16062.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  16063.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  16064. %@AS@%                                                                   Emotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16065. %@NL@%
  16066. %@NL@%
  16067. %@2@%"There are strings," said Mr. Tappertit, " . . .  in the human%@EH@%
  16068. heart that had better not be wibrated."%@NL@%
  16069. %@CR:EMOTIODickens   @%%@NL@%
  16070.                                                              %@AI@%Barnaby Rudge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16071.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  16072.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  16073. %@AS@%                                                                   Emotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16074. %@NL@%
  16075. %@NL@%
  16076. %@2@%The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man%@EH@%
  16077. who will not laugh is a fool.%@NL@%
  16078. %@CR:EMOTIOSantayana @%%@NL@%
  16079.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  16080.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  16081. %@AS@%                                                                   Emotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16082. %@NL@%
  16083. %@NL@%
  16084. %@2@%He is not affected by the reality of distress touching his%@EH@%
  16085. heart, but by the showy resemblance of it striking his imagination.
  16086. He pities the plumage, but forgets the dying bird.%@NL@%
  16087. %@CR:EMOTIOPaine     @%%@NL@%
  16088.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  16089.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  16090.                                                            of Edmund Burke%@NL@%
  16091. %@AS@%                                                                   Emotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16092. %@NL@%
  16093. %@NL@%
  16094. %@NL@%
  16095. %@1@%%@AS@%Empire%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16096. %@CR:EMPIRE          @%%@NL@%
  16097. %@2@%See:%@QR:Empire@%%@NL@%
  16098.      %@AB@%Decolonization%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           a14c9@%%@NL@%
  16099.      Nationalism: %@AB@%Hitler%@AE@%%@BO:          1b665a@%%@NL@%
  16100. %@NL@%
  16101. %@2@%We seem, as it were, to have conquered and peopled half the%@EH@%
  16102. world in a fit of absence of mind.%@NL@%
  16103. %@CR:EMPIRESeeley    @%%@NL@%
  16104.                                               Sir J. R. Seeley (1834-1895)%@NL@%
  16105.                                              English classicist, historian%@NL@%
  16106. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16107. %@NL@%
  16108. %@NL@%
  16109.      %@2@%Not once or twice in our rough island-story%@NL@%
  16110.      The path of booty was the way to glory.%@NL@%
  16111. %@CR:EMPIRESeeley    @%%@NL@%
  16112.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  16113. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16114. %@NL@%
  16115. %@NL@%
  16116. %@2@%If Germany is to become a colonising power, all I say is, "God%@EH@%
  16117. speed her!" She becomes our ally and partner in the execution
  16118. of the great purposes of Providence for the advantage of mankind.%@NL@%
  16119. %@CR:EMPIREGladstone @%%@NL@%
  16120.                                        William Ewald Gladstone (1809-1898)%@NL@%
  16121.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  16122.                                                                    in 1885%@NL@%
  16123. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16124. %@NL@%
  16125. %@NL@%
  16126.      %@2@%With a hero at head, and a nation%@NL@%
  16127.      Well gagged and well drilled and well cowed,%@NL@%
  16128.      And a gospel of war and damnation,%@NL@%
  16129.      Has not Empire a right to be proud?%@NL@%
  16130. %@CR:EMPIRESwinburne @%%@NL@%
  16131.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  16132.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  16133. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16134. %@NL@%
  16135. %@NL@%
  16136. %@2@%To plunder, to slaughter, to steal, these things they misname%@EH@%
  16137. empire; and where they make a wilderness, they call it peace.%@NL@%
  16138. %@CR:EMPIRETacitus   @%%@NL@%
  16139.                                                     Tacitus (c. 55-c. 120)%@NL@%
  16140.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  16141.                                                              of the Romans%@NL@%
  16142. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16143. %@NL@%
  16144. %@NL@%
  16145. %@2@%The reluctant obedience of distant provinces generally costs%@EH@%
  16146. more than it [the territory] is worth.%@NL@%
  16147. %@CR:EMPIREMacaulay3 @%%@NL@%
  16148.                                      Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  16149.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  16150. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16151. %@NL@%
  16152. %@NL@%
  16153. %@2@%The conquest of the earth, which mostly means the taking it%@EH@%
  16154. away from those who have a different complection or slightly flatter
  16155. noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing when you look into
  16156. it.%@NL@%
  16157. %@CR:EMPIREConrad    @%%@NL@%
  16158.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  16159.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  16160. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16161. %@NL@%
  16162. %@NL@%
  16163. %@2@%The British Government in India is like a tooth that is decaying%@EH@%
  16164. but is still strongly embedded. It is painful, but it cannot be
  16165. easily pulled out.%@NL@%
  16166. %@CR:EMPIRENehru     @%%@NL@%
  16167.                                               Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964)%@NL@%
  16168.                                                      Indian prime minister%@NL@%
  16169.                                                                    in 1935%@NL@%
  16170. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16171. %@NL@%
  16172. %@NL@%
  16173. %@2@%All empires die of indigestion.%@NL@%
  16174. %@CR:EMPIRENapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  16175.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  16176.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  16177. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16178. %@NL@%
  16179. %@NL@%
  16180.      %@2@%And the end of the fight is a tombstone white with the name of%@NL@%
  16181.      the late deceased, And the epitaph drear; "A Fool lies here who%@NL@%
  16182.      tried to hustle the East."%@NL@%
  16183. %@CR:EMPIREKipling   @%%@NL@%
  16184.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  16185.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16186. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16187. %@NL@%
  16188. %@NL@%
  16189. %@2@%How is the Empire?%@NL@%
  16190. %@CR:EMPIREGeorgeV   @%%@NL@%
  16191.                                 King George V of Great Britain (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  16192.                                                                 last words%@NL@%
  16193. %@AS@%                                                                    Empire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16194. %@NL@%
  16195. %@NL@%
  16196. %@NL@%
  16197. %@1@%%@AS@%Encyclopedias%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16198. %@CR:ENCYCLOPEDIAS   @%%@NL@%
  16199. %@2@%%@QR:Encyclopedias@%The man consulting it finds the thing he wants; he also finds%@EH@%
  16200. how many thousand things there are that he does not want.%@NL@%
  16201. %@CR:ENCYCLChesterton@%%@NL@%
  16202.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  16203.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16204. %@AS@%                                                             Encyclopedias%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16205. %@NL@%
  16206. %@NL@%
  16207. %@NL@%
  16208. %@1@%%@AS@%Enemies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16209. %@CR:ENEMIES         @%%@NL@%
  16210. %@2@%See:%@QR:Enemies@%%@NL@%
  16211.      Forgiveness: %@AB@%Heine%@AE@%%@BO:           f7a4b@%; %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           f7717@%%@NL@%
  16212.      Friends: %@AB@%Canning%@AE@%%@BO:           fea3e@%%@NL@%
  16213.      Generals: %@AB@%Bonaparte%@AE@%%@BO:          105d10@%%@NL@%
  16214.      Human Nature: %@AB@%Browne%@AE@%%@BO:          138807@%%@NL@%
  16215.      Jokers: %@AB@%Sterne%@AE@%%@BO:          160b88@%%@NL@%
  16216.      Leadership: %@AB@%Hitler%@AE@%%@BO:          16ff20@%%@NL@%
  16217.      Motives: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@CF:MOTIVEBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  16218.      Public Life: %@AB@%Cassandra%@AE@%%@BO:          210778@%%@NL@%
  16219.      Success: %@AB@%Schopenhauer%@AE@%%@BO:          2725fe@%%@NL@%
  16220.      Winning: %@AB@%Wellington%@AE@%%@BO:          2b440b@%%@NL@%
  16221. %@NL@%
  16222. %@2@%Enemies are so stimulating.%@NL@%
  16223. %@CR:ENEMIEHepburn   @%%@NL@%
  16224.                                                Katharine Hepburn (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  16225.                                                           American actress%@NL@%
  16226. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16227. %@NL@%
  16228. %@NL@%
  16229. %@2@%To have a good enemy, choose a friend: he knows where to stike.%@NL@%
  16230. %@CR:ENEMIEPoitiers  @%%@NL@%
  16231.                                              Diane de Poitiers (1499-1566)%@NL@%
  16232.                                     mistress of Henri II of France, patron%@NL@%
  16233. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16234. %@NL@%
  16235. %@NL@%
  16236. %@2@%I choose my friends for their good looks, my acquaintances%@EH@%
  16237. for their good characters, and my enemies for their intellects.
  16238. A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies.%@NL@%
  16239. %@CR:ENEMIEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  16240.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  16241.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  16242. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16243. %@NL@%
  16244. %@NL@%
  16245. %@2@%I'm lonesome. They are all dying. I have hardly a warm personal%@EH@%
  16246. enemy left.%@NL@%
  16247. %@CR:ENEMIEWhistler  @%%@NL@%
  16248.                                         James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)%@NL@%
  16249.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  16250. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16251. %@NL@%
  16252. %@NL@%
  16253. %@2@%For my enemy is dead, a man as divine as myself is dead.%@NL@%
  16254. %@CR:ENEMIEWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  16255.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  16256.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  16257. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16258. %@NL@%
  16259. %@NL@%
  16260. %@2@%Treating your adversary with respect is giving him an advantage%@EH@%
  16261. to which he is not entitled.%@NL@%
  16262. %@CR:ENEMIEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  16263.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  16264.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  16265. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16266. %@NL@%
  16267. %@NL@%
  16268. %@2@%Despise the enemy strategically, but take him seriously tactically.%@NL@%
  16269. %@CR:ENEMIEMaoZedong @%%@NL@%
  16270.                                                     Mao Zedong (1893-1976)%@NL@%
  16271.                                  founder of the People's Republic of China%@NL@%
  16272. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16273. %@NL@%
  16274. %@NL@%
  16275. %@2@%There are men whose enmity is a compliment.%@NL@%
  16276. %@CR:ENEMIEFroude    @%%@NL@%
  16277.                                                   J. A. Froude (1818-1894)%@NL@%
  16278.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16279. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16280. %@NL@%
  16281. %@NL@%
  16282. %@2@%You must embrace the man you hate, if you cannot be justified%@EH@%
  16283. in knocking him down.%@NL@%
  16284. %@CR:ENEMIEChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  16285.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  16286.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  16287. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16288. %@NL@%
  16289. %@NL@%
  16290. %@2@%Am I not destroying my enemies when I make friends of them?%@NL@%
  16291. %@CR:ENEMIELincoln   @%%@NL@%
  16292.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  16293.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  16294. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16295. %@NL@%
  16296. %@NL@%
  16297. %@2@%Take heed of enemies reconciled, and of meat twice boiled.%@NL@%
  16298. %@CR:ENEMIELincoln   @%%@NL@%
  16299.                                                            Spanish proverb%@NL@%
  16300. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16301. %@NL@%
  16302. %@NL@%
  16303. %@2@%Nothing ever perplexes an adversary so much as an appeal to%@EH@%
  16304. his honour.%@NL@%
  16305. %@CR:ENEMIEDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  16306.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  16307.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  16308. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16309. %@NL@%
  16310. %@NL@%
  16311. %@2@%She is as implacable an adversary as a wife suing for alimony.%@NL@%
  16312. %@CR:ENEMIEWycherley @%%@NL@%
  16313.                                              William Wycherley (1640-1716)%@NL@%
  16314.                                                         English dramatist
  16315. %@NL@%
  16316. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16317. %@NL@%
  16318. %@NL@%
  16319. %@2@%If you would injure your neighbour, better not do it by halves.%@NL@%
  16320. %@CR:ENEMIEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  16321.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  16322.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  16323. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16324. %@NL@%
  16325. %@NL@%
  16326. %@2@%I do not approve the extermination of the enemy; the policy%@EH@%
  16327. of exterminating or, as it is barbarously said, liquidating enemies,
  16328. is one of the most alarming developments of modern war and peace,
  16329. from the point of view of those who desire the survival of culture.
  16330. One needs the enemy.%@NL@%
  16331. %@CR:ENEMIEEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  16332.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  16333.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  16334. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16335. %@NL@%
  16336. %@NL@%
  16337. %@2@%You have many enemies, that know not why they are so, but,%@EH@%
  16338. like to village-curs, bark when their fellows do.%@NL@%
  16339. %@CR:ENEMIEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  16340.                                                King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry VIII%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16341.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  16342.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  16343. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16344. %@NL@%
  16345. %@NL@%
  16346. %@2@%I have only ever made one prayer to God, a very short one;%@EH@%
  16347. "O Lord, make my enemies ridiculous." And God granted it.%@NL@%
  16348. %@CR:ENEMIEVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  16349.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  16350.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  16351. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16352. %@NL@%
  16353. %@NL@%
  16354. %@2@%Oh, I am heartily tired of hearing what Lee is going to do.%@EH@%
  16355. Try to think what we are going to do ourselves.%@NL@%
  16356. %@CR:ENEMIEGrant2    @%%@NL@%
  16357.                                               Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885)%@NL@%
  16358.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  16359. %@AS@%                                                                   Enemies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16360. %@NL@%
  16361. %@NL@%
  16362. %@NL@%
  16363. %@1@%%@AS@%England%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16364. %@CR:ENGLAND         @%%@NL@%
  16365. %@2@%See:%@QR:England@%%@NL@%
  16366.      Reform: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          21ed59@%%@NL@%
  16367.      The Weather: %@AB@%Whitehorn%@AE@%%@BO:          2af43f@%%@NL@%
  16368. %@NL@%
  16369. %@2@%This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.%@NL@%
  16370. %@CR:ENGLANShakespear@%%@NL@%
  16371.                                                     Gaunt, %@AI@%King Richard II%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16372.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  16373.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  16374. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16375. %@NL@%
  16376. %@NL@%
  16377. %@2@%I am sure my bones would not rest in an English grave, or my%@EH@%
  16378. clay mix with the earth of that country. I believe the thought
  16379. would drive me mad on my death-bed could I suppose that any of
  16380. my friends would be base enough to convey my carcase back to her
  16381. soil. I would not even feed her worms if I could help it.%@NL@%
  16382. %@CR:ENGLANByron2    @%%@NL@%
  16383.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  16384.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16385. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16386. %@NL@%
  16387. %@NL@%
  16388. %@2@%England, surely, is the paradise of little men, and the purgatory%@EH@%
  16389. of great ones.%@NL@%
  16390. %@CR:ENGLANNewman1   @%%@NL@%
  16391.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  16392.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  16393. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16394. %@NL@%
  16395. %@NL@%
  16396. %@2@%What a pity it is that we have no amusements in England but%@EH@%
  16397. vice and religion!%@NL@%
  16398. %@CR:ENGLANSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  16399.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  16400.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  16401. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16402. %@NL@%
  16403. %@NL@%
  16404. %@2@%In England there are sixty different religions, and only one%@EH@%
  16405. sauce.%@NL@%
  16406. %@CR:ENGLANCaraccioli@%%@NL@%
  16407.                                           Francesco Caraccioli (1752-1799)%@NL@%
  16408.                                                 Neapolitan naval commander%@NL@%
  16409. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16410. %@NL@%
  16411. %@NL@%
  16412. %@2@%The expression "as right as rain" must have been invented%@EH@%
  16413. by an Englishman.%@NL@%
  16414. %@CR:ENGLANPhelps    @%%@NL@%
  16415.                                            William Lyon Phelps (1865-1943)%@NL@%
  16416.                                                  American educator, author%@NL@%
  16417. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16418. %@NL@%
  16419. %@NL@%
  16420.      %@2@%The English winter - ending in July,%@NL@%
  16421.      To recommence in August.%@NL@%
  16422. %@CR:ENGLANByron2    @%%@NL@%
  16423.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  16424.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16425. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16426. %@NL@%
  16427. %@NL@%
  16428. %@2@%Summer has set in with its usual severity.%@NL@%
  16429. %@CR:ENGLANColeridge @%%@NL@%
  16430.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  16431.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16432. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16433. %@NL@%
  16434. %@NL@%
  16435. %@2@%The best sun we have is made of Newcastle coal.%@NL@%
  16436. %@CR:ENGLANWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  16437.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  16438.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  16439. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16440. %@NL@%
  16441. %@NL@%
  16442. %@2@%I shall continue to praise the English climate till I die,%@EH@%
  16443. even if I die of the English climate.%@NL@%
  16444. %@CR:ENGLANChesterton@%%@NL@%
  16445.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  16446.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16447. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16448. %@NL@%
  16449. %@NL@%
  16450.      %@2@%I am living in the Midlands%@NL@%
  16451.      That are sodden and unkind.%@NL@%
  16452. %@CR:ENGLANBelloc    @%%@NL@%
  16453.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  16454.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  16455. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16456. %@NL@%
  16457. %@NL@%
  16458. %@2@%One has no great hopes from Birmingham. I always say there%@EH@%
  16459. is something direful in the sound.%@NL@%
  16460. %@CR:ENGLANAusten    @%%@NL@%
  16461.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  16462.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  16463. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16464. %@NL@%
  16465. %@NL@%
  16466. %@2@%The shortest way out of Manchester is notoriously a bottle%@EH@%
  16467. of Gordon's gin.%@NL@%
  16468. %@CR:ENGLANBolitho   @%%@NL@%
  16469.                                                William Bolitho (1890-1930)%@NL@%
  16470.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  16471. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16472. %@NL@%
  16473. %@NL@%
  16474. %@2@%A Yorkshireman, like a dragoon, is nothing without his horse.%@NL@%
  16475. %@CR:ENGLANSurtees   @%%@NL@%
  16476.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  16477.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  16478. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16479. %@NL@%
  16480. %@NL@%
  16481.      %@2@%For Cambridge people rarely smile,%@NL@%
  16482.      Being urban, squat, and packed with guile.%@NL@%
  16483. %@CR:ENGLANBrooke    @%%@NL@%
  16484.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  16485.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  16486. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16487. %@NL@%
  16488. %@NL@%
  16489. %@2@%An acre in Middlesex is better than a principality in Utopia.%@NL@%
  16490. %@CR:ENGLANMacaulay3 @%%@NL@%
  16491.                                      Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  16492.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  16493. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16494. %@NL@%
  16495. %@NL@%
  16496. %@2@%Kent, sir - everybody knows Kent - apples, cherries,%@EH@%
  16497. hops, and women.%@NL@%
  16498. %@CR:ENGLANDickens   @%%@NL@%
  16499.                                                Jingle, %@AI@%The Pickwick Papers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16500.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  16501.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  16502. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16503. %@NL@%
  16504. %@NL@%
  16505. %@2@%The rolling English drunkard made the rolling English road.%@NL@%
  16506. %@CR:ENGLANChesterton@%%@NL@%
  16507.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  16508.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16509. %@AS@%                                                                   England%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16510. %@NL@%
  16511. %@NL@%
  16512. %@NL@%
  16513. %@1@%%@AS@%The English%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16514. %@CR:THEENGLISH      @%%@NL@%
  16515. %@2@%See:%@QR:The English@%%@NL@%
  16516.      %@AB@%The British%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           4afe2@%%@NL@%
  16517.      Conservatives: %@AB@%Whitehead%@AE@%%@BO:           7eb83@%%@NL@%
  16518.      Courtesy: %@AB@%Bradbury%@AE@%%@BO:           8962a@%%@NL@%
  16519.      Dress: %@AB@%Halsey%@AE@%%@BO:           b60dc@%; %@AB@%Sitwell%@AE@%%@BO:           b5f25@%%@NL@%
  16520.      Food: %@AB@%Mikes%@AE@%%@BO:           f322a@%%@NL@%
  16521.      Ireland: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          159f46@%%@NL@%
  16522.      Morality: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1b0a69@%%@NL@%
  16523.      Music: %@AB@%Beecham%@AE@%%@BO:          1b50b9@%%@NL@%
  16524.      The Scots: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@BO:          23db98@%; %@AB@%Wilson%@AE@%%@BO:          23e3ea@%%@NL@%
  16525.      Sex: %@AB@%Muggeridge%@AE@%%@BO:          24dca2@%%@NL@%
  16526.      Vice: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2a05ce@%%@NL@%
  16527. %@NL@%
  16528.      %@2@%Stands the church clock at ten to three?%@NL@%
  16529.      And is there honey still for tea?%@NL@%
  16530. %@CR:THEENGBrooke    @%%@NL@%
  16531.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  16532.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  16533. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16534. %@NL@%
  16535. %@NL@%
  16536. %@2@%English life, while very pleasant, is rather bland. I expected%@EH@%
  16537. kindness and gentility and I found it, but there is such a thing
  16538. as too much couth.%@NL@%
  16539. %@CR:THEENGPerelman  @%%@NL@%
  16540.                                                 S. J. Perelman (1904-1979)%@NL@%
  16541.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  16542. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16543. %@NL@%
  16544. %@NL@%
  16545. %@2@%The English (it must be owned) are rather a foul-mouthed nation.%@NL@%
  16546. %@CR:THEENGHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  16547.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  16548.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  16549. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16550. %@NL@%
  16551. %@NL@%
  16552. %@2@%The English are probably the most tolerant, least religious%@EH@%
  16553. people on earth.%@NL@%
  16554. %@CR:THEENGGoldberg2 @%%@NL@%
  16555.                                             Rabbi David Goldberg (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  16556.                           Minister of the Liberal Jewish Synagogue, London%@NL@%
  16557. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16558. %@NL@%
  16559. %@NL@%
  16560. %@2@%I should like my country well enough if it were not for my%@EH@%
  16561. countrymen.%@NL@%
  16562. %@CR:THEENGWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  16563.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  16564.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  16565. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16566. %@NL@%
  16567. %@NL@%
  16568. %@2@%To be an Englishman is to belong to the most exclusive class%@EH@%
  16569. there is.%@NL@%
  16570. %@CR:THEENGNash      @%%@NL@%
  16571.                                                     Ogden Nash (1902-1971)%@NL@%
  16572.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  16573. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16574. %@NL@%
  16575. %@NL@%
  16576. %@2@%He was inordinately proud of England and he abused her incessantly.%@NL@%
  16577. %@CR:THEENGWells     @%%@NL@%
  16578.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  16579.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  16580. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16581. %@NL@%
  16582. %@NL@%
  16583. %@2@%We do not covet anything from any nation except their respect.%@NL@%
  16584. %@CR:THEENGChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  16585.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  16586.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  16587. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16588. %@NL@%
  16589. %@NL@%
  16590. %@2@%They are like their own beer: froth on the top, dregs at the%@EH@%
  16591. bottom, the middle excellent.%@NL@%
  16592. %@CR:THEENGVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  16593.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  16594.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  16595. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16596. %@NL@%
  16597. %@NL@%
  16598. %@2@%One has often wondered whether  . . .  there is anything so unintelligent,%@EH@%
  16599. so unapt to perceive how the world is really going, as an ordinary
  16600. young Englishman of our upper class.%@NL@%
  16601. %@CR:THEENGArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  16602.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  16603.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  16604. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16605. %@NL@%
  16606. %@NL@%
  16607. %@2@%It is to the middle-class we must look for the safety of England.%@NL@%
  16608. %@CR:THEENGThackeray @%%@NL@%
  16609.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  16610.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16611. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16612. %@NL@%
  16613. %@NL@%
  16614. %@2@%%@AI@%L'Angleterre est une nation de boutiquiers!%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16615. England is a nation of shopkeepers!%@NL@%
  16616. %@CR:THEENGNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  16617.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  16618.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  16619. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16620. %@NL@%
  16621. %@NL@%
  16622. %@2@%You never find an Englishman among the under-dogs - except%@EH@%
  16623. in England, of course.%@NL@%
  16624. %@CR:THEENGWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  16625.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  16626.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  16627. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16628. %@NL@%
  16629. %@NL@%
  16630. %@2@%The English have all the material requisites for the revolution.%@EH@%
  16631. What they lack is the spirit of generalization and revolutionary
  16632. ardor.%@NL@%
  16633. %@CR:THEENGMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  16634.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  16635.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  16636. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16637. %@NL@%
  16638. %@NL@%
  16639. %@2@%Whenever he met a great man he grovelled before him and mylorded%@EH@%
  16640. as only a free-born Englishman can do.%@NL@%
  16641. %@CR:THEENGThackeray @%%@NL@%
  16642.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  16643.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16644. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16645. %@NL@%
  16646. %@NL@%
  16647. %@2@%Englishmen never will be slaves; they are free to do whatever%@EH@%
  16648. the Government and public opinion allow them to do.%@NL@%
  16649. %@CR:THEENGShaw      @%%@NL@%
  16650.                                                The Devil, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16651.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  16652.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  16653. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16654. %@NL@%
  16655. %@NL@%
  16656. %@2@%You can get the English to do anything if you put it to them%@EH@%
  16657. the right way. The trouble with the English is they try all the
  16658. wrong ways first.%@NL@%
  16659. %@CR:THEENGMasefield @%%@NL@%
  16660.                                                 John Masefield (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  16661.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  16662. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16663. %@NL@%
  16664. %@NL@%
  16665. %@2@%Now I understand how it is that they form a great nation. It%@EH@%
  16666. is merely because they stand and let you thump them until you are
  16667. tired, and then they proceed to do what they intended to do from
  16668. the first.%@NL@%
  16669. %@CR:THEENGMerriman  @%%@NL@%
  16670.                                              H. Seton Merriman (1862-1903)%@NL@%
  16671.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  16672. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16673. %@NL@%
  16674. %@NL@%
  16675. %@2@%The Anglo-Saxon conscience does not prevent the Anglo-Saxon%@EH@%
  16676. from sinning; it merely prevents him from enjoying his sin.%@NL@%
  16677. %@CR:THEENGdeMadariag@%%@NL@%
  16678.                                          Salvador de Madariaga (1886-1978)%@NL@%
  16679.                                           Spanish diplomat, writer, critic%@NL@%
  16680. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16681. %@NL@%
  16682. %@NL@%
  16683. %@2@%How hard it is to make an Englishman acknowledge that he is%@EH@%
  16684. happy.%@NL@%
  16685. %@CR:THEENGThackeray @%%@NL@%
  16686.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  16687.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  16688. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16689. %@NL@%
  16690. %@NL@%
  16691. %@2@%The people of England are never so happy as when you tell them%@EH@%
  16692. they are ruined.%@NL@%
  16693. %@CR:THEENGMurphy    @%%@NL@%
  16694.                                                  Arthur Murphy (1727-1805)%@NL@%
  16695.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  16696. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16697. %@NL@%
  16698. %@NL@%
  16699. %@2@%The Englishman never enjoys himself except for a noble purpose.%@NL@%
  16700. %@CR:THEENGHerbert1  @%%@NL@%
  16701.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  16702.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  16703. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16704. %@NL@%
  16705. %@NL@%
  16706. %@2@%You will never find an Englishman in the wrong. He does everything%@EH@%
  16707. on principle. He fights you on patriotic principles; he robs you
  16708. on business principles; he enslaves you on imperial principles;
  16709. he bullies you on manly principles; he supports his king on loyal
  16710. principles; and cuts off his king's head on republican principles.%@NL@%
  16711. %@CR:THEENGShaw      @%%@NL@%
  16712.                                               Napoleon, %@AI@%The Man of Destiny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16713.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  16714.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  16715. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16716. %@NL@%
  16717. %@NL@%
  16718.      %@2@%%@AI@%Le sombre Anglais, meme dans ses amours,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16719.      %@AI@%Veut raisonner toujours.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16720. %@NL@%
  16721. %@2@%The gloomy Englishman always wants to reason things out,
  16722. even in his love affairs.%@NL@%
  16723. %@CR:THEENGVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  16724.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  16725.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  16726. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16727. %@NL@%
  16728. %@NL@%
  16729. %@2@%As soon as sex comes up we collectively say "Er  . . . " instead%@EH@%
  16730. of "Aha!"%@NL@%
  16731. %@CR:THEENGYoung4    @%%@NL@%
  16732.                                                   George Younger (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  16733.                                           Scottish Conservative politician%@NL@%
  16734. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16735. %@NL@%
  16736. %@NL@%
  16737. %@2@%Continental people have sex lives; the English have hot-water%@EH@%
  16738. bottles.%@NL@%
  16739. %@CR:THEENGMikes     @%%@NL@%
  16740.                                                     George Mikes (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  16741.                                            Hungarian-born British humorist%@NL@%
  16742. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16743. %@NL@%
  16744. %@NL@%
  16745. %@2@%Cool, and quite English, imperturbable.%@NL@%
  16746. %@CR:THEENGByron2    @%%@NL@%
  16747.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  16748.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16749. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16750. %@NL@%
  16751. %@NL@%
  16752. %@2@%The English have an extraordinary ability for flying into a%@EH@%
  16753. great calm.%@NL@%
  16754. %@CR:THEENGWoollcott @%%@NL@%
  16755.                                            Alexander Woollcott (1887-1943)%@NL@%
  16756.                                                 American columnist, critic%@NL@%
  16757. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16758. %@NL@%
  16759. %@NL@%
  16760. %@2@%The Englishman has all the qualities of a poker except its%@EH@%
  16761. occasional warmth.%@NL@%
  16762. %@CR:THEENGOConnell  @%%@NL@%
  16763.                                               Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847)%@NL@%
  16764.                                               Irish nationalist politician%@NL@%
  16765. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16766. %@NL@%
  16767. %@NL@%
  16768. %@2@%It is not that the Englishman can't feel - it is that he%@EH@%
  16769. is afraid to feel. He has been taught at his public school that
  16770. feeling is bad form. He must not express great joy or sorrow, or
  16771. even open his mouth too wide when he talks - his pipe might
  16772. fall out if he did.%@NL@%
  16773. %@CR:THEENGForster   @%%@NL@%
  16774.                                                  E. M. Forster (1879-1970)%@NL@%
  16775.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  16776. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16777. %@NL@%
  16778. %@NL@%
  16779. %@2@%Stoicism, the sublimest kind of stupidity. Modesty, the proudest%@EH@%
  16780. kind of groveling.%@NL@%
  16781. %@CR:THEENGFlaubert  @%%@NL@%
  16782.                                               Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880)%@NL@%
  16783.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  16784. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16785. %@NL@%
  16786. %@NL@%
  16787. %@2@%Even crushed against his brother in the Tube the average Englishman%@EH@%
  16788. pretends desperately that he is alone.%@NL@%
  16789. %@CR:THEENGGreer     @%%@NL@%
  16790.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  16791.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  16792. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16793. %@NL@%
  16794. %@NL@%
  16795. %@2@%Not only England, but every Englishman is an island.%@NL@%
  16796. %@CR:THEENGHardenberg@%%@NL@%
  16797.                              Novalis, Friedrich von Hardenberg (1772-1801)%@NL@%
  16798.                                                                German poet%@NL@%
  16799. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16800. %@NL@%
  16801. %@NL@%
  16802. %@2@% . . .  A scene that is all English and stiff upper lip. Nothing%@EH@%
  16803. is said that can be regretted. Nothing is said that can even be
  16804. remembered.%@NL@%
  16805. %@CR:THEENGLejeune   @%%@NL@%
  16806.                                            Caroline A. Lejeune (1897-1973)%@NL@%
  16807.                                                        British film critic%@NL@%
  16808. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16809. %@NL@%
  16810. %@NL@%
  16811. %@2@%Silence - a conversation with an Englishman.%@NL@%
  16812. %@CR:THEENGHeine     @%%@NL@%
  16813.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  16814.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  16815. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16816. %@NL@%
  16817. %@NL@%
  16818. %@2@%But Lord! to see the absurd nature of Englishmen, that cannot%@EH@%
  16819. forbear laughing and jeering at everything that looks strange.%@NL@%
  16820. %@CR:THEENGPepys     @%%@NL@%
  16821.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  16822.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  16823. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16824. %@NL@%
  16825. %@NL@%
  16826. %@2@%We do not regard Englishmen as foreigners. We look on them%@EH@%
  16827. only as rather mad Norwegians.%@NL@%
  16828. %@CR:THEENGLange2    @%%@NL@%
  16829.                                                              Halvard Lange%@NL@%
  16830.                                             Norwegian prime minister, 1958%@NL@%
  16831. %@AS@%                                                               The English%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16832. %@NL@%
  16833. %@NL@%
  16834. %@NL@%
  16835. %@1@%%@AS@%Ennui%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16836. %@CR:ENNUI           @%%@NL@%
  16837. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ennui@%%@NL@%
  16838.      %@AB@%Boredom%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           47a7a@%%@NL@%
  16839. %@NL@%
  16840.      %@2@%Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale,%@NL@%
  16841.      Vexing the dull ear of a drowsy man.%@NL@%
  16842. %@CR:ENNUI Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  16843.                                                           Lewis, %@AI@%King John%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16844.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  16845.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  16846. %@AS@%                                                                     Ennui%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16847. %@NL@%
  16848. %@NL@%
  16849.      %@2@%She, while her lover pants upon her breast,%@NL@%
  16850.      Can mark the carvings in an Indian chest.%@NL@%
  16851. %@CR:ENNUI Pope      @%%@NL@%
  16852.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  16853.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  16854. %@AS@%                                                                     Ennui%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16855. %@NL@%
  16856. %@NL@%
  16857. %@2@%The flesh is weary, alas, and I've read all the books.%@NL@%
  16858. %@CR:ENNUI Mallarme  @%%@NL@%
  16859.                                              Stephane Mallarme (1842-1898)%@NL@%
  16860.                                                      French Symbolist poet%@NL@%
  16861. %@AS@%                                                                     Ennui%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16862. %@NL@%
  16863. %@NL@%
  16864. %@2@%They remind me of a very tired rich man who said to his chauffeur%@EH@%
  16865. "Drive off that cliff, James, I want to commit suicide."%@NL@%
  16866. %@CR:ENNUI Stevenson1@%%@NL@%
  16867.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  16868.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  16869. %@AS@%                                                                     Ennui%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16870. %@NL@%
  16871. %@NL@%
  16872. %@2@%What a day-to-day affair life is.%@NL@%
  16873. %@CR:ENNUI Laforgue  @%%@NL@%
  16874.                                                 Jules Laforgue (1860-1887)%@NL@%
  16875.                                                      French Symbolist poet%@NL@%
  16876. %@AS@%                                                                     Ennui%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16877. %@NL@%
  16878. %@NL@%
  16879. %@NL@%
  16880. %@1@%%@AS@%Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16881. %@CR:ENTHUSIASM      @%%@NL@%
  16882. %@2@%%@QR:Enthusiasm@%In things pertaining to enthusiasm, no man is sane who does%@EH@%
  16883. not know how to be insane on proper occasions.%@NL@%
  16884. %@CR:ENTHUSBeecher1  @%%@NL@%
  16885.                                             Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887)%@NL@%
  16886.                                         American clergyman, editor, writer%@NL@%
  16887. %@AS@%                                                                Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16888. %@NL@%
  16889. %@NL@%
  16890. %@2@%Daniel Webster struck me much like a steam engine in trousers.%@NL@%
  16891. %@CR:ENTHUSSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  16892.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  16893.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  16894. %@AS@%                                                                Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16895. %@NL@%
  16896. %@NL@%
  16897. %@2@% . . .  talk about God as though nobody had ever heard of Him%@EH@%
  16898. before.%@NL@%
  16899. %@CR:ENTHUSLynes     @%%@NL@%
  16900.                                                    Russell Lynes (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  16901.                                                    American editor, critic%@NL@%
  16902. %@AS@%                                                                Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16903. %@NL@%
  16904. %@NL@%
  16905. %@2@%It is unfortunate, considering that enthusiasm moves the world,%@EH@%
  16906. that so few enthusiasts can be trusted to speak the truth.%@NL@%
  16907. %@CR:ENTHUSBalfour   @%%@NL@%
  16908.                                           Arthur James Balfour (1848-1930)%@NL@%
  16909.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  16910. %@AS@%                                                                Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16911. %@NL@%
  16912. %@NL@%
  16913. %@2@%Enthusiasm. A distemper of youth, curable by small doses of%@EH@%
  16914. repentance in connection with outward applications of experience.%@NL@%
  16915. %@CR:ENTHUSBierce    @%%@NL@%
  16916.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  16917.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  16918. %@AS@%                                                                Enthusiasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16919. %@NL@%
  16920. %@NL@%
  16921. %@NL@%
  16922. %@1@%%@AS@%Envy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16923. %@CR:ENVY            @%%@NL@%
  16924. %@2@%See:%@QR:Envy@%%@NL@%
  16925.      Genius: %@AB@%Beerbohm%@AE@%%@BO:          107e9b@%%@NL@%
  16926. %@NL@%
  16927. %@2@%Some folks rail against other folks, because other folks have%@EH@%
  16928. what some folks would be glad of.%@NL@%
  16929. %@CR:ENVY  Fielding  @%%@NL@%
  16930.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  16931.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  16932. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16933. %@NL@%
  16934. %@NL@%
  16935. %@2@%Envy is a kind of praise.%@NL@%
  16936. %@CR:ENVY  Gay       @%%@NL@%
  16937.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  16938.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  16939. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16940. %@NL@%
  16941. %@NL@%
  16942. %@2@%Envy among other ingredients has a mixture of the love of justice%@EH@%
  16943. in it. We are more angry at undeserved than at deserved good fortune.%@NL@%
  16944. %@CR:ENVY  Hazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  16945.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  16946.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  16947. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16948. %@NL@%
  16949. %@NL@%
  16950. %@2@%Envy is capable of serving the valuable social function of%@EH@%
  16951. making the rich moderate their habits for fear of arousing it.%@NL@%
  16952. %@CR:ENVY  Joseph    @%%@NL@%
  16953.                                                 Sir Keith Joseph (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  16954.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  16955. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16956. %@NL@%
  16957. %@NL@%
  16958. %@2@%Glamour cannot exist without personal social envy being a common%@EH@%
  16959. and widespread emotion.%@NL@%
  16960. %@CR:ENVY  Berger    @%%@NL@%
  16961.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  16962.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  16963. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16964. %@NL@%
  16965. %@NL@%
  16966. %@2@%His scorn of the great is repeated too often to be real; no%@EH@%
  16967. man thinks much of that which he despises.%@NL@%
  16968. %@CR:ENVY  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  16969.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  16970.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  16971. %@AS@%                                                                      Envy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16972. %@NL@%
  16973. %@NL@%
  16974. %@NL@%
  16975. %@1@%%@AS@%Epigrams%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  16976. %@CR:EPIGRAMS        @%%@NL@%
  16977. %@2@%See:%@QR:Epigrams@%%@NL@%
  16978.      Platitudes: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          1dded0@%%@NL@%
  16979. %@NL@%
  16980.      %@2@%If with the literate, I am%@NL@%
  16981.      Impelled to try an epigram,%@NL@%
  16982.      I never seek to take the credit;%@NL@%
  16983.      We all assume that Oscar said it.%@NL@%
  16984. %@CR:EPIGRAParker1   @%%@NL@%
  16985.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  16986.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  16987. %@AS@%                                                                  Epigrams%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16988. %@NL@%
  16989. %@NL@%
  16990. %@2@%Paradox with him was only truth standing on its head to attract%@EH@%
  16991. attention.%@NL@%
  16992. %@CR:EPIGRALeGallienn@%%@NL@%
  16993.                                           Richard Le Gallienne (1866-1947)%@NL@%
  16994.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  16995.                                                             of Oscar Wilde%@NL@%
  16996. %@AS@%                                                                  Epigrams%@AE@%%@NL@%
  16997. %@NL@%
  16998. %@NL@%
  16999. %@2@%An epigram is only a wisecrack that's played at Carnegie Hall.%@NL@%
  17000. %@CR:EPIGRALevant    @%%@NL@%
  17001.                                                   Oscar Levant (1906-1972)%@NL@%
  17002.                                                 American pianist, composer%@NL@%
  17003. %@AS@%                                                                  Epigrams%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17004. %@NL@%
  17005. %@NL@%
  17006. %@2@%Is this true or only clever?%@NL@%
  17007. %@CR:EPIGRABirrell   @%%@NL@%
  17008.                                              Augustine Birrell (1850-1933)%@NL@%
  17009.                                                 English Liberal politician%@NL@%
  17010. %@AS@%                                                                  Epigrams%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17011. %@NL@%
  17012. %@NL@%
  17013. %@2@%Epigrams succeed where epics fail.%@NL@%
  17014. %@CR:EPIGRABirrell   @%%@NL@%
  17015.                                                            Persian proverb%@NL@%
  17016. %@AS@%                                                                  Epigrams%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17017. %@NL@%
  17018. %@NL@%
  17019. %@NL@%
  17020. %@1@%%@AS@%Epitaphs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17021. %@CR:EPITAPHS        @%%@NL@%
  17022. %@2@%%@QR:Epitaphs@%In lapidary inscriptions a man is not upon oath.%@NL@%
  17023. %@CR:EPITAPJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  17024.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  17025.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  17026. %@AS@%                                                                  Epitaphs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17027. %@NL@%
  17028. %@NL@%
  17029. %@2@%Epitaph: A belated advertisement for a line of goods that has%@EH@%
  17030. been discontinued.%@NL@%
  17031. %@CR:EPITAPCobb      @%%@NL@%
  17032.                                                  Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944)%@NL@%
  17033.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  17034. %@AS@%                                                                  Epitaphs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17035. %@NL@%
  17036. %@NL@%
  17037. %@2@%Reading the epitaphs, our only salvation lies in resurrecting%@EH@%
  17038. the dead and burying the living.%@NL@%
  17039. %@CR:EPITAPEldridge  @%%@NL@%
  17040.                                                    Paul Eldridge (b. 1888)%@NL@%
  17041.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  17042. %@AS@%                                                                  Epitaphs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17043. %@NL@%
  17044. %@NL@%
  17045.      %@2@%Posterity will ne'er survey%@NL@%
  17046.      A nobler grave than this:%@NL@%
  17047.      Here lie the bones of Castlereagh:%@NL@%
  17048.      Stop, traveller, and piss.%@NL@%
  17049. %@CR:EPITAPByron2    @%%@NL@%
  17050.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  17051.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  17052. %@AS@%                                                                  Epitaphs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17053. %@NL@%
  17054. %@NL@%
  17055. %@NL@%
  17056. %@1@%%@AS@%Equality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17057. %@CR:EQUALITY        @%%@NL@%
  17058. %@2@%See:%@QR:Equality@%%@NL@%
  17059.      Exercise: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:           d700a@%%@NL@%
  17060.      Gambling: %@AB@%Foote%@AE@%%@BO:          103322@%%@NL@%
  17061.      The Law: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          16c322@%%@NL@%
  17062. %@NL@%
  17063. %@2@%The social process requires the standardization of man, and%@EH@%
  17064. this standardization is called equality.%@NL@%
  17065. %@CR:EQUALIFromm     @%%@NL@%
  17066.                                                    Erich Fromm (1900-1980)%@NL@%
  17067.                                                      American psychologist%@NL@%
  17068. %@AS@%                                                                  Equality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17069. %@NL@%
  17070. %@NL@%
  17071. %@2@%The defect of equality is that we only desire it with our superiors.%@NL@%
  17072. %@CR:EQUALIBecque    @%%@NL@%
  17073.                                                   Henri Becque (1837-1899)%@NL@%
  17074.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  17075. %@AS@%                                                                  Equality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17076. %@NL@%
  17077. %@NL@%
  17078. %@2@%Subordination tends greatly to human happiness. Were we all%@EH@%
  17079. upon an equality, we should have no other enjoyment than mere animal
  17080. pleasure.%@NL@%
  17081. %@CR:EQUALIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  17082.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  17083.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  17084. %@AS@%                                                                  Equality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17085. %@NL@%
  17086. %@NL@%
  17087. %@2@%There is nothing that so strikes men with fear as the saying%@EH@%
  17088. that they are all the sons of God.%@NL@%
  17089. %@CR:EQUALIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  17090.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  17091.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  17092. %@AS@%                                                                  Equality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17093. %@NL@%
  17094. %@NL@%
  17095. %@2@%If there is a human being who is freer than I, then I shall%@EH@%
  17096. necessarily become his slave. If I am freer than another, then
  17097. he will become my slave. Therefore, equality is the absolutely
  17098. necessary condition for freedom  . . .  freedom outside of equality
  17099. can create only privilege.%@NL@%
  17100. %@CR:EQUALIBakunin   @%%@NL@%
  17101.                                                Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)%@NL@%
  17102.                                                 Russian political theorist%@NL@%
  17103. %@AS@%                                                                  Equality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17104. %@NL@%
  17105. %@NL@%
  17106. %@NL@%
  17107. %@1@%%@AS@%Eternity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17108. %@CR:ETERNITY        @%%@NL@%
  17109. %@2@%See:%@QR:Eternity@%%@NL@%
  17110.      Immortality: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1483e8@%%@NL@%
  17111. %@NL@%
  17112. %@2@%Our theories of the eternal are as valuable as are those which%@EH@%
  17113. a chick which has not broken its way through its shell might form
  17114. of the outside world.%@NL@%
  17115. %@CR:ETERNIGautamathe@%%@NL@%
  17116.                                      Gautama the Buddha (c. 560-c. 480 BC)%@NL@%
  17117. %@AS@%                                                                  Eternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17118. %@NL@%
  17119. %@NL@%
  17120. %@2@%Eternity is a terrible thought. I mean, where's it going to%@EH@%
  17121. end?%@NL@%
  17122. %@CR:ETERNIStoppard  @%%@NL@%
  17123.                                                     Tom Stoppard (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  17124.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  17125. %@AS@%                                                                  Eternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17126. %@NL@%
  17127. %@NL@%
  17128. %@NL@%
  17129. %@1@%%@AS@%Europe%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17130. %@CR:EUROPE          @%%@NL@%
  17131. %@2@%See:%@QR:Europe@%%@NL@%
  17132.      Race: %@AB@%Fisher%@AE@%%@BO:          21807f@%%@NL@%
  17133. %@NL@%
  17134. %@2@%Can we never extract the tapeworm of Europe from the brain%@EH@%
  17135. of our countrymen?%@NL@%
  17136. %@CR:EUROPEEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  17137.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  17138.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  17139. %@AS@%                                                                    Europe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17140. %@NL@%
  17141. %@NL@%
  17142. %@2@%There are a whole group of people in Europe who are constantly%@EH@%
  17143. anti-American, who have never forgiven us for the Marshall Plan.%@NL@%
  17144. %@CR:EUROPEWalters2  @%%@NL@%
  17145.                                            General VernonWalters (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  17146.                                              American ambassador to the UN%@NL@%
  17147. %@AS@%                                                                    Europe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17148. %@NL@%
  17149. %@NL@%
  17150. %@2@%Europe has what we do not have yet, a sense of the mysterious%@EH@%
  17151. and inexorable limits of life, a sense, in a word, of tragedy.
  17152. And we have what they sorely need: a sense of life's possibilities.%@NL@%
  17153. %@CR:EUROPEBaldwin   @%%@NL@%
  17154.                                                  James Baldwin (1924-1987)%@NL@%
  17155.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  17156. %@AS@%                                                                    Europe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17157. %@NL@%
  17158. %@NL@%
  17159. %@2@%Their Europeanism is nothing but imperialism with an inferiority%@EH@%
  17160. complex.%@NL@%
  17161. %@CR:EUROPEHealey    @%%@NL@%
  17162.                                                     Denis Healey (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  17163.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  17164.                                                  of the Conservative Party%@NL@%
  17165. %@AS@%                                                                    Europe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17166. %@NL@%
  17167. %@NL@%
  17168. %@NL@%
  17169. %@1@%%@AS@%Euthanasia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17170. %@CR:EUTHANASIA      @%%@NL@%
  17171. %@2@%%@QR:Euthanasia@%O, let him pass! He hates him%@NL@%
  17172.      That would upon the rack of this tough world%@NL@%
  17173.      Stretch him out longer.%@NL@%
  17174. %@CR:EUTHANShakespear@%%@NL@%
  17175.                                                            Kent, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17176.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  17177.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17178. %@AS@%                                                                Euthanasia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17179. %@NL@%
  17180. %@NL@%
  17181. %@NL@%
  17182. %@1@%%@AS@%Evil%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17183. %@CR:EVIL            @%%@NL@%
  17184. %@2@%See:%@QR:Evil@%%@NL@%
  17185.      Temptation: %@AB@%Hardy%@AE@%%@BO:          2856bb@%%@NL@%
  17186.      %@AB@%Wickedness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b0c5e@%%@NL@%
  17187.      Women: %@AB@%Chrysostom%@AE@%%@BO:          2bb219@%; %@AB@%Tertullian%@AE@%%@BO:          2bbcf9@%%@NL@%
  17188. %@NL@%
  17189. %@2@%All men are evil and will declare themselves to be so when%@EH@%
  17190. occasion is offered.%@NL@%
  17191. %@CR:EVIL  Raleigh1  @%%@NL@%
  17192.                                             Sir Walter Raleigh (1552-1618)%@NL@%
  17193.                                           English man of letters, explorer%@NL@%
  17194. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17195. %@NL@%
  17196. %@NL@%
  17197. %@2@%It is a sin to believe evil of others, but it is seldom a mistake.%@NL@%
  17198. %@CR:EVIL  Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  17199.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  17200.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  17201. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17202. %@NL@%
  17203. %@NL@%
  17204. %@2@%The belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary;%@EH@%
  17205. men alone are quite capable of every wickedness.%@NL@%
  17206. %@CR:EVIL  Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  17207.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  17208.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  17209. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17210. %@NL@%
  17211. %@NL@%
  17212. %@2@%So far as we are human, what we do must be either evil or good:%@EH@%
  17213. so far as we do evil or good, we are human: and it is better, in
  17214. a paradoxical way, to do evil than to do nothing: at least we
  17215. exist.%@NL@%
  17216. %@CR:EVIL  Eliot2    @%%@NL@%
  17217.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  17218.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  17219. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17220. %@NL@%
  17221. %@NL@%
  17222. %@2@%When choosing between two evils, I always like to try the one%@EH@%
  17223. I've never tried before.%@NL@%
  17224. %@CR:EVIL  West1     @%%@NL@%
  17225.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  17226.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  17227. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17228. %@NL@%
  17229. %@NL@%
  17230.      %@2@%But evil is wrought by want of Thought%@NL@%
  17231.      As well as want of Heart!%@NL@%
  17232. %@CR:EVIL  Hood      @%%@NL@%
  17233.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  17234.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  17235. %@AS@%                                                                      Evil%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17236. %@NL@%
  17237. %@NL@%
  17238. %@NL@%
  17239. %@1@%%@AS@%Evolution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17240. %@CR:EVOLUTION       @%%@NL@%
  17241. %@2@%See:%@QR:Evolution@%%@NL@%
  17242.      Doubt: %@AB@%Strindberg%@AE@%%@BO:           b4780@%%@NL@%
  17243.      Heresy: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          126c46@%%@NL@%
  17244.      Religion: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          223cc6@%%@NL@%
  17245. %@NL@%
  17246.      %@2@%While Darwinian Man, though well-behaved.%@NL@%
  17247.      At best is only a monkey shaved!%@NL@%
  17248. %@CR:EVOLUTGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  17249.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  17250.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  17251. %@AS@%                                                                 Evolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17252. %@NL@%
  17253. %@NL@%
  17254. %@2@%I repudiate with indignation and abhorrence those new-fangled%@EH@%
  17255. theories.%@NL@%
  17256. %@CR:EVOLUTDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  17257.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  17258.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  17259.                                                               of Darwinism%@NL@%
  17260. %@AS@%                                                                 Evolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17261. %@NL@%
  17262. %@NL@%
  17263. %@2@%The question is this - Is man an ape or an angel? My Lord,%@EH@%
  17264. I am on the side of the angels.%@NL@%
  17265. %@CR:EVOLUTDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  17266.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  17267.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  17268. %@AS@%                                                                 Evolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17269. %@NL@%
  17270. %@NL@%
  17271. %@NL@%
  17272. %@1@%%@AS@%Examinations%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17273. %@CR:EXAMINATIONS    @%%@NL@%
  17274. %@2@%%@QR:Examinations@%Examinations are formidable even to the best prepared, for%@EH@%
  17275. the greatest fool may ask more than the wisest man can answer.%@NL@%
  17276. %@CR:EXAMINColton    @%%@NL@%
  17277.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  17278.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  17279. %@AS@%                                                              Examinations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17280. %@NL@%
  17281. %@NL@%
  17282. %@2@%Examinations, sir, are pure humbug from beginning to end. If%@EH@%
  17283. a man is a gentleman he knows quite enough, and if he is not a
  17284. gentleman whatever he knows is bad for him.%@NL@%
  17285. %@CR:EXAMINWilde     @%%@NL@%
  17286.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  17287.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  17288. %@AS@%                                                              Examinations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17289. %@NL@%
  17290. %@NL@%
  17291. %@2@%Do not on any account attempt to write on both sides of the%@EH@%
  17292. paper at once.%@NL@%
  17293. %@CR:EXAMINSellar    @%%@NL@%
  17294.                                                   W. C. Sellar (1898-1951)%@NL@%
  17295.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  17296.                                                  R. J. Yeatman (1897-1968)%@NL@%
  17297.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  17298. %@AS@%                                                              Examinations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17299. %@NL@%
  17300. %@NL@%
  17301. %@2@%I was thrown out of college for cheating on the metaphysics%@EH@%
  17302. exam: I looked into the soul of another boy.%@NL@%
  17303. %@CR:EXAMINAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  17304.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  17305.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  17306. %@AS@%                                                              Examinations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17307. %@NL@%
  17308. %@NL@%
  17309. %@NL@%
  17310. %@1@%%@AS@%Exasperation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17311. %@CR:EXASPERATION    @%%@NL@%
  17312. %@2@%%@QR:Exasperation@%Lord Ronald said nothing; he flung himself from the room, flung%@EH@%
  17313. himself upon his horse and rode madly off in all directions.%@NL@%
  17314. %@CR:EXASPELeacock   @%%@NL@%
  17315.                                                Stephen Leacock (1869-1944)%@NL@%
  17316.                                               Canadian humorist, economist%@NL@%
  17317. %@AS@%                                                              Exasperation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17318. %@NL@%
  17319. %@NL@%
  17320. %@2@%Your damned nonsense can I stand twice or once, but sometimes%@EH@%
  17321. always, by God, never.%@NL@%
  17322. %@CR:EXASPERichter1  @%%@NL@%
  17323.                                                   Hans Richter (1843-1916)%@NL@%
  17324.                                                           German conductor%@NL@%
  17325.                         to the second flute in the Covent Garden orchestra%@NL@%
  17326. %@AS@%                                                              Exasperation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17327. %@NL@%
  17328. %@NL@%
  17329. %@2@%Inanimate objects are classified scientifically into three%@EH@%
  17330. major categories - those that don't work, those that break down
  17331. and those that get lost.%@NL@%
  17332. %@CR:EXASPEBaker2    @%%@NL@%
  17333.                                                    Russell Baker (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  17334.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  17335. %@AS@%                                                              Exasperation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17336. %@NL@%
  17337. %@NL@%
  17338. %@2@%Sir, you have tasted two whole worms; you have hissed all my%@EH@%
  17339. mystery lectures and have been caught fighting a liar in the quad;
  17340. you will leave by the next town drain.%@NL@%
  17341. %@CR:EXASPESpooner   @%%@NL@%
  17342.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  17343.                                             Rev. W. A. Spooner (1844-1930)%@NL@%
  17344.                                              Warden of New College, Oxford%@NL@%
  17345. %@AS@%                                                              Exasperation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17346. %@NL@%
  17347. %@NL@%
  17348. %@NL@%
  17349. %@1@%%@AS@%Excellence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17350. %@CR:EXCELLENCE      @%%@NL@%
  17351. %@2@%%@QR:Excellence@%%@AI@%Le mieux est l'ennemi du bien.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17352. The best is the enemy of the good.%@NL@%
  17353. %@CR:EXCELLVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  17354.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  17355.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  17356. %@AS@%                                                                Excellence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17357. %@NL@%
  17358. %@NL@%
  17359. %@2@%Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of%@EH@%
  17360. a good example.%@NL@%
  17361. %@CR:EXCELLTwain     @%%@NL@%
  17362.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  17363.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  17364. %@AS@%                                                                Excellence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17365. %@NL@%
  17366. %@NL@%
  17367. %@2@%One shining quality lends a lustre to another, or hides some%@EH@%
  17368. glaring defect.%@NL@%
  17369. %@CR:EXCELLHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  17370.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  17371.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  17372. %@AS@%                                                                Excellence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17373. %@NL@%
  17374. %@NL@%
  17375. %@NL@%
  17376. %@1@%%@AS@%Excess%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17377. %@CR:EXCESS          @%%@NL@%
  17378. %@2@%%@QR:Excess@%Moderation is a fatal thing. Nothing succeeds like excess.%@NL@%
  17379. %@CR:EXCESSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  17380.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  17381.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  17382. %@AS@%                                                                    Excess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17383. %@NL@%
  17384. %@NL@%
  17385. %@2@%The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.%@NL@%
  17386. %@CR:EXCESSBlake     @%%@NL@%
  17387.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  17388.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  17389. %@AS@%                                                                    Excess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17390. %@NL@%
  17391. %@NL@%
  17392. %@2@%Man's chief difference from the brutes lies in the exuberant%@EH@%
  17393. excess of his subjective propensities. Prune his extravagance,
  17394. sober him, and you undo him.%@NL@%
  17395. %@CR:EXCESSJames4    @%%@NL@%
  17396.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  17397.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  17398. %@AS@%                                                                    Excess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17399. %@NL@%
  17400. %@NL@%
  17401. %@2@%Macaulay is well for a while, but one wouldn't live under Niagara.%@NL@%
  17402. %@CR:EXCESSCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  17403.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  17404.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  17405. %@AS@%                                                                    Excess%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17406. %@NL@%
  17407. %@NL@%
  17408. %@NL@%
  17409. %@1@%%@AS@%Excuses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17410. %@CR:EXCUSES         @%%@NL@%
  17411. %@2@%See:%@QR:Excuses@%%@NL@%
  17412.      Lying: %@AB@%Addison%@AE@%%@BO:          18c205@%%@NL@%
  17413. %@NL@%
  17414. %@2@%A person who is going to commit an inhuman act invariably excuses%@EH@%
  17415. himself by saying, "I'm only human, after all."%@NL@%
  17416. %@CR:EXCUSEHarris    @%%@NL@%
  17417.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  17418.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  17419. %@AS@%                                                                   Excuses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17420. %@NL@%
  17421. %@NL@%
  17422.      %@2@%And oftentimes excusing of a fault%@NL@%
  17423.      Doth make the fault the worse by the excuse.%@NL@%
  17424. %@CR:EXCUSEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  17425.                                                        Pembroke, %@AI@%King John%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17426.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  17427.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17428. %@AS@%                                                                   Excuses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17429. %@NL@%
  17430. %@NL@%
  17431. %@2@%Two wrongs don't make a right, but they make a good excuse.%@NL@%
  17432. %@CR:EXCUSESzasz     @%%@NL@%
  17433.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  17434.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  17435. %@AS@%                                                                   Excuses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17436. %@NL@%
  17437. %@NL@%
  17438. %@2@%There is hardly any man so strict as not to vary a little from%@EH@%
  17439. truth when he is to make an excuse.%@NL@%
  17440. %@CR:EXCUSESavile    @%%@NL@%
  17441.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  17442.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  17443. %@AS@%                                                                   Excuses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17444. %@NL@%
  17445. %@NL@%
  17446. %@NL@%
  17447. %@1@%%@AS@%Exercise%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17448. %@CR:EXERCISE        @%%@NL@%
  17449. %@2@%See:%@QR:Exercise@%%@NL@%
  17450.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           43b0d@%%@NL@%
  17451.      %@AB@%Sport%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          269118@%%@NL@%
  17452. %@NL@%
  17453. %@2@%A few hours of mountain climbing turn a rascal and a saint%@EH@%
  17454. into two pretty similar creatures. Fatigue is the shortest way
  17455. to Equality and Fraternity - and, in the end, Liberty will surrender
  17456. to Sleep.%@NL@%
  17457. %@CR:EXERCINietzsche @%%@NL@%
  17458.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  17459.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  17460. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17461. %@NL@%
  17462. %@NL@%
  17463. %@2@%That's not exercise, it's flagellation.%@NL@%
  17464. %@CR:EXERCICoward    @%%@NL@%
  17465.                                                    Noel Coward (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  17466.                                        English playwright, actor, composer%@NL@%
  17467.                                                                  of squash%@NL@%
  17468. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17469. %@NL@%
  17470. %@NL@%
  17471. %@2@%Exercise is bunk. If you are healthy you don't need it, if%@EH@%
  17472. you are sick you shouldn't take it.%@NL@%
  17473. %@CR:EXERCIFord2     @%%@NL@%
  17474.                                                     Henry Ford (1863-1947)%@NL@%
  17475.                                                     American industrialist%@NL@%
  17476. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17477. %@NL@%
  17478. %@NL@%
  17479. %@2@%The only athletic sport I ever mastered was backgammon.%@NL@%
  17480. %@CR:EXERCIJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  17481.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  17482.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  17483. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17484. %@NL@%
  17485. %@NL@%
  17486. %@2@%Whenever I feel like exercise I lie down until the feeling%@EH@%
  17487. passes.%@NL@%
  17488. %@CR:EXERCIHutchins  @%%@NL@%
  17489.                                             Robert M. Hutchins (1899-1977)%@NL@%
  17490.                                                  American educator, writer%@NL@%
  17491. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17492. %@NL@%
  17493. %@NL@%
  17494. %@2@%I like long walks, especially when they are taken by people%@EH@%
  17495. who annoy me.%@NL@%
  17496. %@CR:EXERCIAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  17497.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  17498.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  17499. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17500. %@NL@%
  17501. %@NL@%
  17502. %@2@%Another good reducing exercise consists in placing both hands%@EH@%
  17503. against the table edge and pushing back.%@NL@%
  17504. %@CR:EXERCIQuillen   @%%@NL@%
  17505.                                                 Robert Quillen (1877-1948)%@NL@%
  17506.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  17507. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17508. %@NL@%
  17509. %@NL@%
  17510. %@2@%I get my exercise acting as a pallbearer to my friends who%@EH@%
  17511. exercise.%@NL@%
  17512. %@CR:EXERCIDepew     @%%@NL@%
  17513.                                                 Chauncey Depew (1834-1928)%@NL@%
  17514.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  17515. %@AS@%                                                                  Exercise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17516. %@NL@%
  17517. %@NL@%
  17518. %@NL@%
  17519. %@1@%%@AS@%Exertion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17520. %@CR:EXERTION        @%%@NL@%
  17521. %@2@%%@QR:Exertion@%There's no taking trout with dry breeches.%@NL@%
  17522. %@CR:EXERTICervantes @%%@NL@%
  17523.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  17524.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17525. %@AS@%                                                                  Exertion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17526. %@NL@%
  17527. %@NL@%
  17528. %@2@%I wish to preach, not the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the%@EH@%
  17529. doctrine of the strenuous life.%@NL@%
  17530. %@CR:EXERTIRoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  17531.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  17532.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  17533. %@AS@%                                                                  Exertion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17534. %@NL@%
  17535. %@NL@%
  17536. %@NL@%
  17537. %@1@%%@AS@%Existence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17538. %@CR:EXISTENCE       @%%@NL@%
  17539. %@2@%See:%@QR:Existence@%%@NL@%
  17540.      Royalty: %@AB@%Charles%@AE@%%@BO:          2319aa@%%@NL@%
  17541. %@NL@%
  17542. %@2@%A man said to the universe: "Sir, I exist!" "However,"%@EH@%
  17543. replied the universe, "that fact has not created in me a sense
  17544. of obligation."%@NL@%
  17545. %@CR:EXISTECrane     @%%@NL@%
  17546.                                                  Stephen Crane (1871-1900)%@NL@%
  17547.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  17548. %@AS@%                                                                 Existence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17549. %@NL@%
  17550. %@NL@%
  17551. %@2@%Man is the only animal for whom his own existence is a problem%@EH@%
  17552. which he has to solve.%@NL@%
  17553. %@CR:EXISTEFromm     @%%@NL@%
  17554.                                                    Erich Fromm (1900-1980)%@NL@%
  17555.                                                      American psychologist%@NL@%
  17556. %@AS@%                                                                 Existence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17557. %@NL@%
  17558. %@NL@%
  17559. %@2@%Common sense tells us that our existence is but a brief crack%@EH@%
  17560. of light between two eternities of darkness.%@NL@%
  17561. %@CR:EXISTENabokov   @%%@NL@%
  17562.                                               Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977)%@NL@%
  17563.                                                  Russian-American novelist%@NL@%
  17564. %@AS@%                                                                 Existence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17565. %@NL@%
  17566. %@NL@%
  17567. %@2@%The individual who has to justify his existence by his own%@EH@%
  17568. efforts is in eternal bondage to himself.%@NL@%
  17569. %@CR:EXISTEHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  17570.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  17571.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  17572. %@AS@%                                                                 Existence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17573. %@NL@%
  17574. %@NL@%
  17575. %@2@%Being is the great explainer.%@NL@%
  17576. %@CR:EXISTEThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  17577.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  17578.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  17579. %@AS@%                                                                 Existence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17580. %@NL@%
  17581. %@NL@%
  17582. %@NL@%
  17583. %@1@%%@AS@%Experience%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17584. %@CR:EXPERIENCE      @%%@NL@%
  17585. %@2@%See:%@QR:Experience@%%@NL@%
  17586.      Advice: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:            b3d9@%%@NL@%
  17587.      Age: %@AB@%Estienne%@AE@%%@BO:            d55a@%; %@AB@%Grattan%@AE@%%@BO:            d268@%%@NL@%
  17588.      Comedy: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           74647@%%@NL@%
  17589.      Excess: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:           d626d@%%@NL@%
  17590.      Training: %@AB@%Bishop of Carthage%@AE@%%@BO:          290eb4@%%@NL@%
  17591.      Wisdom: %@AB@%Ascham%@AE@%%@BO:          2b6a43@%%@NL@%
  17592. %@NL@%
  17593. %@2@%Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes.%@NL@%
  17594. %@CR:EXPERIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  17595.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  17596.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  17597. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17598. %@NL@%
  17599. %@NL@%
  17600. %@2@%Experience. The wisdom that enables us to recognize in an undesirable%@EH@%
  17601. old acquaintance the folly that we have already embraced.%@NL@%
  17602. %@CR:EXPERIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  17603.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  17604.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  17605. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17606. %@NL@%
  17607. %@NL@%
  17608. %@2@%We learn from experience that men never learn anything from%@EH@%
  17609. experience.%@NL@%
  17610. %@CR:EXPERIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  17611.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  17612.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  17613. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17614. %@NL@%
  17615. %@NL@%
  17616. %@2@%Experience comprises illusions lost, rather than wisdom gained.%@NL@%
  17617. %@CR:EXPERIRoux      @%%@NL@%
  17618.                                                    Joseph Roux (1834-1886)%@NL@%
  17619.                                                      French priest, writer%@NL@%
  17620. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17621. %@NL@%
  17622. %@NL@%
  17623. %@2@%If a man deceives me once, shame on him; if he deceives me%@EH@%
  17624. twice, shame on me.%@NL@%
  17625. %@CR:EXPERIRoux      @%%@NL@%
  17626.                                                            Italian proverb%@NL@%
  17627. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17628. %@NL@%
  17629. %@NL@%
  17630. %@2@%Experience is a comb which nature gives to men when they are%@EH@%
  17631. bald.%@NL@%
  17632. %@CR:EXPERIRoux      @%%@NL@%
  17633.                                                            Eastern proverb%@NL@%
  17634. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17635. %@NL@%
  17636. %@NL@%
  17637. %@2@%What a man knows at fifty which he didn't know at twenty is,%@EH@%
  17638. for the most part, incommunicable.%@NL@%
  17639. %@CR:EXPERIStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  17640.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  17641.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  17642. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17643. %@NL@%
  17644. %@NL@%
  17645. %@2@%Experience is a good teacher, but her fees are very high.%@NL@%
  17646. %@CR:EXPERIInge      @%%@NL@%
  17647.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  17648.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  17649. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17650. %@NL@%
  17651. %@NL@%
  17652.      %@2@%And the wild regrets, and the bloody sweats,%@NL@%
  17653.      None knew so well as I:%@NL@%
  17654.      For he who lives more lives than one%@NL@%
  17655.      More deaths than one must die.%@NL@%
  17656. %@CR:EXPERIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  17657.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  17658.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  17659. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17660. %@NL@%
  17661. %@NL@%
  17662.      %@2@%Men may rise on stepping-stones%@NL@%
  17663.      Of their dead selves to higher things.%@NL@%
  17664. %@CR:EXPERITennyson  @%%@NL@%
  17665.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  17666.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  17667. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17668. %@NL@%
  17669. %@NL@%
  17670. %@2@%Experience is not what happens to a man. It is what a man does%@EH@%
  17671. with what happens to him.%@NL@%
  17672. %@CR:EXPERIHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  17673.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  17674.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  17675. %@AS@%                                                                Experience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17676. %@NL@%
  17677. %@NL@%
  17678. %@NL@%
  17679. %@1@%%@AS@%Experts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17680. %@CR:EXPERTS         @%%@NL@%
  17681. %@2@%See:%@QR:Experts@%%@NL@%
  17682.      Juries: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          163e32@%; %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          163b17@%%@NL@%
  17683. %@NL@%
  17684. %@2@%An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less.%@NL@%
  17685. %@CR:EXPERTButler2   @%%@NL@%
  17686.                                         Nicholas Murray Butler (1862-1948)%@NL@%
  17687.                                           President of Columbia University%@NL@%
  17688. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17689. %@NL@%
  17690. %@NL@%
  17691. %@2@%Never forget that if you leave your law to judges and your%@EH@%
  17692. religion to bishops you will presently find yourself without either
  17693. law or religion.%@NL@%
  17694. %@CR:EXPERTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  17695.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  17696.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  17697. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17698. %@NL@%
  17699. %@NL@%
  17700. %@2@%Everyone should learn to do one thing supremely well because%@EH@%
  17701. he likes it, and one thing supremely well because he detests it.%@NL@%
  17702. %@CR:EXPERTYoung2    @%%@NL@%
  17703.                                                   B. W. M. Young (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  17704.                                                      British administrator%@NL@%
  17705. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17706. %@NL@%
  17707. %@NL@%
  17708. %@2@%This world is run by people who know how to do things. They%@EH@%
  17709. know how things work. They are %@AI@%equipped.%@AE@% Up there, there's a
  17710. layer of people who run everything. But we - we're just peasants.
  17711. We don't understand what's going on, and we can't do anything.%@NL@%
  17712. %@CR:EXPERTLessing   @%%@NL@%
  17713.                                                    Doris Lessing (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  17714.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  17715. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17716. %@NL@%
  17717. %@NL@%
  17718. %@2@%How could I have been so far off base? All my life I've known%@EH@%
  17719. better than to depend on the experts. How could I have been so
  17720. stupid, to let them go ahead?%@NL@%
  17721. %@CR:EXPERTKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  17722.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  17723.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  17724.                                               after the Bay of Pigs fiasco%@NL@%
  17725. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17726. %@NL@%
  17727. %@NL@%
  17728. %@2@%An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can%@EH@%
  17729. be made in a very narrow field.%@NL@%
  17730. %@CR:EXPERTBohr      @%%@NL@%
  17731.                                                     Niels Bohr (1885-1962)%@NL@%
  17732.                                                           Danish physicist%@NL@%
  17733. %@AS@%                                                                   Experts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17734. %@NL@%
  17735. %@NL@%
  17736. %@NL@%
  17737. %@1@%%@AS@%Extravagance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17738. %@CR:EXTRAVAGANCE    @%%@NL@%
  17739. %@2@%%@QR:Extravagance@%I am dying beyond my means.%@NL@%
  17740. %@CR:EXTRAVWilde     @%%@NL@%
  17741.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  17742.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  17743. %@AS@%                                                              Extravagance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17744. %@NL@%
  17745. %@NL@%
  17746. %@2@%I'm living so far beyond my income that we may almost be said%@EH@%
  17747. to be living apart.%@NL@%
  17748. %@CR:EXTRAVMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  17749.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  17750.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  17751. %@AS@%                                                              Extravagance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17752. %@NL@%
  17753. %@NL@%
  17754.      %@2@%My candle burns at both ends;%@NL@%
  17755.      It will not last the night;%@NL@%
  17756.      But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends -%@NL@%
  17757.      It gives a lovely light!%@NL@%
  17758. %@CR:EXTRAVMillay    @%%@NL@%
  17759.                                        Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950)%@NL@%
  17760.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  17761. %@AS@%                                                              Extravagance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17762. %@NL@%
  17763. %@NL@%
  17764. %@2@%Let us all be happy, and live within our means, even if we%@EH@%
  17765. have to borrow the money to do it with.%@NL@%
  17766. %@CR:EXTRAVWard1     @%%@NL@%
  17767.                                                   Artemus Ward (1834-1867)%@NL@%
  17768.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  17769. %@AS@%                                                              Extravagance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17770. %@NL@%
  17771. %@NL@%
  17772. %@NL@%
  17773. %@1@%%@AS@%Extremism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17774. %@CR:EXTREMISM       @%%@NL@%
  17775. %@2@%See:%@QR:Extremism@%%@NL@%
  17776.      Drink: Abstinence: %@AB@%Saint Augustine%@AE@%%@BO:           ba679@%%@NL@%
  17777. %@NL@%
  17778.      %@2@%So over violent or over civil%@NL@%
  17779.      That every man with him was God or Devil.%@NL@%
  17780. %@CR:EXTREMDryden    @%%@NL@%
  17781.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  17782.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  17783. %@AS@%                                                                 Extremism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17784. %@NL@%
  17785. %@NL@%
  17786. %@2@%I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty%@EH@%
  17787. is no vice. And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit
  17788. of justice is no virtue.%@NL@%
  17789. %@CR:EXTREMGoldwater @%%@NL@%
  17790.                                                  Barry Goldwater (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  17791.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  17792. %@AS@%                                                                 Extremism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17793. %@NL@%
  17794. %@NL@%
  17795. %@2@%What is objectionable, what is dangerous about extremists is%@EH@%
  17796. not that they are extreme, but that they are intolerant. The evil
  17797. is not what they say about their cause, but what they say about
  17798. their opponents.%@NL@%
  17799. %@CR:EXTREMKennedy2  @%%@NL@%
  17800.                                                 Robert Kennedy (1925-1968)%@NL@%
  17801.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  17802. %@AS@%                                                                 Extremism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17803. %@NL@%
  17804. %@NL@%
  17805. %@NL@%
  17806. %@1@%%@AS@%Faces%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17807. %@CR:FACES           @%%@NL@%
  17808. %@2@%See:%@QR:Faces@%%@NL@%
  17809.      Appearances: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           23b58@%%@NL@%
  17810.      %@AB@%Beards%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3aa96@%%@NL@%
  17811.      Debauchery: %@AB@%Masefield%@AE@%%@BO:           9ee32@%%@NL@%
  17812.      %@AB@%Noses%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bec66@%%@NL@%
  17813. %@NL@%
  17814. %@2@%I have always considered my face a convenience rather than%@EH@%
  17815. an ornament.%@NL@%
  17816. %@CR:FACES Holmes1   @%%@NL@%
  17817.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  17818.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  17819. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17820. %@NL@%
  17821. %@NL@%
  17822. %@2@%The tartness of his face sours ripe grapes.%@NL@%
  17823. %@CR:FACES Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  17824.                                                       Menenius, %@AI@%Coriolanus%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17825.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  17826.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17827. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17828. %@NL@%
  17829. %@NL@%
  17830. %@2@%He had a face like a benediction.%@NL@%
  17831. %@CR:FACES Cervantes @%%@NL@%
  17832.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  17833.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17834. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17835. %@NL@%
  17836. %@NL@%
  17837. %@2@%My face looks like a wedding cake that has been left out in%@EH@%
  17838. the rain.%@NL@%
  17839. %@CR:FACES Auden     @%%@NL@%
  17840.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  17841.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  17842. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17843. %@NL@%
  17844. %@NL@%
  17845. %@2@%I have eyes like those of a dead pig.%@NL@%
  17846. %@CR:FACES Brando    @%%@NL@%
  17847.                                                    Marlon Brando (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  17848.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  17849. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17850. %@NL@%
  17851. %@NL@%
  17852. %@2@%I guess I look like a rock quarry that someone has dynamited.%@NL@%
  17853. %@CR:FACES Bronson   @%%@NL@%
  17854.                                                  Charles Bronson (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  17855.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  17856. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17857. %@NL@%
  17858. %@NL@%
  17859.      %@2@%As a beauty I'm not a great star.%@NL@%
  17860.      Others are handsomer far;%@NL@%
  17861.      But my face - I don't mind it%@NL@%
  17862.      Because I'm behind it;%@NL@%
  17863.      It's the folks out in front that I jar.%@NL@%
  17864. %@CR:FACES Euwer     @%%@NL@%
  17865.                                                      A. H. Euwer (b. 1877)%@NL@%
  17866.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  17867. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17868. %@NL@%
  17869. %@NL@%
  17870. %@2@%Once seen, that antique-mapped face is never forgotten - a%@EH@%
  17871. bloodhound with a head cold, a man who is simultaneously biting
  17872. on a bad lobster and caught by the neck in lift-doors, a mad scientist's
  17873. amalgam of Wallace Beery and Yogi Bear.%@NL@%
  17874. %@CR:FACES Brien     @%%@NL@%
  17875.                                                       Alan Brien (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  17876.                                               British novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  17877.                                                          of Walter Matthau%@NL@%
  17878. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17879. %@NL@%
  17880. %@NL@%
  17881. %@2@%At fifty everyone has the face he deserves.%@NL@%
  17882. %@CR:FACES Orwell    @%%@NL@%
  17883.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  17884.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  17885.                                                 last entry in his notebook%@NL@%
  17886. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17887. %@NL@%
  17888. %@NL@%
  17889.      %@2@%Was this the face that launch'd a thousand ships,%@NL@%
  17890.      And burnt the topless towers of%@NL@%
  17891.      Ilium?%@NL@%
  17892. %@CR:FACES Marlowe   @%%@NL@%
  17893.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  17894.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  17895. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17896. %@NL@%
  17897. %@NL@%
  17898.      %@2@%"What is your fortune, my pretty maid?"%@NL@%
  17899.      "My face is my fortune, Sir," she said.%@NL@%
  17900. %@CR:FACES Marlowe   @%%@NL@%
  17901.                                                              nursery rhyme%@NL@%
  17902. %@AS@%                                                                     Faces%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17903. %@NL@%
  17904. %@NL@%
  17905. %@NL@%
  17906. %@1@%%@AS@%Facts%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17907. %@CR:FACTS           @%%@NL@%
  17908. %@2@%See:%@QR:Facts@%%@NL@%
  17909.      Newspapers: %@AB@%Scott%@AE@%%@BO:          1bd3ce@%%@NL@%
  17910.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          209bcf@%%@NL@%
  17911.      Religion: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          2232d0@%%@NL@%
  17912. %@NL@%
  17913. %@2@%Facts are stubborn things.%@NL@%
  17914. %@CR:FACTS Smollett  @%%@NL@%
  17915.                                                Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)%@NL@%
  17916.                                                 Scottish novelist, surgeon%@NL@%
  17917. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17918. %@NL@%
  17919. %@NL@%
  17920. %@2@%Nobuddy kin talk as interestin' as th'feller that's not hampered%@EH@%
  17921. by facts or information.%@NL@%
  17922. %@CR:FACTS Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  17923.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  17924.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  17925. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17926. %@NL@%
  17927. %@NL@%
  17928. %@2@%Reporting facts is the refuge of those who have no imagination.%@NL@%
  17929. %@CR:FACTS MarquisVau@%%@NL@%
  17930.                                   Luc, Marquis de Vauvenargues (1715-1747)%@NL@%
  17931.                                                            French moralist%@NL@%
  17932. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17933. %@NL@%
  17934. %@NL@%
  17935. %@2@%It is the spirit of the age to believe that any fact, however%@EH@%
  17936. suspect, is superior to any imaginative exercise, no matter how
  17937. true.%@NL@%
  17938. %@CR:FACTS Vidal     @%%@NL@%
  17939.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  17940.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  17941. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17942. %@NL@%
  17943. %@NL@%
  17944. %@2@%Oh, don't tell me of facts - I never believe facts: you%@EH@%
  17945. know Canning said nothing was so fallacious as facts, except figures.%@NL@%
  17946. %@CR:FACTS Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  17947.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  17948.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  17949. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17950. %@NL@%
  17951. %@NL@%
  17952. %@2@%He wasn't exactly hostile to facts but he was apathetic about%@EH@%
  17953. them.%@NL@%
  17954. %@CR:FACTS Gibbs2    @%%@NL@%
  17955.                                                  Wolcott Gibbs (1902-1958)%@NL@%
  17956.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  17957. %@AS@%                                                                     Facts%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17958. %@NL@%
  17959. %@NL@%
  17960. %@NL@%
  17961. %@1@%%@AS@%Failure%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  17962. %@CR:FAILURE         @%%@NL@%
  17963. %@2@%See:%@QR:Failure@%%@NL@%
  17964.      Doubt: %@AB@%Hare%@AE@%%@BO:           b4a9b@%%@NL@%
  17965.      Success: %@AB@%Maugham%@AE@%%@BO:          273010@%%@NL@%
  17966. %@NL@%
  17967. %@2@%There is not a fiercer hell than the failure in a great object.%@NL@%
  17968. %@CR:FAILURKeats     @%%@NL@%
  17969.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  17970.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  17971. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17972. %@NL@%
  17973. %@NL@%
  17974. %@2@%We are all of us failures - at least, the best of us are.%@NL@%
  17975. %@CR:FAILURBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  17976.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  17977.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  17978. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17979. %@NL@%
  17980. %@NL@%
  17981. %@2@%Our business in this world is not to succeed, but to continue%@EH@%
  17982. to fail, in good spirits.%@NL@%
  17983. %@CR:FAILURStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  17984.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  17985.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  17986. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17987. %@NL@%
  17988. %@NL@%
  17989.      %@2@%In the lexicon of youth, which Fate reserves%@NL@%
  17990.      For a bright manhood, there is no such word%@NL@%
  17991.      As - fail!%@NL@%
  17992. %@CR:FAILURBulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  17993.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  17994.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  17995. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  17996. %@NL@%
  17997. %@NL@%
  17998. %@2@%I cannot give you the formula for success, but I can give you%@EH@%
  17999. the formula for failure - which is: Try to please everybody.%@NL@%
  18000. %@CR:FAILURSwope     @%%@NL@%
  18001.                                               Herbert B. Swope (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  18002.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  18003. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18004. %@NL@%
  18005. %@NL@%
  18006. %@2@%There are two kinds of men who never amount to much: those%@EH@%
  18007. who cannot do what they are told, and those who can do nothing
  18008. else.%@NL@%
  18009. %@CR:FAILURCurtis    @%%@NL@%
  18010.                                                Cyrus H. Curtis (1850-1933)%@NL@%
  18011.                                               American newspaper publisher%@NL@%
  18012. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18013. %@NL@%
  18014. %@NL@%
  18015. %@2@%There is something distinguished about even his failures; they%@EH@%
  18016. sink not trivially but with a certain air of majesty; like a great
  18017. ship, its flags flying, full of holes.%@NL@%
  18018. %@CR:FAILURNathan    @%%@NL@%
  18019.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  18020.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  18021.                                                          of Eugene O'Neill%@NL@%
  18022. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18023. %@NL@%
  18024. %@NL@%
  18025. %@2@%He was a self-made man who owed his lack of success to nobody.%@NL@%
  18026. %@CR:FAILURHeller    @%%@NL@%
  18027.                                                    Joseph Heller (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  18028.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  18029. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18030. %@NL@%
  18031. %@NL@%
  18032. %@2@%It is mighty presumptuous on your part to suppose your small%@EH@%
  18033. failures of so much consequence that you must talk about them.%@NL@%
  18034. %@CR:FAILURHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  18035.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  18036.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  18037. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18038. %@NL@%
  18039. %@NL@%
  18040. %@2@%A man's life manifests itself as a failure; what he has attempted%@EH@%
  18041. he will not achieve. He will not even succeed in thinking what
  18042. he wants to think or in feeling what he wants to feel.%@NL@%
  18043. %@CR:FAILURSartre    @%%@NL@%
  18044.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  18045.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  18046. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18047. %@NL@%
  18048. %@NL@%
  18049. %@2@%Everyone is born a king, and most people die in exile.%@NL@%
  18050. %@CR:FAILURWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18051.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18052.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18053. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18054. %@NL@%
  18055. %@NL@%
  18056. %@2@%Everyone pushes a falling fence.%@NL@%
  18057. %@CR:FAILURWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18058.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  18059. %@AS@%                                                                   Failure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18060. %@NL@%
  18061. %@NL@%
  18062. %@NL@%
  18063. %@1@%%@AS@%Faith%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18064. %@CR:FAITH           @%%@NL@%
  18065. %@2@%See:%@QR:Faith@%%@NL@%
  18066.      The Afterlife: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:            cdae@%%@NL@%
  18067. %@NL@%
  18068. %@2@%It was the schoolboy who said, "Faith is believing what you%@EH@%
  18069. know ain't so."%@NL@%
  18070. %@CR:FAITH Twain     @%%@NL@%
  18071.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  18072.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  18073. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18074. %@NL@%
  18075. %@NL@%
  18076. %@2@%"Faith" means not %@AI@%wanting%@AE@% to know what is true.%@NL@%
  18077. %@CR:FAITH Nietzsche @%%@NL@%
  18078.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  18079.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  18080. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18081. %@NL@%
  18082. %@NL@%
  18083. %@2@%What is faith but a kind of betting or speculation after all?%@EH@%
  18084. It should be, "I bet that my Redeemer liveth."%@NL@%
  18085. %@CR:FAITH Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  18086.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  18087.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  18088. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18089. %@NL@%
  18090. %@NL@%
  18091. %@2@%Faith. Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks%@EH@%
  18092. without knowledge, of things without parallel.%@NL@%
  18093. %@CR:FAITH Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  18094.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  18095.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  18096. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18097. %@NL@%
  18098. %@NL@%
  18099. %@2@%Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of%@EH@%
  18100. things not seen.%@NL@%
  18101. %@CR:FAITH BibleHebre@%%@NL@%
  18102.                                                             Bible, Hebrews%@NL@%
  18103. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18104. %@NL@%
  18105. %@NL@%
  18106. %@2@%Faith declares what the senses do not see, but not the contrary%@EH@%
  18107. of what they see.%@NL@%
  18108. %@CR:FAITH Pascal    @%%@NL@%
  18109.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  18110.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  18111. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18112. %@NL@%
  18113. %@NL@%
  18114. %@2@%Faith begins as an experiment and ends as an experience.%@NL@%
  18115. %@CR:FAITH Inge      @%%@NL@%
  18116.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  18117.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  18118. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18119. %@NL@%
  18120. %@NL@%
  18121. %@2@%To believe only possibilities is not Faith, but mere Philosophy.%@NL@%
  18122. %@CR:FAITH Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  18123.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  18124.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  18125. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18126. %@NL@%
  18127. %@NL@%
  18128. %@2@%Philosophic argument, especially that drawn from the vastness%@EH@%
  18129. of the universe, in comparison with the apparent insignificance
  18130. of this globe, has sometimes shaken my reason for the faith that
  18131. is in me; but my heart has always assured and reassured me that
  18132. the gospel of Jesus Christ must be Divine Reality. The Sermon on
  18133. the Mount cannot be a mere human production. This belief enters
  18134. into the very depth of my conscience. The whole history of man
  18135. proves it.%@NL@%
  18136. %@CR:FAITH Webster1  @%%@NL@%
  18137.                                                 Daniel Webster (1782-1852)%@NL@%
  18138.                                                 American lawyer, statesman%@NL@%
  18139.                    spoken on the eve of his deathand carved as his epitaph%@NL@%
  18140. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18141. %@NL@%
  18142. %@NL@%
  18143. %@2@%The faith that stands on authority is not faith.%@NL@%
  18144. %@CR:FAITH Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  18145.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  18146.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  18147. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18148. %@NL@%
  18149. %@NL@%
  18150. %@2@%It is the heart which experiences God, and not the reason.%@EH@%
  18151. This, then, is faith: God felt by the heart, not by the reason.%@NL@%
  18152. %@CR:FAITH Pascal    @%%@NL@%
  18153.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  18154.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  18155. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18156. %@NL@%
  18157. %@NL@%
  18158.      %@2@%Reason is our soul's left hand, Faith her right,%@NL@%
  18159.      By these we reach divinity.%@NL@%
  18160. %@CR:FAITH Donne     @%%@NL@%
  18161.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  18162.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  18163. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18164. %@NL@%
  18165. %@NL@%
  18166. %@2@%Faith may be defined briefly as an illogical belief in the%@EH@%
  18167. occurrence of the improbable.%@NL@%
  18168. %@CR:FAITH Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  18169.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  18170.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  18171. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18172. %@NL@%
  18173. %@NL@%
  18174. %@2@%It is as absurd to argue men, as to torture them, into believing.%@NL@%
  18175. %@CR:FAITH Newman1   @%%@NL@%
  18176.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  18177.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  18178. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18179. %@NL@%
  18180. %@NL@%
  18181. %@2@%"You say you %@AI@%believe,%@AE@%" said Count de X., an extreme Catholic,%@EH@%
  18182. to the good Protestant minister. "You people believe, but we %@AI@%know.%@AE@%"%@NL@%
  18183. %@CR:FAITH Gide      @%%@NL@%
  18184.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  18185.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  18186. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18187. %@NL@%
  18188. %@NL@%
  18189. %@2@%I admire the serene assurance of those who have religious faith.%@EH@%
  18190. It is wonderful to observe the calm confidence of a Christian with
  18191. four aces.%@NL@%
  18192. %@CR:FAITH Twain     @%%@NL@%
  18193.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  18194.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  18195. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18196. %@NL@%
  18197. %@NL@%
  18198. %@2@%Faith which does not doubt is dead faith.%@NL@%
  18199. %@CR:FAITH Unamuno   @%%@NL@%
  18200.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  18201.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  18202. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18203. %@NL@%
  18204. %@NL@%
  18205. %@2@%How many things we held yesterday as articles of faith which%@EH@%
  18206. today we tell as fables.%@NL@%
  18207. %@CR:FAITH Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  18208.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  18209.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  18210. %@AS@%                                                                     Faith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18211. %@NL@%
  18212. %@NL@%
  18213. %@NL@%
  18214. %@1@%%@AS@%Fallibility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18215. %@CR:FALLIBILITY     @%%@NL@%
  18216. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fallibility@%%@NL@%
  18217.      Lying: %@AB@%von Goethe%@AE@%%@BO:          18c08f@%%@NL@%
  18218.      Maturity: %@AB@%Szasz%@AE@%%@BO:          19dab4@%%@NL@%
  18219.      Prophecy: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          20b359@%%@NL@%
  18220. %@NL@%
  18221. %@2@%The fellow that says, "I may be wrong, but -" does not%@EH@%
  18222. believe there can be any such possibility.%@NL@%
  18223. %@CR:FALLIBHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  18224.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  18225.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  18226. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18227. %@NL@%
  18228. %@NL@%
  18229. %@2@%To be positive. To be mistaken at the top of one's voice.%@NL@%
  18230. %@CR:FALLIBBierce    @%%@NL@%
  18231.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  18232.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  18233. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18234. %@NL@%
  18235. %@NL@%
  18236. %@2@%The first faults are theirs that commit them, the second theirs%@EH@%
  18237. that permit them.%@NL@%
  18238. %@CR:FALLIBBierce    @%%@NL@%
  18239.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  18240. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18241. %@NL@%
  18242. %@NL@%
  18243. %@2@%A man should never be ashamed to own he has been in the wrong,%@EH@%
  18244. which is but saying, in other words, that he is wiser to-day than
  18245. he was yesterday.%@NL@%
  18246. %@CR:FALLIBSwift     @%%@NL@%
  18247.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  18248.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  18249. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18250. %@NL@%
  18251. %@NL@%
  18252. %@2@%Mistakes are, after all, the foundations of truth, and if a%@EH@%
  18253. man does not know what a thing %@AI@%is,%@AE@% it is at least an increase
  18254. in knowledge if he knows what it is %@AI@%not.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18255. %@CR:FALLIBJung      @%%@NL@%
  18256.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  18257.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  18258. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18259. %@NL@%
  18260. %@NL@%
  18261. %@2@%Even the youngest of us may be wrong sometimes.%@NL@%
  18262. %@CR:FALLIBShaw      @%%@NL@%
  18263.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  18264.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  18265. %@AS@%                                                               Fallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18266. %@NL@%
  18267. %@NL@%
  18268. %@NL@%
  18269. %@1@%%@AS@%Fame%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18270. %@CR:FAME            @%%@NL@%
  18271. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fame@%%@NL@%
  18272.      Books: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:           45b0c@%%@NL@%
  18273.      Greatness: %@AB@%de Montandre%@AE@%%@BO:          119338@%%@NL@%
  18274.      Honor: %@AB@%Schopenhauer%@AE@%%@BO:          1344ea@%%@NL@%
  18275.      Politicians: %@AB@%Cassandra%@AE@%%@BO:          1eea14@%%@NL@%
  18276. %@NL@%
  18277. %@2@%America has a genius for the encouragement of fame.%@NL@%
  18278. %@CR:FAME  Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  18279.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  18280.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  18281. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18282. %@NL@%
  18283. %@NL@%
  18284. %@2@%Happy is the man who hath never known what it is to taste of%@EH@%
  18285. fame - to have it is a purgatory, to want it is a Hell!%@NL@%
  18286. %@CR:FAME  BulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  18287.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  18288.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  18289. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18290. %@NL@%
  18291. %@NL@%
  18292. %@2@%Fame is proof that the people are gullible.%@NL@%
  18293. %@CR:FAME  Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  18294.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  18295.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  18296. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18297. %@NL@%
  18298. %@NL@%
  18299. %@2@%A celebrity is one who is known to many persons he is glad%@EH@%
  18300. he doesn't know.%@NL@%
  18301. %@CR:FAME  Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  18302.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  18303.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  18304. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18305. %@NL@%
  18306. %@NL@%
  18307. %@2@%After a fellow gets famous it doesn't take long for someone%@EH@%
  18308. to bob up that used to sit by him at school.%@NL@%
  18309. %@CR:FAME  Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  18310.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  18311.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  18312. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18313. %@NL@%
  18314. %@NL@%
  18315. %@2@%Not to know me argues yourself unknown.%@NL@%
  18316. %@CR:FAME  Milton    @%%@NL@%
  18317.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  18318.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  18319. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18320. %@NL@%
  18321. %@NL@%
  18322. %@2@%What you are thunders so loud that I cannot hear what you say.%@NL@%
  18323. %@CR:FAME  Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  18324.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  18325.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  18326. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18327. %@NL@%
  18328. %@NL@%
  18329. %@2@%The fame of a great man ought always to be estimated by the%@EH@%
  18330. means used to acquire it.%@NL@%
  18331. %@CR:FAME  LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  18332.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  18333.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  18334. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18335. %@NL@%
  18336. %@NL@%
  18337. %@2@%I had not achieved a success; but I had provoked an uproar;%@EH@%
  18338. and the sensation was so agreeable that I resolved to try again.%@NL@%
  18339. %@CR:FAME  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  18340.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  18341.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  18342. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18343. %@NL@%
  18344. %@NL@%
  18345. %@2@%It is a mark of many famous people that they cannot part with%@EH@%
  18346. their brightest hour.%@NL@%
  18347. %@CR:FAME  Hellman   @%%@NL@%
  18348.                                                Lillian Hellman (1907-1984)%@NL@%
  18349.                                                American playwright, author%@NL@%
  18350. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18351. %@NL@%
  18352. %@NL@%
  18353. %@2@%A friend recently said, "Just imagine %@AI@%not%@AE@% being famous - what%@EH@%
  18354. would happen?" And all of a sudden I saw the face of a passer-by
  18355. on the street and the oddest feeling came over me.%@NL@%
  18356. %@CR:FAME  Swanson   @%%@NL@%
  18357.                                                 Gloria Swanson (1897-1983)%@NL@%
  18358.                                                           American actress%@NL@%
  18359. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18360. %@NL@%
  18361. %@NL@%
  18362. %@2@%Publicity in women is detestable. Anonymity runs in their blood.%@EH@%
  18363. The desire to be veiled still possesses them. They are not even
  18364. now as concerned about the health of their fame as men are, and,
  18365. speaking generally, will pass a tombstone or a signpost without
  18366. feeling an irresistible desire to cut their names on it.%@NL@%
  18367. %@CR:FAME  Woolf     @%%@NL@%
  18368.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  18369.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  18370. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18371. %@NL@%
  18372. %@NL@%
  18373. %@2@%Being a celebrity is like rape.%@NL@%
  18374. %@CR:FAME  McEnroe   @%%@NL@%
  18375.                                                     John McEnroe (b. 1959)%@NL@%
  18376.                                                     American tennis player%@NL@%
  18377. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18378. %@NL@%
  18379. %@NL@%
  18380. %@2@%It's either vilification or sanctification, and both piss me%@EH@%
  18381. off.%@NL@%
  18382. %@CR:FAME  Geldof    @%%@NL@%
  18383.                                                       Bob Geldof (b. 1954)%@NL@%
  18384.                                                        Irish rock musician%@NL@%
  18385. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18386. %@NL@%
  18387. %@NL@%
  18388. %@2@%Censure is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent.%@NL@%
  18389. %@CR:FAME  Swift     @%%@NL@%
  18390.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  18391.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  18392. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18393. %@NL@%
  18394. %@NL@%
  18395. %@2@%I would much rather have men ask why I have no statue than%@EH@%
  18396. why I have one.%@NL@%
  18397. %@CR:FAME  Cato      @%%@NL@%
  18398.                                                Cato the Elder (234-149 BC)%@NL@%
  18399.                                                            Roman statesman%@NL@%
  18400. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18401. %@NL@%
  18402. %@NL@%
  18403.      %@2@%The strongest poison ever known%@NL@%
  18404.      Came from Caesar's laurel crown.%@NL@%
  18405. %@CR:FAME  Blake     @%%@NL@%
  18406.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  18407.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  18408. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18409. %@NL@%
  18410. %@NL@%
  18411. %@2@%If fame will fall to me only after death, I am in no hurry%@EH@%
  18412. for it.%@NL@%
  18413. %@CR:FAME  Martial   @%%@NL@%
  18414.                                                     Martial (c. 40-c. 104)%@NL@%
  18415.                                                                 Roman poet%@NL@%
  18416. %@AS@%                                                                      Fame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18417. %@NL@%
  18418. %@NL@%
  18419. %@NL@%
  18420. %@1@%%@AS@%Family%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18421. %@CR:FAMILY          @%%@NL@%
  18422. %@2@%See:%@QR:Family@%%@NL@%
  18423.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           ab216@%%@NL@%
  18424.      %@AB@%Father%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           e910f@%%@NL@%
  18425.      Greatness: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:          11a0ba@%%@NL@%
  18426.      %@AB@%Mother%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1b1266@%%@NL@%
  18427.      %@AB@%Parents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cb680@%%@NL@%
  18428. %@NL@%
  18429. %@2@%The family  . . .  home of all social vices, where children are%@EH@%
  18430. taught to tell their first lie; the charitable institution for
  18431. all lazy women.%@NL@%
  18432. %@CR:FAMILYStrindberg@%%@NL@%
  18433.                                           J. August Strindberg (1849-1912)%@NL@%
  18434.                                                          Swedish dramatist%@NL@%
  18435. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18436. %@NL@%
  18437. %@NL@%
  18438. %@2@%The family is the place where the most ridiculous and least%@EH@%
  18439. respectable things in the world go on.%@NL@%
  18440. %@CR:FAMILYBetti     @%%@NL@%
  18441.                                                      Ugo Betti (1892-1953)%@NL@%
  18442.                                                         Italian playwright%@NL@%
  18443. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18444. %@NL@%
  18445. %@NL@%
  18446. %@2@%No matter how many communes anybody invents, the family always%@EH@%
  18447. creeps back.%@NL@%
  18448. %@CR:FAMILYMead      @%%@NL@%
  18449.                                                  Margaret Mead (1901-1978)%@NL@%
  18450.                                                    American anthropologist%@NL@%
  18451. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18452. %@NL@%
  18453. %@NL@%
  18454. %@2@%He that hath wife and children have given hostages to fortune;%@EH@%
  18455. for they are impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue
  18456. or mischief.%@NL@%
  18457. %@CR:FAMILYBacon     @%%@NL@%
  18458.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  18459.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  18460. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18461. %@NL@%
  18462. %@NL@%
  18463. %@2@%Man is the head of the family, woman the neck that turns the%@EH@%
  18464. head.%@NL@%
  18465. %@CR:FAMILYBacon     @%%@NL@%
  18466.                                                           Chinese aphorism%@NL@%
  18467. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18468. %@NL@%
  18469. %@NL@%
  18470. %@2@%If Absolute Sovereignty be not necessary in a State, how comes%@EH@%
  18471. it to be so in a family?%@NL@%
  18472. %@CR:FAMILYAstell    @%%@NL@%
  18473.                                                    Mary Astell (1666-1735)%@NL@%
  18474.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  18475. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18476. %@NL@%
  18477. %@NL@%
  18478. %@2@%[He] didn't dare to, because his father had a weak heart%@EH@%
  18479. and habitually threatened to drop dead if anybody hurt his feelings.
  18480. You may have noticed that people with weak hearts are the tyrants
  18481. of English married life.%@NL@%
  18482. %@CR:FAMILYShaw      @%%@NL@%
  18483.                                     The Bishop of Chelsea, %@AI@%Getting Married%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18484.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  18485.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  18486. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18487. %@NL@%
  18488. %@NL@%
  18489. %@2@%Be kind to your mother-in-law, and if necessary pay for her%@EH@%
  18490. board at some good hotel.%@NL@%
  18491. %@CR:FAMILYBillings  @%%@NL@%
  18492.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  18493.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  18494. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18495. %@NL@%
  18496. %@NL@%
  18497. %@2@%The awe and dread with which the untutored savage contemplates%@EH@%
  18498. his mother-in-law are amongst the most familiar facts of anthropology.%@NL@%
  18499. %@CR:FAMILYFrazer    @%%@NL@%
  18500.                                                James G. Frazer (1854-1941)%@NL@%
  18501.                                        Scottish classicist, anthropologist%@NL@%
  18502. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18503. %@NL@%
  18504. %@NL@%
  18505. %@2@%If you want to know how old a woman is, ask her sister-in-law.%@NL@%
  18506. %@CR:FAMILYHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  18507.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  18508.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  18509. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18510. %@NL@%
  18511. %@NL@%
  18512.      %@2@%For there is no friend like a sister%@NL@%
  18513.      In calm or stormy weather;%@NL@%
  18514.      To cheer one on the tedious way,%@NL@%
  18515.      To fetch one if one goes astray,%@NL@%
  18516.      To lift one if one totters down,%@NL@%
  18517.      To strengthen whilst one stands.%@NL@%
  18518. %@CR:FAMILYRossetti  @%%@NL@%
  18519.                                             Christina Rossetti (1830-1894)%@NL@%
  18520.                                                     English poet, lyricist%@NL@%
  18521. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18522. %@NL@%
  18523. %@NL@%
  18524. %@2@%Big sisters are the crab grass in the lawn of life.%@NL@%
  18525. %@CR:FAMILYSchulz    @%%@NL@%
  18526.                                                   Charles Schulz (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  18527.                                                        American cartoonist%@NL@%
  18528. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18529. %@NL@%
  18530. %@NL@%
  18531. %@2@%Relations are simply a tedious pack of people who haven't got%@EH@%
  18532. the remotest knowledge of how to live nor the smallest instinct
  18533. about when to die.%@NL@%
  18534. %@CR:FAMILYWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18535.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18536.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18537. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18538. %@NL@%
  18539. %@NL@%
  18540. %@2@%I advise thee to visit thy relations and friends; but I advise%@EH@%
  18541. thee not to live too near to them.%@NL@%
  18542. %@CR:FAMILYFuller3   @%%@NL@%
  18543.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  18544.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  18545. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18546. %@NL@%
  18547. %@NL@%
  18548. %@2@%When our relatives are at home, we have to think of all their%@EH@%
  18549. good points or it would be impossible to endure them. But when
  18550. they are away, we console ourselves for their absence by dwelling
  18551. on their vices.%@NL@%
  18552. %@CR:FAMILYShaw      @%%@NL@%
  18553.                                              The Captain, %@AI@%Heartbreak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18554.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  18555.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  18556. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18557. %@NL@%
  18558. %@NL@%
  18559. %@2@%I can't help detesting my relations. I suppose it comes from%@EH@%
  18560. the fact that none of us can stand other people having the same
  18561. faults as ourselves.%@NL@%
  18562. %@CR:FAMILYWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18563.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18564.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18565. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18566. %@NL@%
  18567. %@NL@%
  18568. %@2@%God gives us our relatives; thank God we can choose our friends.%@NL@%
  18569. %@CR:FAMILYMumford1  @%%@NL@%
  18570.                                            Ethel Watts Mumford (1878-1940)%@NL@%
  18571.                                         American novelist, humorous writer%@NL@%
  18572. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18573. %@NL@%
  18574. %@NL@%
  18575. %@2@%A poor relation - is the most irrelevant thing in nature.%@NL@%
  18576. %@CR:FAMILYLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  18577.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  18578.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  18579. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18580. %@NL@%
  18581. %@NL@%
  18582. %@2@%Accidents will occur in the best-regulated families.%@NL@%
  18583. %@CR:FAMILYDickens   @%%@NL@%
  18584.                                            Mr. Micawber, %@AI@%David Copperfield%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18585.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  18586.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  18587. %@AS@%                                                                    Family%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18588. %@NL@%
  18589. %@NL@%
  18590. %@NL@%
  18591. %@1@%%@AS@%Fanatics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18592. %@CR:FANATICS        @%%@NL@%
  18593. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fanatics@%%@NL@%
  18594.      Persuasion: %@AB@%Junius%@AE@%%@BO:          1d7333@%%@NL@%
  18595.      Sects: %@AB@%Keats%@AE@%%@BO:          2412e9@%%@NL@%
  18596. %@NL@%
  18597. %@2@%A fanatic is a man that does what he thinks the Lord would%@EH@%
  18598. do if he knew the facts of the case.%@NL@%
  18599. %@CR:FANATIDunne     @%%@NL@%
  18600.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  18601.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  18602. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18603. %@NL@%
  18604. %@NL@%
  18605. %@2@%Defined in psychological terms, a fanatic is a man who consciously%@EH@%
  18606. overcompensates a secret doubt.%@NL@%
  18607. %@CR:FANATIHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  18608.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  18609.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  18610. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18611. %@NL@%
  18612. %@NL@%
  18613. %@2@%A fanataic is one who can't change his mind and won't change%@EH@%
  18614. the subject.%@NL@%
  18615. %@CR:FANATIChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  18616.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  18617.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  18618. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18619. %@NL@%
  18620. %@NL@%
  18621. %@2@%Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have%@EH@%
  18622. forgotten your aim.%@NL@%
  18623. %@CR:FANATISantayana @%%@NL@%
  18624.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  18625.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  18626. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18627. %@NL@%
  18628. %@NL@%
  18629. %@2@%Without fanaticism we cannot accomplish anything.%@NL@%
  18630. %@CR:FANATIPeron     @%%@NL@%
  18631.                                                      Eva Peron (1919-1952)%@NL@%
  18632.                                 wife of Juan Peron, President of Argentina%@NL@%
  18633. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18634. %@NL@%
  18635. %@NL@%
  18636. %@2@%There are few catastrophes so great and irremediable as those%@EH@%
  18637. that follow an excess of zeal.%@NL@%
  18638. %@CR:FANATIBenson    @%%@NL@%
  18639.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  18640.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  18641. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18642. %@NL@%
  18643. %@NL@%
  18644. %@2@%The worst of madmen is a saint run mad.%@NL@%
  18645. %@CR:FANATIPope      @%%@NL@%
  18646.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  18647.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  18648. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18649. %@NL@%
  18650. %@NL@%
  18651. %@2@%Fanatics are men with strong tastes for drink trying hard to%@EH@%
  18652. keep sober.%@NL@%
  18653. %@CR:FANATIHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  18654.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  18655.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  18656. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18657. %@NL@%
  18658. %@NL@%
  18659. %@2@%Mere human beings cannot afford to be fanatical about anything.%@EH@%
  18660. Not even about justice or loyalty. The fanatic for justice ends
  18661. by murdering a million helpless people to clear a space for his
  18662. law courts. If we are to survive on this planet there must be compromises.%@NL@%
  18663. %@CR:FANATIJameson   @%%@NL@%
  18664.                                                  Storm Jameson (1891-1986)%@NL@%
  18665.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  18666. %@AS@%                                                                  Fanatics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18667. %@NL@%
  18668. %@NL@%
  18669. %@NL@%
  18670. %@1@%%@AS@%Farewells%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18671. %@CR:FAREWELLS       @%%@NL@%
  18672. %@2@%%@QR:Farewells@%Laughter is not at all a bad beginning for a friendship, and%@EH@%
  18673. it is far the best ending for one.%@NL@%
  18674. %@CR:FAREWEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18675.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18676.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18677. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18678. %@NL@%
  18679. %@NL@%
  18680. %@2@%Let's have one other gaudy night.%@NL@%
  18681. %@CR:FAREWEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  18682.                                               Antony, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18683.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  18684.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  18685. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18686. %@NL@%
  18687. %@NL@%
  18688. %@2@%Let us eat and drink; for tomorrow we shall die.%@NL@%
  18689. %@CR:FAREWEBibleIsaia@%%@NL@%
  18690.                                                              Bible, Isaiah%@NL@%
  18691. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18692. %@NL@%
  18693. %@NL@%
  18694. %@2@%%@AI@%Partir, c'est mourir un peu.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18695. To leave is to die a little.%@NL@%
  18696. %@CR:FAREWEBibleIsaia@%%@NL@%
  18697.                                                             French proverb%@NL@%
  18698. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18699. %@NL@%
  18700. %@NL@%
  18701.      %@2@%When I died last, and, Dear, I die%@NL@%
  18702.      As often as from thee I go.%@NL@%
  18703. %@CR:FAREWEDonne     @%%@NL@%
  18704.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  18705.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  18706. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18707. %@NL@%
  18708. %@NL@%
  18709. %@2@%Every parting gives a foretaste of death, every reunion a hint%@EH@%
  18710. of the resurrection.%@NL@%
  18711. %@CR:FAREWESchopenhau@%%@NL@%
  18712.                                            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)%@NL@%
  18713.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  18714. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18715. %@NL@%
  18716. %@NL@%
  18717. %@2@%It is amazing how nice people are to you when they know you%@EH@%
  18718. are going away.%@NL@%
  18719. %@CR:FAREWEArlen     @%%@NL@%
  18720.                                                  Michael Arlen (1895-1956)%@NL@%
  18721.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  18722. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18723. %@NL@%
  18724. %@NL@%
  18725. %@2@%It is never any good dwelling on goodbyes. It is not the being%@EH@%
  18726. together that it prolongs, it is the parting.%@NL@%
  18727. %@CR:FAREWEBibesco   @%%@NL@%
  18728.                                              Elizabeth Bibesco (1897-1945)%@NL@%
  18729.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  18730. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18731. %@NL@%
  18732. %@NL@%
  18733. %@2@%All farewells should be sudden.%@NL@%
  18734. %@CR:FAREWEByron2    @%%@NL@%
  18735.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  18736.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  18737. %@AS@%                                                                 Farewells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18738. %@NL@%
  18739. %@NL@%
  18740. %@NL@%
  18741. %@1@%%@AS@%Farmers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18742. %@CR:FARMERS         @%%@NL@%
  18743. %@2@%%@QR:Farmers@%Our Farmers round, well pleased with constant gain,%@NL@%
  18744.      Like other farmers, flourish and complain.%@NL@%
  18745. %@CR:FARMERCrabbe    @%%@NL@%
  18746.                                                  George Crabbe (1754-1832)%@NL@%
  18747.                                                    English poet, clergyman%@NL@%
  18748. %@AS@%                                                                   Farmers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18749. %@NL@%
  18750. %@NL@%
  18751. %@2@%A good farmer is nothing more nor less than a handy man with%@EH@%
  18752. a sense of humus.%@NL@%
  18753. %@CR:FARMERWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  18754.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  18755.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  18756. %@AS@%                                                                   Farmers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18757. %@NL@%
  18758. %@NL@%
  18759. %@2@%The master's eye is the best fertilizer.%@NL@%
  18760. %@CR:FARMERPlinytheEl@%%@NL@%
  18761.                                                    Pliny the Elder (23-79)%@NL@%
  18762.                                                              Roman scholar%@NL@%
  18763. %@AS@%                                                                   Farmers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18764. %@NL@%
  18765. %@NL@%
  18766. %@2@%How can he get wisdom  . . .  whose talk is of bullocks?%@NL@%
  18767. %@CR:FARMERApocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  18768.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  18769. %@AS@%                                                                   Farmers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18770. %@NL@%
  18771. %@NL@%
  18772. %@NL@%
  18773. %@1@%%@AS@%Fascism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18774. %@CR:FASCISM         @%%@NL@%
  18775. %@2@%%@QR:Fascism@%The destiny of history has united you [Hitler] with myself%@EH@%
  18776. and the Duce in an indissoluble way.%@NL@%
  18777. %@CR:FASCISFranco    @%%@NL@%
  18778.                                                 General Franco (1892-1975)%@NL@%
  18779.                                                  Fascist dictator of Spain%@NL@%
  18780. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18781. %@NL@%
  18782. %@NL@%
  18783. %@2@%Fascism is a European inquietude. It is a way of knowing%@EH@%
  18784. everything - history, the state, the achievement of the
  18785. proletarianization of public life, a new way of knowing the phenomena
  18786. of our epoch.%@NL@%
  18787. %@CR:FASCISPrimodeRiv@%%@NL@%
  18788.                                          J. A. Primo de Rivera (1903-1936)%@NL@%
  18789.                                               Spanish Falangist politician%@NL@%
  18790. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18791. %@NL@%
  18792. %@NL@%
  18793. %@2@%We enter parliament in order to supply ourselves, in the arsenal%@EH@%
  18794. of democracy, with its own weapons  . . .  If democracy is so stupid
  18795. as to give us free tickets and salaries for this bear's work,
  18796. that is its affair  . . .  We do not come as friends, nor even as
  18797. neutrals. We come as enemies. As the wolf bursts into the flock,
  18798. so we come.%@NL@%
  18799. %@CR:FASCISGoebbels  @%%@NL@%
  18800.                                                Joseph Goebbels (1897-1945)%@NL@%
  18801.                                                   German Nazi propagandist%@NL@%
  18802.                                                                    in 1928%@NL@%
  18803. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18804. %@NL@%
  18805. %@NL@%
  18806. %@2@%Fascism, the more it considers and observes the future and%@EH@%
  18807. the development of humanity, quite apart from political considerations
  18808. of the moment, believes neither in the possibility nor the utility
  18809. of perpetual peace.%@NL@%
  18810. %@CR:FASCISMussolini @%%@NL@%
  18811.                                               Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)%@NL@%
  18812.                                                  Fascist dictator of Italy%@NL@%
  18813. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18814. %@NL@%
  18815. %@NL@%
  18816. %@2@%Fascism is Capitalism plus Murder.%@NL@%
  18817. %@CR:FASCISSinclair  @%%@NL@%
  18818.                                                 Upton Sinclair (1878-1968)%@NL@%
  18819.                                      American writer, Socialist politician%@NL@%
  18820. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18821. %@NL@%
  18822. %@NL@%
  18823. %@2@%Because Fascism is a lie, it is condemned to literary sterility.%@EH@%
  18824. And when it is past, it will have no history, except the bloody
  18825. history of murder.%@NL@%
  18826. %@CR:FASCISHemingway @%%@NL@%
  18827.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  18828.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  18829. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18830. %@NL@%
  18831. %@NL@%
  18832. %@2@%Fascism is not in itself a new order of society. It is the%@EH@%
  18833. future refusing to be born.%@NL@%
  18834. %@CR:FASCISBevan     @%%@NL@%
  18835.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  18836.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  18837. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18838. %@NL@%
  18839. %@NL@%
  18840. %@2@%Fascism was a counter-revolution against a revolution that%@EH@%
  18841. never took place.%@NL@%
  18842. %@CR:FASCISSilone    @%%@NL@%
  18843.                                                 Ignazio Silone (1900-1978)%@NL@%
  18844.                                       Italian writer, Socialist politician%@NL@%
  18845. %@AS@%                                                                   Fascism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18846. %@NL@%
  18847. %@NL@%
  18848. %@NL@%
  18849. %@1@%%@AS@%Fashion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18850. %@CR:FASHION         @%%@NL@%
  18851. %@2@%%@QR:Fashion@%Fashion is gentility running away from vulgarity, and afraid%@EH@%
  18852. of being overtaken.%@NL@%
  18853. %@CR:FASHIOHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  18854.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  18855.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  18856. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18857. %@NL@%
  18858. %@NL@%
  18859. %@2@%Fashion is that by which the fantastic becomes for a moment%@EH@%
  18860. the universal.%@NL@%
  18861. %@CR:FASHIOWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18862.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18863.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18864. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18865. %@NL@%
  18866. %@NL@%
  18867.      %@2@%In olden days a glimpse of stocking%@NL@%
  18868.      Was looked on as something shocking%@NL@%
  18869.      But now, heaven knows,%@NL@%
  18870.      Anything goes.%@NL@%
  18871. %@CR:FASHIOPorter    @%%@NL@%
  18872.                                                    Cole Porter (1893-1964)%@NL@%
  18873.                                                American composer, lyricist%@NL@%
  18874. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18875. %@NL@%
  18876. %@NL@%
  18877. %@2@%A fashionable woman is always in love - with herself.%@NL@%
  18878. %@CR:FASHIOLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  18879.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  18880.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  18881. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18882. %@NL@%
  18883. %@NL@%
  18884. %@2@%I cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year's%@EH@%
  18885. fashions.%@NL@%
  18886. %@CR:FASHIOHellman   @%%@NL@%
  18887.                                                Lillian Hellman (1907-1984)%@NL@%
  18888.                                                American playwright, author%@NL@%
  18889.     in letter to Chairman of the House Committee on un-American Activities%@NL@%
  18890. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18891. %@NL@%
  18892. %@NL@%
  18893. %@2@%You don't have to signal a social conscience by looking like%@EH@%
  18894. a frump. Lace knickers won't hasten the holocaust, you can ban
  18895. the bomb in a feather boa just as well as without, and a mild interest
  18896. in the length of hemlines doesn't necessarily disqualify you from
  18897. reading %@AI@%Das Kapital%@AE@% and agreeing with every word.%@NL@%
  18898. %@CR:FASHIOTweedie   @%%@NL@%
  18899.                                                     Jill Tweedie (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  18900.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  18901. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18902. %@NL@%
  18903. %@NL@%
  18904. %@2@%One had as good be out of the world, as out of the fashion.%@NL@%
  18905. %@CR:FASHIOCibber    @%%@NL@%
  18906.                                                  Colley Cibber (1671-1757)%@NL@%
  18907.                                          English actor-manager, playwright%@NL@%
  18908. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18909. %@NL@%
  18910. %@NL@%
  18911. %@2@%Fashion is made to become unfashionable.%@NL@%
  18912. %@CR:FASHIOChanel    @%%@NL@%
  18913.                                                    Coco Chanel (1883-1971)%@NL@%
  18914.                                              French %@AB@%couturiere%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18915. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18916. %@NL@%
  18917. %@NL@%
  18918. %@2@%After all, what is fashion? From the artistic point of view,%@EH@%
  18919. it is usually a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to
  18920. alter it every six months.%@NL@%
  18921. %@CR:FASHIOWilde     @%%@NL@%
  18922.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  18923.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  18924. %@AS@%                                                                   Fashion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18925. %@NL@%
  18926. %@NL@%
  18927. %@NL@%
  18928. %@1@%%@AS@%Father%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  18929. %@CR:FATHER          @%%@NL@%
  18930. %@2@%See:%@QR:Father@%%@NL@%
  18931.      %@AB@%Parents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cb680@%%@NL@%
  18932. %@NL@%
  18933. %@2@%As fathers commonly go, it is seldom a misfortune to be fatherless;%@EH@%
  18934. and considering the general run of sons, as seldom a misfortune
  18935. to be childless.%@NL@%
  18936. %@CR:FATHERChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  18937.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  18938.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  18939. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18940. %@NL@%
  18941. %@NL@%
  18942. %@2@%No man is responsible for his father. That is entirely his%@EH@%
  18943. mother's affair.%@NL@%
  18944. %@CR:FATHERTurnbull  @%%@NL@%
  18945.                                              Margaret Turnbull (1890-1942)%@NL@%
  18946.                                                American writer, politician%@NL@%
  18947. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18948. %@NL@%
  18949. %@NL@%
  18950. %@2@%The worst misfortune that can happen to an ordinary man is%@EH@%
  18951. to have an extraordinary father.%@NL@%
  18952. %@CR:FATHEROMalley   @%%@NL@%
  18953.                                                Austin O'Malley (1858-1932)%@NL@%
  18954.                                                   American oculist, writer%@NL@%
  18955. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18956. %@NL@%
  18957. %@NL@%
  18958. %@2@%To be a successful father there's one absolute rule: when you%@EH@%
  18959. have a kid, don't look at it for the first two years.%@NL@%
  18960. %@CR:FATHERHemingway @%%@NL@%
  18961.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  18962.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  18963. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18964. %@NL@%
  18965. %@NL@%
  18966. %@2@%What harsh judges fathers are to all young men!%@NL@%
  18967. %@CR:FATHERTerence   @%%@NL@%
  18968.                                                    Terence (c. 190-159 BC)%@NL@%
  18969.                                                            Roman dramatist%@NL@%
  18970. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18971. %@NL@%
  18972. %@NL@%
  18973. %@2@%The fundamental defect of fathers is that they want their children%@EH@%
  18974. to be a credit to them.%@NL@%
  18975. %@CR:FATHERRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  18976.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  18977.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  18978. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18979. %@NL@%
  18980. %@NL@%
  18981. %@2@%An unforgiving eye, and a damned disinheriting countenance.%@NL@%
  18982. %@CR:FATHERSheridan  @%%@NL@%
  18983.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  18984.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  18985. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18986. %@NL@%
  18987. %@NL@%
  18988. %@2@%One father is more than a hundred schoolmasters.%@NL@%
  18989. %@CR:FATHERSheridan  @%%@NL@%
  18990.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  18991. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18992. %@NL@%
  18993. %@NL@%
  18994. %@2@%Leontine: An only son, sir, might expect more indulgence.%@EH@%
  18995. Croaker: An only father, sir, might expect more obedience.%@NL@%
  18996. %@CR:FATHERGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  18997.                                                       %@AI@%The Good-Natur'd Man%@AE@%%@NL@%
  18998.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  18999.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  19000. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19001. %@NL@%
  19002. %@NL@%
  19003. %@2@%Diogenes struck the father when the son swore.%@NL@%
  19004. %@CR:FATHERBurton2   @%%@NL@%
  19005.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  19006.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  19007. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19008. %@NL@%
  19009. %@NL@%
  19010. %@2@%Sir Walter, being strangely surprised and put out of his countenance%@EH@%
  19011. at so great a table, gives his son a damned blow over the face.
  19012. His son, as rude as he was, would not strike his father, but strikes
  19013. over the face the gentleman that sat next to him and said "Box
  19014. about: 'twill come to my father anon."%@NL@%
  19015. %@CR:FATHERAubrey    @%%@NL@%
  19016.                                                    John Aubrey (1626-1697)%@NL@%
  19017.                                                  English antiquary, author%@NL@%
  19018. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19019. %@NL@%
  19020. %@NL@%
  19021. %@2@%When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could%@EH@%
  19022. hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one,
  19023. I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years.%@NL@%
  19024. %@CR:FATHERTwain     @%%@NL@%
  19025.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  19026.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19027. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19028. %@NL@%
  19029. %@NL@%
  19030.      %@2@%We think our fathers fools, so wise we grow;%@NL@%
  19031.      Our wiser sons, no doubt will think us so.%@NL@%
  19032. %@CR:FATHERPope      @%%@NL@%
  19033.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  19034.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19035. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19036. %@NL@%
  19037. %@NL@%
  19038. %@2@%The father's thankless position in the family is to be everybody's%@EH@%
  19039. breadwinner, everybody's enemy.%@NL@%
  19040. %@CR:FATHERStrindberg@%%@NL@%
  19041.                                           J. August Strindberg (1849-1912)%@NL@%
  19042.                                                          Swedish dramatist%@NL@%
  19043. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19044. %@NL@%
  19045. %@NL@%
  19046. %@2@%His father watched him across the gulf of years and pathos%@EH@%
  19047. which always must divide a father from his son.%@NL@%
  19048. %@CR:FATHERMarquand  @%%@NL@%
  19049.                                                 J. P. Marquand (1893-1960)%@NL@%
  19050.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  19051. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19052. %@NL@%
  19053. %@NL@%
  19054. %@2@%In peace the sons bury their fathers, but in war the fathers%@EH@%
  19055. bury their sons.%@NL@%
  19056. %@CR:FATHERCroesus   @%%@NL@%
  19057.                                                     Croesus (d. c. 560 BC)%@NL@%
  19058.                                                                Lydian king%@NL@%
  19059. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19060. %@NL@%
  19061. %@NL@%
  19062. %@2@%You're a kind of father figure to me, Dad.%@NL@%
  19063. %@CR:FATHERCoren     @%%@NL@%
  19064.                                                       Alan Coren (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  19065.                                                   British editor, humorist%@NL@%
  19066. %@AS@%                                                                    Father%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19067. %@NL@%
  19068. %@NL@%
  19069. %@NL@%
  19070. %@1@%%@AS@%Fault-finding%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19071. %@CR:FAULTFINDING    @%%@NL@%
  19072. %@2@%%@QR:Fault-finding@%If we had no faults we should not take so much pleasure in%@EH@%
  19073. noticing them in others.%@NL@%
  19074. %@CR:FAULTFLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  19075.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  19076.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  19077. %@AS@%                                                             Fault-finding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19078. %@NL@%
  19079. %@NL@%
  19080. %@2@%To find out a girl's faults, praise her to her girl friends.%@NL@%
  19081. %@CR:FAULTFFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  19082.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  19083.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  19084. %@AS@%                                                             Fault-finding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19085. %@NL@%
  19086. %@NL@%
  19087. %@2@%Always mistrust a subordinate who never finds fault with his%@EH@%
  19088. superior.%@NL@%
  19089. %@CR:FAULTFCollins1  @%%@NL@%
  19090.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  19091.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  19092. %@AS@%                                                             Fault-finding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19093. %@NL@%
  19094. %@NL@%
  19095. %@2@%There are persons who always find a hair in their plate of%@EH@%
  19096. soup for the simple reason that, when they sit down before it,
  19097. they shake their heads until one falls in.%@NL@%
  19098. %@CR:FAULTFHebbel    @%%@NL@%
  19099.                                               Friedrich Hebbel (1813-1863)%@NL@%
  19100.                                                           German dramatist%@NL@%
  19101. %@AS@%                                                             Fault-finding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19102. %@NL@%
  19103. %@NL@%
  19104. %@2@%Clean your finger before you point at my spots.%@NL@%
  19105. %@CR:FAULTFFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  19106.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  19107.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  19108. %@AS@%                                                             Fault-finding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19109. %@NL@%
  19110. %@NL@%
  19111. %@NL@%
  19112. %@1@%%@AS@%Favors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19113. %@CR:FAVORS          @%%@NL@%
  19114. %@2@%See:%@QR:Favors@%%@NL@%
  19115.      Gratitude: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          11841a@%%@NL@%
  19116. %@NL@%
  19117. %@2@%He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to%@EH@%
  19118. do you another than he whom you yourself have obliged.%@NL@%
  19119. %@CR:FAVORSFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  19120.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  19121.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  19122. %@AS@%                                                                    Favors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19123. %@NL@%
  19124. %@NL@%
  19125. %@2@%The pleasure we derive from doing favors is partly in the feeling%@EH@%
  19126. it gives us that we are not altogether worthless.%@NL@%
  19127. %@CR:FAVORSHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  19128.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  19129.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  19130. %@AS@%                                                                    Favors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19131. %@NL@%
  19132. %@NL@%
  19133. %@2@%Too great a hurry to discharge an obligation is a kind of ingratitude.%@NL@%
  19134. %@CR:FAVORSLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  19135.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  19136.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  19137. %@AS@%                                                                    Favors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19138. %@NL@%
  19139. %@NL@%
  19140. %@2@%When some men discharge an obligation, you can hear the report%@EH@%
  19141. for miles around.%@NL@%
  19142. %@CR:FAVORSTwain     @%%@NL@%
  19143.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  19144.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19145. %@AS@%                                                                    Favors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19146. %@NL@%
  19147. %@NL@%
  19148. %@NL@%
  19149. %@1@%%@AS@%Fear%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19150. %@CR:FEAR            @%%@NL@%
  19151. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fear@%%@NL@%
  19152.      Love: %@AB@%Saint John%@AE@%%@BO:          180a0f@%%@NL@%
  19153. %@NL@%
  19154. %@2@%If hopes were dupes, fears may be liars.%@NL@%
  19155. %@CR:FEAR  Clough    @%%@NL@%
  19156.                                                   A. H. Clough (1819-1861)%@NL@%
  19157.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19158. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19159. %@NL@%
  19160. %@NL@%
  19161. %@2@%Let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to%@EH@%
  19162. fear is fear itself.%@NL@%
  19163. %@CR:FEAR  Roosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  19164.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  19165.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  19166. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19167. %@NL@%
  19168. %@NL@%
  19169. %@2@%No passion so effectually robs the mind of all its powers of%@EH@%
  19170. acting and reasoning as fear.%@NL@%
  19171. %@CR:FEAR  Burke2    @%%@NL@%
  19172.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  19173.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  19174. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19175. %@NL@%
  19176. %@NL@%
  19177. %@2@%There is no terror in a bang, only in the anticipation of it.%@NL@%
  19178. %@CR:FEAR  Hitchcock @%%@NL@%
  19179.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  19180.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  19181. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19182. %@NL@%
  19183. %@NL@%
  19184. %@2@%I am not afraid of anything. If you fear God you do not fear%@EH@%
  19185. anything else.%@NL@%
  19186. %@CR:FEAR  Qaddafi   @%%@NL@%
  19187.                                          Colonel MuhammarQaddafi (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  19188.                                                              Libyan leader%@NL@%
  19189. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19190. %@NL@%
  19191. %@NL@%
  19192. %@2@%Those who love to be feared, fear to be loved. Some fear them,%@EH@%
  19193. but they fear everyone.%@NL@%
  19194. %@CR:FEAR  Camus2    @%%@NL@%
  19195.                                              Jean-Pierre Camus (1584-1652)%@NL@%
  19196.                                                   French churchman, author%@NL@%
  19197. %@AS@%                                                                      Fear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19198. %@NL@%
  19199. %@NL@%
  19200. %@NL@%
  19201. %@1@%%@AS@%Feminism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19202. %@CR:FEMINISM        @%%@NL@%
  19203. %@2@%See:%@QR:Feminism@%%@NL@%
  19204.      Protest: %@AB@%Mathews%@AE@%%@BO:          20c3a0@%%@NL@%
  19205.      Revolutionaries: %@AB@%Oppenheim%@AE@%%@BO:          22c97d@%%@NL@%
  19206. %@NL@%
  19207. %@2@%The Queen is most anxious to enlist everyone who can speak%@EH@%
  19208. or write to join in checking this mad, wicked folly of "Woman's
  19209. Rights" with all its attendant horrors on which her poor, feeble
  19210. sex is bent, forgetting every sense of womanly feeling and propriety.%@NL@%
  19211. %@CR:FEMINIQueenVicto@%%@NL@%
  19212.                                       Queen Victoriaof England (1819-1901)%@NL@%
  19213. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19214. %@NL@%
  19215. %@NL@%
  19216. %@2@%A society in which woman are taught anything but the management%@EH@%
  19217. of a family, the care of men, and the creation of the future generation
  19218. is a society which is on the way out.%@NL@%
  19219. %@CR:FEMINIHubbard3  @%%@NL@%
  19220.                                                 L. Ron Hubbard (1911-1986)%@NL@%
  19221.                                                     founder of scientology%@NL@%
  19222. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19223. %@NL@%
  19224. %@NL@%
  19225. %@2@%Movements born in hatred very quickly take on the characteristics%@EH@%
  19226. of the thing they oppose.%@NL@%
  19227. %@CR:FEMINIHabgood   @%%@NL@%
  19228.                                                    J. S. Habgood (b. 1927)%@NL@%
  19229.                                                         Archbishop of York%@NL@%
  19230.                                                of ultra-feminists, in 1986%@NL@%
  19231. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19232. %@NL@%
  19233. %@NL@%
  19234. %@2@%If men will not do us justice, they shall do us violence.%@NL@%
  19235. %@CR:FEMINIPankhurst @%%@NL@%
  19236.                                             Emmeline Pankhurst (1857-1928)%@NL@%
  19237.                                                        British suffragette%@NL@%
  19238. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19239. %@NL@%
  19240. %@NL@%
  19241. %@2@%The history of men's opposition to women's emancipation is%@EH@%
  19242. more interesting perhaps than the story of that emancipation itself.%@NL@%
  19243. %@CR:FEMINIWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  19244.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  19245.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  19246. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19247. %@NL@%
  19248. %@NL@%
  19249. %@2@%If the abstract rights of man will bear discussion and explanation,%@EH@%
  19250. those of women, by a parity of reasoning, will not shrink from
  19251. the same test; though a different opinion prevails in this country.%@NL@%
  19252. %@CR:FEMINIWollstonec@%%@NL@%
  19253.                                            Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)%@NL@%
  19254.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  19255. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19256. %@NL@%
  19257. %@NL@%
  19258. %@2@%The true Republic: men, their rights and nothing more; women,%@EH@%
  19259. their rights and nothing less.%@NL@%
  19260. %@CR:FEMINIAnthony   @%%@NL@%
  19261.                                               Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906)%@NL@%
  19262.                                                       American suffragette%@NL@%
  19263. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19264. %@NL@%
  19265. %@NL@%
  19266. %@2@%Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social%@EH@%
  19267. changes are impossible without the feminine upheaval. Social progress
  19268. can be measured exactly by the social position of the fair sex;
  19269. the ugly ones included.%@NL@%
  19270. %@CR:FEMINIMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  19271.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  19272.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  19273. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19274. %@NL@%
  19275. %@NL@%
  19276. %@2@%Women's liberation, if it abolishes the patriarchal family,%@EH@%
  19277. will abolish a necessary substructure of the authoritarian state,
  19278. and once that withers away Marx will have come true willy-nilly,
  19279. so let's get on with it.%@NL@%
  19280. %@CR:FEMINIGreer     @%%@NL@%
  19281.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  19282.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  19283. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19284. %@NL@%
  19285. %@NL@%
  19286. %@2@%I owe nothing to Women's Lib.%@NL@%
  19287. %@CR:FEMINIThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  19288.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  19289.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  19290. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19291. %@NL@%
  19292. %@NL@%
  19293. %@2@%Women get more unhappy the more they try to liberate themselves.%@NL@%
  19294. %@CR:FEMINIBardot    @%%@NL@%
  19295.                                                  Brigitte Bardot (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  19296.                                                        French film actress%@NL@%
  19297. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19298. %@NL@%
  19299. %@NL@%
  19300. %@2@%The people I'm furious with are the women's liberationists.%@EH@%
  19301. They keep getting up on soapboxes and proclaiming women are brighter
  19302. than men. That's true, but it should be kept quiet or it ruins
  19303. the whole racket.%@NL@%
  19304. %@CR:FEMINILoos      @%%@NL@%
  19305.                                                     Anita Loos (1893-1981)%@NL@%
  19306.                                                      American screenwriter%@NL@%
  19307. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19308. %@NL@%
  19309. %@NL@%
  19310. %@2@%The suffering of either sex - of the male who is unable,%@EH@%
  19311. because of the way in which he was reared, to take the strong initiating
  19312. or patriarchal role that is still demanded of him, or of the female
  19313. who has been given too much freedom of movement as a child to stay
  19314. placidly within the house as an adult - this suffering, this
  19315. discrepancy, this sense of failure in an enjoined role, is the
  19316. point of leverage for social change.%@NL@%
  19317. %@CR:FEMINIMead      @%%@NL@%
  19318.                                                  Margaret Mead (1901-1978)%@NL@%
  19319.                                                    American anthropologist%@NL@%
  19320. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19321. %@NL@%
  19322. %@NL@%
  19323. %@2@%There must be a world revolution which puts an end to all materialistic%@EH@%
  19324. conditions hindering woman from performing her natural role in
  19325. life and driving her to carry out man's duties in order to be
  19326. equal in rights.%@NL@%
  19327. %@CR:FEMINIQaddafi   @%%@NL@%
  19328.                                          Colonel MuhammarQaddafi (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  19329.                                                              Libyan leader%@NL@%
  19330. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19331. %@NL@%
  19332. %@NL@%
  19333. %@2@%People call me feminist whenever I express sentiments that%@EH@%
  19334. differentiate me from a doormat or a prostitute.%@NL@%
  19335. %@CR:FEMINIWest2     @%%@NL@%
  19336.                                                   Rebecca West (1892-1983)%@NL@%
  19337.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  19338. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19339. %@NL@%
  19340. %@NL@%
  19341. %@2@%A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle.%@NL@%
  19342. %@CR:FEMINISteinem   @%%@NL@%
  19343.                                                   Gloria Steinem (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  19344.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  19345. %@AS@%                                                                  Feminism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19346. %@NL@%
  19347. %@NL@%
  19348. %@NL@%
  19349. %@1@%%@AS@%Fertility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19350. %@CR:FERTILITY       @%%@NL@%
  19351. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fertility@%%@NL@%
  19352.      Procreation: %@AB@%Greer%@AE@%%@BO:          205bf7@%%@NL@%
  19353. %@NL@%
  19354. %@2@%Earth is here so kind, that just tickle her with a hoe and%@EH@%
  19355. she laughs with a harvest.%@NL@%
  19356. %@CR:FERTILJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  19357.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  19358.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  19359. %@AS@%                                                                 Fertility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19360. %@NL@%
  19361. %@NL@%
  19362. %@2@%The disruptive powers of excessive national fecundity may have%@EH@%
  19363. played a greater part in bursting the bonds of convention than
  19364. either the power of ideas or the errors of autocracy.%@NL@%
  19365. %@CR:FERTILKeynes    @%%@NL@%
  19366.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  19367.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  19368. %@AS@%                                                                 Fertility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19369. %@NL@%
  19370. %@NL@%
  19371. %@2@%The management of fertility is one of the most important functions%@EH@%
  19372. of adulthood.%@NL@%
  19373. %@CR:FERTILGreer     @%%@NL@%
  19374.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  19375.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  19376. %@AS@%                                                                 Fertility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19377. %@NL@%
  19378. %@NL@%
  19379. %@2@%I'm hurt, hurt and humiliated beyond endurance  . . .  Seeing%@EH@%
  19380. the wheat ripening, the fountains never ceasing to give water,
  19381. the sheep bearing hundreds of lambs, the she-dogs  . . .  until it
  19382. seems the whole country rises to show me its tender sleeping young
  19383. while I feel two hammer-blows here instead of the mouth of my child.%@NL@%
  19384. %@CR:FERTILLorca     @%%@NL@%
  19385.                                                               Yerma, %@AI@%Yerma%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19386.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  19387.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  19388. %@AS@%                                                                 Fertility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19389. %@NL@%
  19390. %@NL@%
  19391. %@NL@%
  19392. %@1@%%@AS@%Fiction%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19393. %@CR:FICTION         @%%@NL@%
  19394. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fiction@%%@NL@%
  19395.      Literature: %@AB@%Hemingway%@AE@%%@BO:          17a486@%%@NL@%
  19396.      Writers: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2c775a@%%@NL@%
  19397. %@NL@%
  19398. %@2@%Fiction is Truth's elder sister%@NL@%
  19399. %@CR:FICTIOKipling   @%%@NL@%
  19400.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  19401.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  19402. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19403. %@NL@%
  19404. %@NL@%
  19405. %@2@%For if the proper study of mankind is man, it is evidently%@EH@%
  19406. more sensible to occupy yourself with the coherent, substantial
  19407. and significant creatures of fiction than with the irrational and
  19408. shadowy figures of real life.%@NL@%
  19409. %@CR:FICTIOMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  19410.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  19411.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  19412. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19413. %@NL@%
  19414. %@NL@%
  19415. %@2@%The novel, if it be anything, is contemporary history, an exact%@EH@%
  19416. and complete reproduction of social surroundings of the age we
  19417. live in.%@NL@%
  19418. %@CR:FICTIOMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  19419.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  19420.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  19421. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19422. %@NL@%
  19423. %@NL@%
  19424. %@2@%If you write fiction you are, in a sense, corrupted. There's%@EH@%
  19425. a tremendous corruptibility for the fiction writer because you're
  19426. dealing mainly with sex and violence. These remain the basic themes,
  19427. they're the basic themes of Shakespeare whether you like it or
  19428. not.%@NL@%
  19429. %@CR:FICTIOBurgess1  @%%@NL@%
  19430.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  19431.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  19432. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19433. %@NL@%
  19434. %@NL@%
  19435. %@2@%In the true novel, as opposed to reportage and chronicle, the%@EH@%
  19436. main action takes place inside the characters' skull and ribs.%@NL@%
  19437. %@CR:FICTIOKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  19438.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  19439.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  19440. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19441. %@NL@%
  19442. %@NL@%
  19443. %@2@%Generally speaking people are plagued with problems that they%@EH@%
  19444. are unable to solve. To escape them they pick up a detective story,
  19445. become completely absorbed, help bring the investigation to a
  19446. successful conclusion, switch off the light and go to sleep.%@NL@%
  19447. %@CR:FICTIOGardner1  @%%@NL@%
  19448.                                           Erle Stanley Gardner (1899-1970)%@NL@%
  19449.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19450. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19451. %@NL@%
  19452. %@NL@%
  19453. %@2@%The thriller is an extension of the fairy tale. It is melodrama%@EH@%
  19454. so embellished as to create the illusion that the story being told,
  19455. however unlikely, could be true.%@NL@%
  19456. %@CR:FICTIOChandler  @%%@NL@%
  19457.                                               Raymond Chandler (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  19458.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  19459. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19460. %@NL@%
  19461. %@NL@%
  19462. %@2@%The best part of the fiction in many novels is the notice that%@EH@%
  19463. the characters are purely imaginary.%@NL@%
  19464. %@CR:FICTIOAdams1    @%%@NL@%
  19465.                                              Franklin P. Adams (1881-1960)%@NL@%
  19466.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  19467. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19468. %@NL@%
  19469. %@NL@%
  19470. %@2@%When the characters are really alive before their author, the%@EH@%
  19471. latter does nothing but follow them in their action, in their words,
  19472. in the situations which they suggest to him.%@NL@%
  19473. %@CR:FICTIOPirandello@%%@NL@%
  19474.                                               Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  19475.                                                 Italian playwright, author%@NL@%
  19476. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19477. %@NL@%
  19478. %@NL@%
  19479. %@2@%Novels so often provide an anodyne and not an antidote, glide%@EH@%
  19480. one into torpid slumbers instead of rousing one with a burning
  19481. brand.%@NL@%
  19482. %@CR:FICTIOWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  19483.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  19484.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  19485. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19486. %@NL@%
  19487. %@NL@%
  19488. %@2@%The principle of procrastinated rape is said to be the ruling%@EH@%
  19489. one in all the great bestsellers.%@NL@%
  19490. %@CR:FICTIOPritchett @%%@NL@%
  19491.                                                  V. S. Pritchett (b. 1900)%@NL@%
  19492.                                                     British writer, critic%@NL@%
  19493. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19494. %@NL@%
  19495. %@NL@%
  19496. %@2@%The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what%@EH@%
  19497. Fiction means.%@NL@%
  19498. %@CR:FICTIOWilde     @%%@NL@%
  19499.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  19500.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  19501. %@AS@%                                                                   Fiction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19502. %@NL@%
  19503. %@NL@%
  19504. %@NL@%
  19505. %@1@%%@AS@%Fidelity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19506. %@CR:FIDELITY        @%%@NL@%
  19507. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fidelity@%%@NL@%
  19508.      %@AB@%Loyalty%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          187e03@%%@NL@%
  19509.      Virtue: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2a35e7@%%@NL@%
  19510. %@NL@%
  19511. %@2@%Fidelity. A virtue peculiar to those who are about to be betrayed.%@NL@%
  19512. %@CR:FIDELIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  19513.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  19514.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19515. %@AS@%                                                                  Fidelity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19516. %@NL@%
  19517. %@NL@%
  19518. %@2@%Young men want to be faithful and are not; old men want to%@EH@%
  19519. be faithless and cannot.%@NL@%
  19520. %@CR:FIDELIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  19521.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  19522.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  19523. %@AS@%                                                                  Fidelity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19524. %@NL@%
  19525. %@NL@%
  19526. %@2@%The cruelest revenge of a woman is to remain faithful to a%@EH@%
  19527. man.%@NL@%
  19528. %@CR:FIDELIBossuet   @%%@NL@%
  19529.                                                Jacques Bossuet (1627-1704)%@NL@%
  19530.                                                           French churchman%@NL@%
  19531. %@AS@%                                                                  Fidelity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19532. %@NL@%
  19533. %@NL@%
  19534. %@2@%No man worth having is true to his wife, or can be true to%@EH@%
  19535. his wife, or ever was, or ever will be so.%@NL@%
  19536. %@CR:FIDELIVanbrugh  @%%@NL@%
  19537.                                              Sir John Vanbrugh (1664-1726)%@NL@%
  19538.                                              English playwright, architect%@NL@%
  19539. %@AS@%                                                                  Fidelity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19540. %@NL@%
  19541. %@NL@%
  19542. %@2@%Those who are faithful know only the trivial side of love:%@EH@%
  19543. it is the faithless who know love's tragedies.%@NL@%
  19544. %@CR:FIDELIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  19545.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  19546.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  19547. %@AS@%                                                                  Fidelity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19548. %@NL@%
  19549. %@NL@%
  19550. %@NL@%
  19551. %@1@%%@AS@%Fire%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19552. %@CR:FIRE            @%%@NL@%
  19553. %@2@%%@QR:Fire@%Man is the animal that has made friends with the fire.%@NL@%
  19554. %@CR:FIRE  VanDyke   @%%@NL@%
  19555.                                                 Henry Van Dyke (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  19556.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  19557. %@AS@%                                                                      Fire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19558. %@NL@%
  19559. %@NL@%
  19560. %@2@%No spectacle is nobler than a blaze.%@NL@%
  19561. %@CR:FIRE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  19562.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  19563.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  19564. %@AS@%                                                                      Fire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19565. %@NL@%
  19566. %@NL@%
  19567. %@NL@%
  19568. %@1@%%@AS@%Flattery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19569. %@CR:FLATTERY        @%%@NL@%
  19570. %@2@%See:%@QR:Flattery@%%@NL@%
  19571.      Admiration: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:            6b40@%%@NL@%
  19572.      %@AB@%Compliments%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           796cb@%%@NL@%
  19573.      Humility: %@AB@%Chinese proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          13c166@%%@NL@%
  19574.      Ingratiation: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          14d8e6@%%@NL@%
  19575.      Politicians: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          1ef5c0@%%@NL@%
  19576.      Power: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          1f8752@%%@NL@%
  19577.      Praise: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          1f9cf1@%%@NL@%
  19578.      Royalty: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          230cdd@%%@NL@%
  19579. %@NL@%
  19580. %@2@%Madam, before you flatter a man so grossly to his face, you%@EH@%
  19581. should consider whether or not your flattery is worth his having.%@NL@%
  19582. %@CR:FLATTEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  19583.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  19584.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  19585. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19586. %@NL@%
  19587. %@NL@%
  19588. %@2@%Blarney is flattery laid on so thin you love it; baloney is%@EH@%
  19589. flattery laid on so thick you hate it.%@NL@%
  19590. %@CR:FLATTESheen     @%%@NL@%
  19591.                                                Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979)%@NL@%
  19592.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  19593. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19594. %@NL@%
  19595. %@NL@%
  19596. %@2@%Flattery makes friends and truth makes enemies.%@NL@%
  19597. %@CR:FLATTESheen     @%%@NL@%
  19598.                                                            Spanish proverb%@NL@%
  19599. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19600. %@NL@%
  19601. %@NL@%
  19602. %@2@%The art of pleasing consists in being pleased.%@NL@%
  19603. %@CR:FLATTEHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  19604.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  19605.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  19606. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19607. %@NL@%
  19608. %@NL@%
  19609. %@2@%Just praise is only a debt, but flattery is a present.%@NL@%
  19610. %@CR:FLATTEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  19611.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  19612.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  19613. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19614. %@NL@%
  19615. %@NL@%
  19616. %@2@%Very ugly or very beautiful women should be flattered on their%@EH@%
  19617. understanding, mediocre ones on their beauty.%@NL@%
  19618. %@CR:FLATTEChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  19619.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  19620.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  19621. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19622. %@NL@%
  19623. %@NL@%
  19624. %@2@%What really flatters a man is that you think him worth flattering.%@NL@%
  19625. %@CR:FLATTEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  19626.                                        Broadbent, %@AI@%John Bull's Other Island%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19627.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  19628.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  19629. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19630. %@NL@%
  19631. %@NL@%
  19632. %@2@%Praise undeserv'd is satire in disguise.%@NL@%
  19633. %@CR:FLATTEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  19634.                                                    anonymous, 18th century%@NL@%
  19635. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19636. %@NL@%
  19637. %@NL@%
  19638. %@2@%I should have praised you more had you praised me less.%@NL@%
  19639. %@CR:FLATTELouisXIV  @%%@NL@%
  19640.                                       King Louis XIV of France (1638-1715)%@NL@%
  19641.                                                                 to Bossuet%@NL@%
  19642. %@AS@%                                                                  Flattery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19643. %@NL@%
  19644. %@NL@%
  19645. %@NL@%
  19646. %@1@%%@AS@%Flirting%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19647. %@CR:FLIRTING        @%%@NL@%
  19648. %@2@%See:%@QR:Flirting@%%@NL@%
  19649.      Marriage: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          19759b@%%@NL@%
  19650.      Seduction: %@AB@%Charles%@AE@%%@BO:          24283a@%%@NL@%
  19651.      Self-image: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          2486ef@%%@NL@%
  19652. %@NL@%
  19653. %@2@%No matter how happily a woman may be married, it always pleases%@EH@%
  19654. her to discover that there is a nice man who wishes that she were
  19655. not.%@NL@%
  19656. %@CR:FLIRTIMencken   @%%@NL@%
  19657.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  19658.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  19659. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19660. %@NL@%
  19661. %@NL@%
  19662. %@2@%Flirtation, attention without intention.%@NL@%
  19663. %@CR:FLIRTIORell     @%%@NL@%
  19664.                                        Max O'Rell, Paul Blouet (1848-1903)%@NL@%
  19665.                                        French journalist, lecturer, critic%@NL@%
  19666. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19667. %@NL@%
  19668. %@NL@%
  19669. %@2@%When she raises her eyelids it's as if she were taking off%@EH@%
  19670. all her clothes.%@NL@%
  19671. %@CR:FLIRTIColette   @%%@NL@%
  19672.                                                        Colette (1873-1954)%@NL@%
  19673.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  19674. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19675. %@NL@%
  19676. %@NL@%
  19677.      %@2@%Ah, beautiful passionate body%@NL@%
  19678.      That has never ached with a heart!%@NL@%
  19679. %@CR:FLIRTISwinburne @%%@NL@%
  19680.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  19681.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  19682. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19683. %@NL@%
  19684. %@NL@%
  19685. %@2@%What attracts us in a woman rarely binds us to her.%@NL@%
  19686. %@CR:FLIRTICollins1  @%%@NL@%
  19687.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  19688.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  19689. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19690. %@NL@%
  19691. %@NL@%
  19692.      %@2@%So much alarm'd that she is quite alarming,%@NL@%
  19693.      All Giggle, Blush - half Pertness, and half Pout.%@NL@%
  19694. %@CR:FLIRTIByron2    @%%@NL@%
  19695.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  19696.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19697. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19698. %@NL@%
  19699. %@NL@%
  19700. %@2@%Whoever loves above all the approach of love will never know%@EH@%
  19701. the joy of attaining it.%@NL@%
  19702. %@CR:FLIRTISaintExupe@%%@NL@%
  19703.                                       Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900-1944)%@NL@%
  19704.                                                     French aviator, writer%@NL@%
  19705. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19706. %@NL@%
  19707. %@NL@%
  19708. %@2@%Men do make passes at girls who wear glasses - but it all%@EH@%
  19709. depends on their frames.%@NL@%
  19710. %@CR:FLIRTISaintExupe@%%@NL@%
  19711.                                                             optician, 1964%@NL@%
  19712. %@AS@%                                                                  Flirting%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19713. %@NL@%
  19714. %@NL@%
  19715. %@NL@%
  19716. %@1@%%@AS@%Food%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19717. %@CR:FOOD            @%%@NL@%
  19718. %@2@%See:%@QR:Food@%%@NL@%
  19719.      Morality: %@AB@%Brecht%@AE@%%@BO:          1b00b3@%%@NL@%
  19720. %@NL@%
  19721. %@2@%To eat is human, to digest divine.%@NL@%
  19722. %@CR:FOOD  Copeland  @%%@NL@%
  19723.                                               Charles Copeland (1860-1952)%@NL@%
  19724.                                                          American educator%@NL@%
  19725. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19726. %@NL@%
  19727. %@NL@%
  19728. %@2@%A man seldom thinks with more earnestness of anything than%@EH@%
  19729. he does of his dinner.%@NL@%
  19730. %@CR:FOOD  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  19731.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  19732.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  19733. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19734. %@NL@%
  19735. %@NL@%
  19736. %@2@%He was a bold man who first swallowed an oyster.%@NL@%
  19737. %@CR:FOOD  JamesI    @%%@NL@%
  19738.                                        King James I of England (1566-1625)%@NL@%
  19739. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19740. %@NL@%
  19741. %@NL@%
  19742. %@2@%On the continent people have good food; in England people have%@EH@%
  19743. good table manners.%@NL@%
  19744. %@CR:FOOD  Mikes     @%%@NL@%
  19745.                                                     George Mikes (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  19746.                                            Hungarian-born British humorist%@NL@%
  19747. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19748. %@NL@%
  19749. %@NL@%
  19750. %@2@%"Dish or no dish," rejoined the Caledonian, "there's a deal%@EH@%
  19751. o' fine confused feedin' about it, let me tell you."%@NL@%
  19752. %@CR:FOOD  Brown3    @%%@NL@%
  19753.                                                     John Brown (1810-1882)%@NL@%
  19754.                                               Scottish essayist, physician%@NL@%
  19755.                                                                  of haggis%@NL@%
  19756. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19757. %@NL@%
  19758. %@NL@%
  19759. %@2@%Part of the secret of success in life is to eat what you like%@EH@%
  19760. and let the food fight it out inside.%@NL@%
  19761. %@CR:FOOD  Twain     @%%@NL@%
  19762.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  19763.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19764. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19765. %@NL@%
  19766. %@NL@%
  19767. %@2@%The right diet directs sexual energy into the parts that matter.%@NL@%
  19768. %@CR:FOOD  Cartland  @%%@NL@%
  19769.                                                 Barbara Cartland (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  19770.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  19771. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19772. %@NL@%
  19773. %@NL@%
  19774. %@2@%Everything you see, I owe to spaghetti.%@NL@%
  19775. %@CR:FOOD  Loren     @%%@NL@%
  19776.                                                     Sophia Loren (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  19777.                                                       Italian film actress%@NL@%
  19778. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19779. %@NL@%
  19780. %@NL@%
  19781. %@2@%No man is lonely while eating spaghetti; it requires so much%@EH@%
  19782. attention.%@NL@%
  19783. %@CR:FOOD  Morley1   @%%@NL@%
  19784.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  19785.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  19786. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19787. %@NL@%
  19788. %@NL@%
  19789. %@2@%There is no love sincerer than the love of food.%@NL@%
  19790. %@CR:FOOD  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  19791.                                                   Tanner, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19792.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  19793.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  19794. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19795. %@NL@%
  19796. %@NL@%
  19797. %@2@%One should eat to live, not live to eat.%@NL@%
  19798. %@CR:FOOD  Moliere   @%%@NL@%
  19799.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  19800.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  19801. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19802. %@NL@%
  19803. %@NL@%
  19804. %@2@%Seeing is deceiving. It's eating that's believing.%@NL@%
  19805. %@CR:FOOD  Thurber   @%%@NL@%
  19806.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  19807.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  19808. %@AS@%                                                                      Food%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19809. %@NL@%
  19810. %@NL@%
  19811. %@NL@%
  19812. %@1@%%@AS@%Fools%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19813. %@CR:FOOLS           @%%@NL@%
  19814. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fools@%%@NL@%
  19815.      Imitation: %@AB@%Beerbohm Tree%@AE@%%@BO:          1477cd@%%@NL@%
  19816.      Laughter: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          16b6c4@%; %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          16b54d@%%@NL@%
  19817.      Marriage: %@AB@%Fielding%@AE@%%@BO:          198254@%%@NL@%
  19818.      Persuasion: %@AB@%Billings%@AE@%%@BO:          1d6e7d@%%@NL@%
  19819. %@NL@%
  19820. %@2@%They never open their mouths without subtracting from the sum%@EH@%
  19821. of human knowledge.%@NL@%
  19822. %@CR:FOOLS Reed      @%%@NL@%
  19823.                                                 Thomas B. Reed (1839-1902)%@NL@%
  19824.                                                American lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  19825. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19826. %@NL@%
  19827. %@NL@%
  19828. %@2@%A fellow who is always declaring he's no fool usually has his%@EH@%
  19829. suspicions.%@NL@%
  19830. %@CR:FOOLS Mizner2   @%%@NL@%
  19831.                                                  Wilson Mizner (1876-1933)%@NL@%
  19832.                                                    American dramatist, wit%@NL@%
  19833. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19834. %@NL@%
  19835. %@NL@%
  19836. %@2@%He was born stupid, and greatly increased his birthright.%@NL@%
  19837. %@CR:FOOLS Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  19838.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  19839.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  19840. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19841. %@NL@%
  19842. %@NL@%
  19843. %@2@%Ordinarily he was insane, but he had lucid moments when he%@EH@%
  19844. was merely stupid.%@NL@%
  19845. %@CR:FOOLS Heine     @%%@NL@%
  19846.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  19847.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  19848. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19849. %@NL@%
  19850. %@NL@%
  19851. %@2@%However big the fool, there is always a bigger fool to admire%@EH@%
  19852. him.%@NL@%
  19853. %@CR:FOOLS Boileau   @%%@NL@%
  19854.                                                Nicolas Boileau (1636-1711)%@NL@%
  19855.                                                        French poet, critic%@NL@%
  19856. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19857. %@NL@%
  19858. %@NL@%
  19859. %@2@%%@AI@%Limbus fatuorum%@AE@% is the name given by the old schoolmen to%@EH@%
  19860. the intermediate region between heaven and hell, where dwelt what
  19861. Dante calls "the praiseless and the blameless dead," or, in other
  19862. words, fools, idiots and lunatics.%@NL@%
  19863. %@CR:FOOLS Milton    @%%@NL@%
  19864.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  19865.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19866. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19867. %@NL@%
  19868. %@NL@%
  19869. %@2@%Whenever a man does a thoroughly stupid thing, it is always%@EH@%
  19870. from the noblest motives.%@NL@%
  19871. %@CR:FOOLS Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  19872.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  19873.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  19874. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19875. %@NL@%
  19876. %@NL@%
  19877. %@2@%As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his%@EH@%
  19878. folly.%@NL@%
  19879. %@CR:FOOLS BibleProve@%%@NL@%
  19880.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  19881. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19882. %@NL@%
  19883. %@NL@%
  19884. %@2@%There are two kinds of fools: one says, "This is old, therefore%@EH@%
  19885. it is good"; the other says, "This is new, therefore it is better."%@NL@%
  19886. %@CR:FOOLS Inge      @%%@NL@%
  19887.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  19888.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  19889. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19890. %@NL@%
  19891. %@NL@%
  19892. %@2@%A fool and his words are soon parted.%@NL@%
  19893. %@CR:FOOLS Shenstone @%%@NL@%
  19894.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  19895.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19896. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19897. %@NL@%
  19898. %@NL@%
  19899. %@2@%It has been said that there is no fool like an old fool, except%@EH@%
  19900. a young fool. But the young fool has first to grow up to be an
  19901. old fool to realise what a damn fool he was when he was a young
  19902. fool.%@NL@%
  19903. %@CR:FOOLS Macmillan @%%@NL@%
  19904.                                Harold Macmillan, Lord Stockton (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  19905.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  19906. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19907. %@NL@%
  19908. %@NL@%
  19909. %@2@%The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly,%@EH@%
  19910. is to fill the world with fools.%@NL@%
  19911. %@CR:FOOLS Spencer   @%%@NL@%
  19912.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  19913.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  19914. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19915. %@NL@%
  19916. %@NL@%
  19917. %@2@%He who lives without folly isn't so wise as he thinks.%@NL@%
  19918. %@CR:FOOLS LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  19919.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  19920.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  19921. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19922. %@NL@%
  19923. %@NL@%
  19924. %@2@%I always treat fools and coxcombs with great ceremony; true%@EH@%
  19925. good breeding not being a sufficient barrier against them.%@NL@%
  19926. %@CR:FOOLS Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  19927.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  19928.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  19929. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19930. %@NL@%
  19931. %@NL@%
  19932. %@2@%There are more fools than knaves in the world, else the knaves%@EH@%
  19933. would not have enough to live upon.%@NL@%
  19934. %@CR:FOOLS Butler3   @%%@NL@%
  19935.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  19936.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  19937. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19938. %@NL@%
  19939. %@NL@%
  19940. %@2@%The dulness of the fool is the whetstone of the wits.%@NL@%
  19941. %@CR:FOOLS Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  19942.                                                      Celia, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19943.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  19944.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  19945. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19946. %@NL@%
  19947. %@NL@%
  19948. %@2@%If it were not for the company of fools, a witty man would%@EH@%
  19949. often be greatly at a loss.%@NL@%
  19950. %@CR:FOOLS LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  19951.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  19952.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  19953. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19954. %@NL@%
  19955. %@NL@%
  19956. %@2@%The most difficult character in comedy is the fool, and he%@EH@%
  19957. must be no fool who plays that part.%@NL@%
  19958. %@CR:FOOLS Cervantes @%%@NL@%
  19959.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  19960.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  19961. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19962. %@NL@%
  19963. %@NL@%
  19964. %@2@%In the vain laughter of folly wisdom hears half its applause.%@NL@%
  19965. %@CR:FOOLS Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  19966.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  19967.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  19968. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19969. %@NL@%
  19970. %@NL@%
  19971. %@2@%Let us be thankful for the fools. But for them the rest of%@EH@%
  19972. us could not succeed.%@NL@%
  19973. %@CR:FOOLS Twain     @%%@NL@%
  19974.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  19975.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  19976. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19977. %@NL@%
  19978. %@NL@%
  19979. %@2@%Suffer fools gladly; they may be right.%@NL@%
  19980. %@CR:FOOLS Jackson3  @%%@NL@%
  19981.                                               Holbrook Jackson (1874-1948)%@NL@%
  19982.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  19983. %@AS@%                                                                     Fools%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19984. %@NL@%
  19985. %@NL@%
  19986. %@NL@%
  19987. %@1@%%@AS@%Force%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  19988. %@CR:FORCE           @%%@NL@%
  19989. %@2@%%@QR:Force@%I have with me two gods, Persuasion and Compulsion.%@NL@%
  19990. %@CR:FORCE Themistocl@%%@NL@%
  19991.                                            Themistocles (c. 528-c. 462 BC)%@NL@%
  19992.                                                         Athenian statesman%@NL@%
  19993. %@AS@%                                                                     Force%@AE@%%@NL@%
  19994. %@NL@%
  19995. %@NL@%
  19996. %@2@%The use of force alone is but temporary. It may subdue for%@EH@%
  19997. a moment; but does not remove the necessity of subduing again:
  19998. and a nation is not governed, which is perpetually to be conquered.%@NL@%
  19999. %@CR:FORCE Burke2    @%%@NL@%
  20000.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  20001.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  20002. %@AS@%                                                                     Force%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20003. %@NL@%
  20004. %@NL@%
  20005. %@2@%Some people draw a comforting distinction between "force"%@EH@%
  20006. and "violence"  . . .  I refuse to cloud the issue by such word-play
  20007.  . . .  the power which establishes a state is violence; the power
  20008. which maintains it is violence; the power which eventually overthrows
  20009. it is violence  . . .  Call an elephant a rabbit only if it gives
  20010. you comfort to feel that you are about to be trampled to death
  20011. by a rabbit.%@NL@%
  20012. %@CR:FORCE Kaunda    @%%@NL@%
  20013.                                                   Kenneth Kaunda (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  20014.                                               Zambian statesman, president%@NL@%
  20015. %@AS@%                                                                     Force%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20016. %@NL@%
  20017. %@NL@%
  20018. %@2@%I think that the sacredness of human life is a purely municipal%@EH@%
  20019. ideal of no validity outside the jurisdiction. I believe that force,
  20020. mitigated as far as may be by good manners, is the %@AI@%ultima ratio,%@AE@%
  20021. and between two groups of men that want to make inconsistent kinds
  20022. of world I see no remedy except force  . . .  It seems to me that
  20023. every society rests on the death of men.%@NL@%
  20024. %@CR:FORCE Holmes2   @%%@NL@%
  20025.                                   Justice Oliver WendellHolmes (1841-1935)%@NL@%
  20026.                                                            American jurist%@NL@%
  20027. %@AS@%                                                                     Force%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20028. %@NL@%
  20029. %@NL@%
  20030. %@NL@%
  20031. %@1@%%@AS@%Foreigners%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20032. %@CR:FOREIGNERS      @%%@NL@%
  20033. %@2@%%@QR:Foreigners@%They spell it Vinci and pronounce it Vinchy; foreigners always%@EH@%
  20034. spell better than they pronounce.%@NL@%
  20035. %@CR:FOREIGTwain     @%%@NL@%
  20036.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  20037.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20038. %@AS@%                                                                Foreigners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20039. %@NL@%
  20040. %@NL@%
  20041. %@2@%Who's 'im, Bill? A stranger! 'Eave 'arf a brick at 'im.%@NL@%
  20042. %@CR:FOREIGTwain     @%%@NL@%
  20043.                                                                      %@AI@%Punch%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20044. %@AS@%                                                                Foreigners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20045. %@NL@%
  20046. %@NL@%
  20047. %@2@%Modern man  . . .  is educated to understand foreign languages%@EH@%
  20048. and misunderstand foreigners.%@NL@%
  20049. %@CR:FOREIGChesterton@%%@NL@%
  20050.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  20051.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  20052. %@AS@%                                                                Foreigners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20053. %@NL@%
  20054. %@NL@%
  20055. %@2@%Don't imagine I regard foreigners as inferior - they fascinate%@EH@%
  20056. me.%@NL@%
  20057. %@CR:FOREIGWilson3   @%%@NL@%
  20058.                                                    Harold Wilson (b. 1916)%@NL@%
  20059.                                  British Labour politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  20060. %@AS@%                                                                Foreigners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20061. %@NL@%
  20062. %@NL@%
  20063. %@2@%I've always had a weakness for foreign affairs.%@NL@%
  20064. %@CR:FOREIGWest1     @%%@NL@%
  20065.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  20066.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  20067. %@AS@%                                                                Foreigners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20068. %@NL@%
  20069. %@NL@%
  20070. %@NL@%
  20071. %@1@%%@AS@%Forgiveness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20072. %@CR:FORGIVENESS     @%%@NL@%
  20073. %@2@%See:%@QR:Forgiveness@%%@NL@%
  20074.      Conversation: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           82dfd@%%@NL@%
  20075.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           ab216@%%@NL@%
  20076.      God: %@AB@%Heine%@AE@%%@BO:          110284@%%@NL@%
  20077.      Guilt: %@AB@%Russian proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          11e349@%%@NL@%
  20078.      The Public: %@AB@%Lavater%@AE@%%@BO:          20fd3f@%%@NL@%
  20079. %@NL@%
  20080. %@2@%Forgiveness is the key to action and freedom.%@NL@%
  20081. %@CR:FORGIVArendt    @%%@NL@%
  20082.                                                  Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)%@NL@%
  20083.                                             American political philosopher%@NL@%
  20084. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20085. %@NL@%
  20086. %@NL@%
  20087. %@2@%Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.%@NL@%
  20088. %@CR:FORGIVWilde     @%%@NL@%
  20089.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  20090.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  20091. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20092. %@NL@%
  20093. %@NL@%
  20094.      %@2@%Forgive! How many will say, "forgive," and find%@NL@%
  20095.      A sort of absolution in the sound%@NL@%
  20096.      To hate a little longer!%@NL@%
  20097. %@CR:FORGIVTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  20098.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  20099.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20100. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20101. %@NL@%
  20102. %@NL@%
  20103. %@2@%One should forgive one's enemies, but not before they are hanged.%@NL@%
  20104. %@CR:FORGIVHeine     @%%@NL@%
  20105.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  20106.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  20107. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20108. %@NL@%
  20109. %@NL@%
  20110. %@2@%Nobody ever forgets where he buried a hatchet.%@NL@%
  20111. %@CR:FORGIVHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  20112.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  20113.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  20114. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20115. %@NL@%
  20116. %@NL@%
  20117. %@2@%Many promising reconciliations have broken down because, while%@EH@%
  20118. both parties came prepared to forgive, neither party came prepared
  20119. to be forgiven.%@NL@%
  20120. %@CR:FORGIVWilliams2 @%%@NL@%
  20121.                                               Charles Williams (1886-1945)%@NL@%
  20122.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  20123. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20124. %@NL@%
  20125. %@NL@%
  20126. %@2@%%@AI@%'Tout comprendre, c'est tout pardonner'%@AE@% is an error, the%@EH@%
  20127. fact being that the secret of forgiving everything is to understand
  20128. nothing.%@NL@%
  20129. %@CR:FORGIVShaw      @%%@NL@%
  20130.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  20131.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  20132. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20133. %@NL@%
  20134. %@NL@%
  20135.      %@2@%How shall I lose the sin, yet keep the sense,%@NL@%
  20136.      And love the offender, yet detest the offence?%@NL@%
  20137. %@CR:FORGIVPope      @%%@NL@%
  20138.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  20139.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20140. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20141. %@NL@%
  20142. %@NL@%
  20143. %@2@%The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive%@EH@%
  20144. and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.%@NL@%
  20145. %@CR:FORGIVSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  20146.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  20147.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  20148. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20149. %@NL@%
  20150. %@NL@%
  20151. %@2@%"I can forgive, but I cannot forget," is only another way%@EH@%
  20152. of saying, "I cannot forgive."%@NL@%
  20153. %@CR:FORGIVBeecher1  @%%@NL@%
  20154.                                             Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887)%@NL@%
  20155.                                         American clergyman, editor, writer%@NL@%
  20156. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20157. %@NL@%
  20158. %@NL@%
  20159. %@2@%I have looked on a lot of women with lust. I've committed adultery%@EH@%
  20160. in my heart many times. God recognizes I will do this and forgives
  20161. me.%@NL@%
  20162. %@CR:FORGIVCarter2   @%%@NL@%
  20163.                                                     Jimmy Carter (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  20164.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  20165.                                         during presidential campaign, 1976%@NL@%
  20166. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20167. %@NL@%
  20168. %@NL@%
  20169. %@2@%God will forgive me; that is His business.%@NL@%
  20170. %@CR:FORGIVHeine     @%%@NL@%
  20171.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  20172.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  20173. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20174. %@NL@%
  20175. %@NL@%
  20176. %@2@%We never ask God to forgive anybody except where we haven't.%@NL@%
  20177. %@CR:FORGIVHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  20178.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  20179.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20180. %@AS@%                                                               Forgiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20181. %@NL@%
  20182. %@NL@%
  20183. %@NL@%
  20184. %@1@%%@AS@%Foul play%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20185. %@CR:FOULPLAY        @%%@NL@%
  20186. %@2@%%@QR:Foul play@%He could not see a belt without hitting below it.%@NL@%
  20187. %@CR:FOULPLAsquith   @%%@NL@%
  20188.                                                 Margot Asquith (1864-1945)%@NL@%
  20189.                           socialite wife of Prime Minister Herbert Asquith%@NL@%
  20190.                                                            of Lloyd George%@NL@%
  20191. %@AS@%                                                                 Foul play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20192. %@NL@%
  20193. %@NL@%
  20194. %@2@%Quit fouling like a wimp. If you're gonna foul, knock the crap%@EH@%
  20195. outta him.%@NL@%
  20196. %@CR:FOULPLStewart2  @%%@NL@%
  20197.                                                               Norm Stewart%@NL@%
  20198.                                          Missouri Tigers' basketball coach%@NL@%
  20199.                                                to 6ft 9in Dan Bingenheimer%@NL@%
  20200. %@AS@%                                                                 Foul play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20201. %@NL@%
  20202. %@NL@%
  20203. %@2@%For nothing can seem foul to those that win.%@NL@%
  20204. %@CR:FOULPLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  20205.                                           King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20206.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  20207.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  20208. %@AS@%                                                                 Foul play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20209. %@NL@%
  20210. %@NL@%
  20211. %@NL@%
  20212. %@1@%%@AS@%France%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20213. %@CR:FRANCE          @%%@NL@%
  20214. %@2@%See:%@QR:France@%%@NL@%
  20215.      %@AB@%Paris%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cc967@%%@NL@%
  20216. %@NL@%
  20217. %@2@%France, famed in all great arts, in none supreme.%@NL@%
  20218. %@CR:FRANCEArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  20219.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  20220.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  20221. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20222. %@NL@%
  20223. %@NL@%
  20224. %@2@%How can anyone govern a nation that has two hundred and forty%@EH@%
  20225. different kinds of cheese?%@NL@%
  20226. %@CR:FRANCEdeGaulle  @%%@NL@%
  20227.                                      General Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970)%@NL@%
  20228.                                                           French president%@NL@%
  20229. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20230. %@NL@%
  20231. %@NL@%
  20232. %@2@%France is the only place where you can make love in the afternoon%@EH@%
  20233. without people hammering on your door.%@NL@%
  20234. %@CR:FRANCECartland  @%%@NL@%
  20235.                                                 Barbara Cartland (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  20236.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  20237. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20238. %@NL@%
  20239. %@NL@%
  20240. %@2@%%@AI@%Liberte! Fraternite! Sexualite!%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20241. %@CR:FRANCECartland  @%%@NL@%
  20242.                                                                   graffito%@NL@%
  20243.                                                             %@AI@%in Paris Metro%@AE@%
  20244. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20245. %@NL@%
  20246. %@NL@%
  20247. %@2@%Everything ends this way in France - everything. Weddings,%@EH@%
  20248. christenings, duels, burials, swindlings, diplomatic affairs - everything
  20249. is a pretext for a good dinner.%@NL@%
  20250. %@CR:FRANCEAnouilh   @%%@NL@%
  20251.                                                   Jean Anouilh (1910-1987)%@NL@%
  20252.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  20253. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20254. %@NL@%
  20255. %@NL@%
  20256.      %@2@% . . .  So damn your food and damn your wines,%@NL@%
  20257.      Your twisted loaves and twisting vines,%@NL@%
  20258.      Your %@AI@%table d'hote,%@AE@% your %@AI@%a la carte,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20259.      Your land, your history, your art.%@NL@%
  20260.      From now on you can keep the lot.%@NL@%
  20261.      Take every single thing you've got,%@NL@%
  20262.      Your land, your wealth, your men, your dames,%@NL@%
  20263.      Your dream of independent power,%@NL@%
  20264.      And dear old Konrad Adenauer,%@NL@%
  20265.      And stick them up your Eiffel Tower.%@NL@%
  20266. %@CR:FRANCEJay       @%%@NL@%
  20267.                                                      Anthony Jay (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  20268.                                                 British writer, journalist%@NL@%
  20269. extract from verse on France's rejection of Britain's entry into EEC, 1963%@NL@%
  20270. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20271. %@NL@%
  20272. %@NL@%
  20273. %@2@%The French are a logical people, which is one reason the%@EH@%
  20274. English dislike them so intensely. The other is that they own France,
  20275. a country which we have always judged to be much too good for
  20276. them.%@NL@%
  20277. %@CR:FRANCEMorley3   @%%@NL@%
  20278.                                                    Robert Morley (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  20279.                                                         British actor, wit%@NL@%
  20280. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20281. %@NL@%
  20282. %@NL@%
  20283. %@2@%France is a country where the money falls apart in your hands%@EH@%
  20284. and you can't tear the toilet paper.%@NL@%
  20285. %@CR:FRANCEWilder1   @%%@NL@%
  20286.                                                     Billy Wilder (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  20287.                                                   American writer-director%@NL@%
  20288. %@AS@%                                                                    France%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20289. %@NL@%
  20290. %@NL@%
  20291. %@NL@%
  20292. %@1@%%@AS@%Fraternity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20293. %@CR:FRATERNITY      @%%@NL@%
  20294. %@2@%See:%@QR:Fraternity@%%@NL@%
  20295.      War: %@AB@%Gill%@AE@%%@BO:          2aba6a@%%@NL@%
  20296. %@NL@%
  20297. %@2@%I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the%@EH@%
  20298. sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will
  20299. be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.%@NL@%
  20300. %@CR:FRATERKing3     @%%@NL@%
  20301.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  20302.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  20303. %@AS@%                                                                Fraternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20304. %@NL@%
  20305. %@NL@%
  20306. %@2@%I believe in the brotherhood of all men, but I don't believe%@EH@%
  20307. in wasting brotherhood on anyone who doesn't want to practice it
  20308. with me. Brotherhood is a two-way street.%@NL@%
  20309. %@CR:FRATERMalcomX   @%%@NL@%
  20310.                                                      Malcolm X (1925-1965)%@NL@%
  20311.                                                    American radical leader%@NL@%
  20312. %@AS@%                                                                Fraternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20313. %@NL@%
  20314. %@NL@%
  20315. %@NL@%
  20316. %@1@%%@AS@%Freedom%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20317. %@CR:FREEDOM         @%%@NL@%
  20318. %@2@%See:%@QR:Freedom@%%@NL@%
  20319.      Equality: %@AB@%Bakunin%@AE@%%@BO:           d2b54@%%@NL@%
  20320.      %@AB@%Freedom of Speech%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fbc06@%%@NL@%
  20321.      %@AB@%Liberty%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          174490@%%@NL@%
  20322.      Necessity: %@AB@%Engels%@AE@%%@BO:          1b8ef6@%%@NL@%
  20323.      Sacrifice: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          234d4c@%%@NL@%
  20324.      The State: %@AB@%Lenin%@AE@%%@BO:          26cebb@%%@NL@%
  20325. %@NL@%
  20326. %@2@%Man was born free, and everywhere he is in chains.%@NL@%
  20327. %@CR:FREEDORousseau  @%%@NL@%
  20328.                                          Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)%@NL@%
  20329.                               Swiss-French philosopher, political theorist%@NL@%
  20330. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20331. %@NL@%
  20332. %@NL@%
  20333. %@2@%All that makes existence valuable to anyone depends on the%@EH@%
  20334. enforcement of restraints upon the actions of other people.%@NL@%
  20335. %@CR:FREEDOMill      @%%@NL@%
  20336.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  20337.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  20338. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20339. %@NL@%
  20340. %@NL@%
  20341. %@2@%Freedom is always freedom for the one who thinks differently.%@NL@%
  20342. %@CR:FREEDOLuxemburg @%%@NL@%
  20343.                                                 Rosa Luxemburg (1870-1919)%@NL@%
  20344.                                                       German revolutionary%@NL@%
  20345. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20346. %@NL@%
  20347. %@NL@%
  20348. %@2@%None who have always been free can understand the terrible%@EH@%
  20349. fascinating power of the hope of freedom to those who are not free.%@NL@%
  20350. %@CR:FREEDOBuck      @%%@NL@%
  20351.                                                  Pearl S. Buck (1892-1973)%@NL@%
  20352.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  20353. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20354. %@NL@%
  20355. %@NL@%
  20356. %@2@%Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must%@EH@%
  20357. be demanded by the oppressed.%@NL@%
  20358. %@CR:FREEDOKing3     @%%@NL@%
  20359.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  20360.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  20361. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20362. %@NL@%
  20363. %@NL@%
  20364. %@2@%Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom%@EH@%
  20365. to err.%@NL@%
  20366. %@CR:FREEDOGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  20367.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  20368.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  20369. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20370. %@NL@%
  20371. %@NL@%
  20372. %@2@%The great trouble with the young people today is their freedom;%@EH@%
  20373. they can no longer disobey.%@NL@%
  20374. %@CR:FREEDOCocteau   @%%@NL@%
  20375.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  20376.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  20377. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20378. %@NL@%
  20379. %@NL@%
  20380. %@2@%The free way of life proposes ends, but it does not prescribe%@EH@%
  20381. means.%@NL@%
  20382. %@CR:FREEDOKennedy2  @%%@NL@%
  20383.                                                 Robert Kennedy (1925-1968)%@NL@%
  20384.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  20385. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20386. %@NL@%
  20387. %@NL@%
  20388. %@2@%We got a free country here in this island, only none of us%@EH@%
  20389. is free, but even so we is unfree equally.%@NL@%
  20390. %@CR:FREEDOMankowitz @%%@NL@%
  20391.                                                   Wolf Mankowitz (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  20392.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  20393. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20394. %@NL@%
  20395. %@NL@%
  20396. %@2@%Only very slowly and late have men come to realize that unless%@EH@%
  20397. freedom is universal it is only extended privilege.%@NL@%
  20398. %@CR:FREEDOHill2     @%%@NL@%
  20399.                                                 Christopher Hill (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  20400.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  20401. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20402. %@NL@%
  20403. %@NL@%
  20404. %@2@%No human being, however great, or powerful, was ever so free%@EH@%
  20405. as a fish.%@NL@%
  20406. %@CR:FREEDORuskin    @%%@NL@%
  20407.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  20408.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  20409. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20410. %@NL@%
  20411. %@NL@%
  20412. %@2@%The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free%@EH@%
  20413. to do than in what we are free not to do.%@NL@%
  20414. %@CR:FREEDOHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  20415.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  20416.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  20417. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20418. %@NL@%
  20419. %@NL@%
  20420.      %@2@%I gave my life for freedom - this I know:%@NL@%
  20421.      For those who bade me fight had told me so.%@NL@%
  20422. %@CR:FREEDOEwer      @%%@NL@%
  20423.                                                     W. N. Ewer (1885-1976)%@NL@%
  20424. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20425. %@NL@%
  20426. %@NL@%
  20427. %@2@%Freedom does not always win. This is one of the bitterest lessons%@EH@%
  20428. of history.%@NL@%
  20429. %@CR:FREEDOTaylor1   @%%@NL@%
  20430.                                                  A. J. P. Taylor (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  20431.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  20432. %@AS@%                                                                   Freedom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20433. %@NL@%
  20434. %@NL@%
  20435. %@NL@%
  20436. %@1@%%@AS@%Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20437. %@CR:FREEDOMOFSPEECH @%%@NL@%
  20438. %@2@%See:%@QR:Freedom of Speech@%%@NL@%
  20439.      %@AB@%Freedom%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fa446@%%@NL@%
  20440.      %@AB@%Liberty%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          174490@%%@NL@%
  20441. %@NL@%
  20442. %@2@%Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely%@EH@%
  20443. according to conscience, above all liberties.%@NL@%
  20444. %@CR:FREEDOMilton    @%%@NL@%
  20445.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  20446.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20447. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20448. %@NL@%
  20449. %@NL@%
  20450. %@2@%Every man has a right to utter what he thinks truth, and every%@EH@%
  20451. man has a right to knock him down for it.%@NL@%
  20452. %@CR:FREEDOJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  20453.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  20454.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  20455. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20456. %@NL@%
  20457. %@NL@%
  20458. %@2@%People hardly ever make use of the freedom they have, for example,%@EH@%
  20459. freedom of thought; instead they demand freedom of speech as a
  20460. compensation.%@NL@%
  20461. %@CR:FREEDOKierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  20462.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  20463.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  20464. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20465. %@NL@%
  20466. %@NL@%
  20467. %@2@%Liberty of thought means liberty to communicate one's thought.%@NL@%
  20468. %@CR:FREEDOdeMadariag@%%@NL@%
  20469.                                          Salvador de Madariaga (1886-1978)%@NL@%
  20470.                                           Spanish diplomat, writer, critic%@NL@%
  20471. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20472. %@NL@%
  20473. %@NL@%
  20474. %@2@%The sound of tireless voices is the price we pay for the right%@EH@%
  20475. to hear the music of our own opinions.%@NL@%
  20476. %@CR:FREEDOStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  20477.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  20478.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  20479. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20480. %@NL@%
  20481. %@NL@%
  20482. %@2@%It is now virtually impossible for the media in Britain to%@EH@%
  20483. expose official wrongdoing without technically breaking the law.%@NL@%
  20484. %@CR:FREEDOTrelford  @%%@NL@%
  20485.                                                  Donald Trelford (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  20486.                                                   British newspaper editor%@NL@%
  20487. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20488. %@NL@%
  20489. %@NL@%
  20490. %@2@%Freedom of speech does not give a person the right to shout%@EH@%
  20491. "Fire!" in a crowded theater.%@NL@%
  20492. %@CR:FREEDOHolmes2   @%%@NL@%
  20493.                                   Justice Oliver WendellHolmes (1841-1935)%@NL@%
  20494.                                                            American jurist%@NL@%
  20495. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20496. %@NL@%
  20497. %@NL@%
  20498. %@2@%I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death%@EH@%
  20499. your right to say it.%@NL@%
  20500. %@CR:FREEDOVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  20501.                                                                epitome of %@NL@%
  20502.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  20503.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  20504. %@AS@%                                                         Freedom of Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20505. %@NL@%
  20506. %@NL@%
  20507. %@NL@%
  20508. %@1@%%@AS@%Friendlessness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20509. %@CR:FRIENDLESSNESS  @%%@NL@%
  20510. %@2@%See:%@QR:Friendlessness@%%@NL@%
  20511.      Leadership: %@AB@%Shelley%@AE@%%@BO:          16f298@%%@NL@%
  20512. %@NL@%
  20513. %@2@%Friendless. Having no favors to bestow. Destitute of fortune.%@EH@%
  20514. Addicted to utterance of truth and common sense.%@NL@%
  20515. %@CR:FRIENDBierce    @%%@NL@%
  20516.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  20517.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20518. %@AS@%                                                            Friendlessness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20519. %@NL@%
  20520. %@NL@%
  20521. %@2@%No one can have a higher opinion of him than I have - and%@EH@%
  20522. I think he is a dirty little beast.%@NL@%
  20523. %@CR:FRIENDGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  20524.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  20525.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  20526. %@AS@%                                                            Friendlessness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20527. %@NL@%
  20528. %@NL@%
  20529. %@NL@%
  20530. %@1@%%@AS@%Friendliness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20531. %@CR:FRIENDLINESS    @%%@NL@%
  20532. %@2@%See:%@QR:Friendliness@%%@NL@%
  20533.      America: %@AB@%Waugh%@AE@%%@BO:           18666@%%@NL@%
  20534. %@NL@%
  20535.      %@2@%The social, friendly, honest man,%@NL@%
  20536.      Whate'er he be,%@NL@%
  20537.      'Tis he fulfils great Nature's plan,%@NL@%
  20538.      And none but he!%@NL@%
  20539. %@CR:FRIENDBurns     @%%@NL@%
  20540.                                                   Robert Burns (1759-1796)%@NL@%
  20541.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  20542. %@AS@%                                                              Friendliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20543. %@NL@%
  20544. %@NL@%
  20545. %@2@%A friend to all is a friend to none.%@NL@%
  20546. %@CR:FRIENDBurns     @%%@NL@%
  20547.                                                              Greek proverb%@NL@%
  20548. %@AS@%                                                              Friendliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20549. %@NL@%
  20550. %@NL@%
  20551. %@2@%The American has dwindled into an Odd Fellow - one who may%@EH@%
  20552. be known by the development of his organ of gregariousness.%@NL@%
  20553. %@CR:FRIENDThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  20554.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  20555.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  20556. %@AS@%                                                              Friendliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20557. %@NL@%
  20558. %@NL@%
  20559. %@NL@%
  20560. %@1@%%@AS@%Friends%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20561. %@CR:FRIENDS         @%%@NL@%
  20562. %@2@%See:%@QR:Friends@%%@NL@%
  20563.      %@AB@%Acquaintance%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            2356@%%@NL@%
  20564.      Altruism: %@AB@%Charles%@AE@%%@BO:           15d85@%%@NL@%
  20565.      Argument: %@AB@%Auden%@AE@%%@BO:           274ce@%%@NL@%
  20566.      Discretion: %@AB@%de la Fontaine%@AE@%%@BO:           ae552@%%@NL@%
  20567.      Enemies: %@AB@%de Poitiers%@AE@%%@BO:           c7e90@%%@NL@%
  20568.      Family: %@AB@%Mumford%@AE@%%@BO:           e4ac5@%%@NL@%
  20569.      Greatness: %@AB@%Horace%@AE@%%@BO:          11a3fd@%%@NL@%
  20570.      Hard Times: %@AB@%Welles%@AE@%%@BO:          122354@%%@NL@%
  20571.      Hypocrisy: %@AB@%Gay%@AE@%%@BO:          13ff9e@%%@NL@%
  20572.      Judgments: %@AB@%Bennett%@AE@%%@BO:          1633f6@%%@NL@%
  20573.      Money: %@AB@%Milligan%@AE@%%@BO:          1ae26b@%%@NL@%
  20574.      Portraits: %@AB@%Sargent%@AE@%%@BO:          1f31cb@%%@NL@%
  20575. %@NL@%
  20576. %@2@%What is a friend? A single soul dwelling in two bodies.%@NL@%
  20577. %@CR:FRIENDAristotle @%%@NL@%
  20578.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  20579.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  20580. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20581. %@NL@%
  20582. %@NL@%
  20583. %@2@%So long as we are loved by others I should say that we are%@EH@%
  20584. almost indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend.%@NL@%
  20585. %@CR:FRIENDStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  20586.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  20587.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  20588. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20589. %@NL@%
  20590. %@NL@%
  20591. %@2@%It is more shameful to distrust one's friends than to be deceived%@EH@%
  20592. by them.%@NL@%
  20593. %@CR:FRIENDLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  20594.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  20595.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  20596. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20597. %@NL@%
  20598. %@NL@%
  20599. %@2@%It is in the thirties that we want friends. In the forties%@EH@%
  20600. we know that they won't save us any more than love did.%@NL@%
  20601. %@CR:FRIENDFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  20602.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  20603.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20604. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20605. %@NL@%
  20606. %@NL@%
  20607. %@2@%If you would have friends, first learn to do without them.%@NL@%
  20608. %@CR:FRIENDHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  20609.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  20610.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20611. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20612. %@NL@%
  20613. %@NL@%
  20614. %@2@%It's the friends you can call up at 4 am that matter.%@NL@%
  20615. %@CR:FRIENDDietrich  @%%@NL@%
  20616.                                                 Marlene Dietrich (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  20617.                                               German-American film actress%@NL@%
  20618. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20619. %@NL@%
  20620. %@NL@%
  20621. %@2@%I do then with my friends, as I do with my books. I would have%@EH@%
  20622. them where I can find them, but I seldom use them.%@NL@%
  20623. %@CR:FRIENDEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  20624.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  20625.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  20626. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20627. %@NL@%
  20628. %@NL@%
  20629. %@2@%We cherish our friends not for their ability to amuse us, but%@EH@%
  20630. for ours to amuse them.%@NL@%
  20631. %@CR:FRIENDWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  20632.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  20633.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  20634. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20635. %@NL@%
  20636. %@NL@%
  20637. %@2@%I do not believe that friends are necessarily the people you%@EH@%
  20638. like best, they are merely the people who got there first.%@NL@%
  20639. %@CR:FRIENDUstinov   @%%@NL@%
  20640.                                                    Peter Ustinov (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  20641.                                                 British author, actor, wit%@NL@%
  20642. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20643. %@NL@%
  20644. %@NL@%
  20645. %@2@%Friends are like fiddle strings, they must not be screwed too%@EH@%
  20646. tight.%@NL@%
  20647. %@CR:FRIENDUstinov   @%%@NL@%
  20648.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  20649. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20650. %@NL@%
  20651. %@NL@%
  20652. %@2@%Most people enjoy the inferiority of their best friends.%@NL@%
  20653. %@CR:FRIENDChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  20654.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  20655.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  20656. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20657. %@NL@%
  20658. %@NL@%
  20659. %@2@%In the misfortunes of our best friends we always find something%@EH@%
  20660. not altogether displeasing to us.%@NL@%
  20661. %@CR:FRIENDLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  20662.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  20663.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  20664. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20665. %@NL@%
  20666. %@NL@%
  20667.      %@2@%Give me the avowed, the erect, the manly foe,%@NL@%
  20668.      Bold I can meet - perhaps may turn his blow;%@NL@%
  20669.      But of all plagues, good Heaven, thy wrath can send,%@NL@%
  20670.      Save, save, oh save me from the%@NL@%
  20671.      Candid Friend.%@NL@%
  20672. %@CR:FRIENDCanning   @%%@NL@%
  20673.                                                 George Canning (1770-1827)%@NL@%
  20674.                                          English statesman, prime minister%@NL@%
  20675. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20676. %@NL@%
  20677. %@NL@%
  20678. %@2@%Instead of loving your enemies, treat your friends a little%@EH@%
  20679. better.%@NL@%
  20680. %@CR:FRIENDHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  20681.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  20682.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  20683. %@AS@%                                                                   Friends%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20684. %@NL@%
  20685. %@NL@%
  20686. %@NL@%
  20687. %@1@%%@AS@%Friendship%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20688. %@CR:FRIENDSHIP      @%%@NL@%
  20689. %@2@%See:%@QR:Friendship@%%@NL@%
  20690.      %@AB@%Acquaintance%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            2356@%%@NL@%
  20691.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           10110@%%@NL@%
  20692.      Altruism: %@AB@%Charles%@AE@%%@BO:           15d85@%%@NL@%
  20693.      Courtesy: %@AB@%Colette%@AE@%%@BO:           89497@%%@NL@%
  20694.      Death: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:           99a72@%%@NL@%
  20695.      Drink: %@AB@%wayside pulpit%@AE@%%@BO:           b9ce6@%%@NL@%
  20696.      Family: %@AB@%Rossetti%@AE@%%@BO:           e4043@%%@NL@%
  20697.      Marriage: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          194545@%%@NL@%
  20698.      Power: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          1f8752@%%@NL@%
  20699. %@NL@%
  20700. %@2@%A sudden thought strikes me; - let us swear an eternal friendship.%@NL@%
  20701. %@CR:FRIENDFrere     @%%@NL@%
  20702.                                             John Hookham Frere (1769-1846)%@NL@%
  20703.                                                   British diplomat, author%@NL@%
  20704. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20705. %@NL@%
  20706. %@NL@%
  20707. %@2@%Be courteous to all, but intimate with few, and let those few%@EH@%
  20708. be well tried before you give them your confidence. True friendship
  20709. is a plant of slow growth, and must undergo and withstand the
  20710. shocks of adversity before it is entitled to the appellation.%@NL@%
  20711. %@CR:FRIENDWashington@%%@NL@%
  20712.                                              George Washington (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  20713.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  20714. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20715. %@NL@%
  20716. %@NL@%
  20717. %@2@%If I am pressed to say why I loved him, I feel it could only%@EH@%
  20718. be explained by answering: "Because it was him; because it was
  20719. me."%@NL@%
  20720. %@CR:FRIENDMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  20721.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  20722.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  20723. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20724. %@NL@%
  20725. %@NL@%
  20726. %@2@%Men seem to kick friendship around like a football, but it%@EH@%
  20727. doesn't seem to crack. Women treat it as glass and it goes to pieces.%@NL@%
  20728. %@CR:FRIENDLindbergh @%%@NL@%
  20729.                                            Anne Morrow Lindbergh (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  20730.                                                    American poet, essayist%@NL@%
  20731. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20732. %@NL@%
  20733. %@NL@%
  20734. %@2@%Oh, the pious friendships of the female sex!%@NL@%
  20735. %@CR:FRIENDCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  20736.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  20737.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  20738. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20739. %@NL@%
  20740. %@NL@%
  20741. %@2@%The endearing elegance of female friendship.%@NL@%
  20742. %@CR:FRIENDJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  20743.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  20744.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  20745. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20746. %@NL@%
  20747. %@NL@%
  20748. %@2@%If a man does not make new acquaintance as he advances through%@EH@%
  20749. life, he will soon find himself alone. A man, Sir, should keep
  20750. his friendship in constant repair.%@NL@%
  20751. %@CR:FRIENDJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  20752.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  20753.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  20754. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20755. %@NL@%
  20756. %@NL@%
  20757. %@2@%Friendship is Love, without his wings!%@NL@%
  20758. %@CR:FRIENDByron2    @%%@NL@%
  20759.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  20760.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20761. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20762. %@NL@%
  20763. %@NL@%
  20764.      %@2@%Love is only chatter,%@NL@%
  20765.      Friends are all that matter.%@NL@%
  20766. %@CR:FRIENDBurgess2  @%%@NL@%
  20767.                                                 Gelett Burgess (1866-1951)%@NL@%
  20768.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  20769. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20770. %@NL@%
  20771. %@NL@%
  20772. %@2@%Friendship is a disinterested commerce between equals; love,%@EH@%
  20773. an abject intercourse between tyrants and slaves.%@NL@%
  20774. %@CR:FRIENDGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  20775.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  20776.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  20777. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20778. %@NL@%
  20779. %@NL@%
  20780. %@2@%Friendship may, and often does, grow into love, but love never%@EH@%
  20781. subsides into friendship.%@NL@%
  20782. %@CR:FRIENDByron2    @%%@NL@%
  20783.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  20784.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20785. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20786. %@NL@%
  20787. %@NL@%
  20788. %@2@%That's what friendship means: sharing the prejudice of experience.%@NL@%
  20789. %@CR:FRIENDBukowski  @%%@NL@%
  20790.                                                 Charles Bukowski (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  20791.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20792. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20793. %@NL@%
  20794. %@NL@%
  20795. %@2@%Love is blind; friendship closes its eyes.%@NL@%
  20796. %@CR:FRIENDBukowski  @%%@NL@%
  20797.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  20798. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20799. %@NL@%
  20800. %@NL@%
  20801. %@2@%Friendship creates only the illusion of not being alone.%@NL@%
  20802. %@CR:FRIENDWelles    @%%@NL@%
  20803.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  20804.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  20805. %@AS@%                                                                Friendship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20806. %@NL@%
  20807. %@NL@%
  20808. %@NL@%
  20809. %@1@%%@AS@%Fun%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20810. %@CR:FUN             @%%@NL@%
  20811. %@2@%%@QR:Fun@%Most of the time I don't have much fun. The rest of the time%@EH@%
  20812. I don't have any fun at all.%@NL@%
  20813. %@CR:FUN   Allen4    @%%@NL@%
  20814.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  20815.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  20816. %@AS@%                                                                       Fun%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20817. %@NL@%
  20818. %@NL@%
  20819. %@2@%All the animals except man know that the principle business%@EH@%
  20820. of life is to enjoy it.%@NL@%
  20821. %@CR:FUN   Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  20822.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  20823.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  20824. %@AS@%                                                                       Fun%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20825. %@NL@%
  20826. %@NL@%
  20827.      %@2@%For present joys are more to flesh and blood%@NL@%
  20828.      Than a dull prospect of a distant good.%@NL@%
  20829. %@CR:FUN   Dryden    @%%@NL@%
  20830.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  20831.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  20832. %@AS@%                                                                       Fun%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20833. %@NL@%
  20834. %@NL@%
  20835. %@2@%Fun is a good thing but only when it spoils nothing better.%@NL@%
  20836. %@CR:FUN   Santayana @%%@NL@%
  20837.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  20838.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  20839. %@AS@%                                                                       Fun%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20840. %@NL@%
  20841. %@NL@%
  20842. %@2@%People must not do things for fun. We are not here for fun.%@EH@%
  20843. There is no reference to fun in any Act of Parliament.%@NL@%
  20844. %@CR:FUN   Herbert1  @%%@NL@%
  20845.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  20846.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  20847. %@AS@%                                                                       Fun%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20848. %@NL@%
  20849. %@NL@%
  20850. %@NL@%
  20851. %@1@%%@AS@%Function%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20852. %@CR:FUNCTION        @%%@NL@%
  20853. %@2@%%@QR:Function@%The question of common sense is always 'What is it good for?' - a%@EH@%
  20854. question which would abolish the rose and be answered triumphantly
  20855. by the cabbage.%@NL@%
  20856. %@CR:FUNCTILowell2   @%%@NL@%
  20857.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  20858.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  20859. %@AS@%                                                                  Function%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20860. %@NL@%
  20861. %@NL@%
  20862. %@2@%Utility is the great idol of the age, to which all powers must%@EH@%
  20863. do service and all talents swear allegiance.%@NL@%
  20864. %@CR:FUNCTISchiller  @%%@NL@%
  20865.                                         Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805)%@NL@%
  20866.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  20867. %@AS@%                                                                  Function%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20868. %@NL@%
  20869. %@NL@%
  20870. %@NL@%
  20871. %@1@%%@AS@%Funerals%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20872. %@CR:FUNERALS        @%%@NL@%
  20873. %@2@%%@QR:Funerals@%Our respect for the dead, when they are just dead, is something%@EH@%
  20874. wonderful.%@NL@%
  20875. %@CR:FUNERARuskin    @%%@NL@%
  20876.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  20877.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  20878. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20879. %@NL@%
  20880. %@NL@%
  20881. %@2@%When we attend the funerals of our friends we grieve for them,%@EH@%
  20882. but when we go to those of other people it is chiefly our own deaths
  20883. that we mourn for.%@NL@%
  20884. %@CR:FUNERABrenan    @%%@NL@%
  20885.                                                  Gerald Brenan (1894-1987)%@NL@%
  20886.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  20887. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20888. %@NL@%
  20889. %@NL@%
  20890.      %@2@%As grand%@NL@%
  20891.      And griefless as a rich man's funeral.%@NL@%
  20892. %@CR:FUNERADobell    @%%@NL@%
  20893.                                         Sidney Thompson Dobell (1824-1874)%@NL@%
  20894.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  20895. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20896. %@NL@%
  20897. %@NL@%
  20898. %@2@%Funeral pomp is more for the vanity of the living than for%@EH@%
  20899. the honour of the dead.%@NL@%
  20900. %@CR:FUNERALaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  20901.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  20902.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  20903. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20904. %@NL@%
  20905. %@NL@%
  20906. %@2@%I did not attend his funeral; but I wrote a nice letter saying%@EH@%
  20907. I approved of it.%@NL@%
  20908. %@CR:FUNERATwain     @%%@NL@%
  20909.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  20910.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20911. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20912. %@NL@%
  20913. %@NL@%
  20914. %@2@%The only reason I might go to the funeral is to make absolutely%@EH@%
  20915. sure that he's dead.%@NL@%
  20916. %@CR:FUNERATwain     @%%@NL@%
  20917.   an "eminent editor" of Lord Beaverbrook, quoted by Anthony Sampson, 1965%@NL@%
  20918. %@AS@%                                                                  Funerals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20919. %@NL@%
  20920. %@NL@%
  20921. %@NL@%
  20922. %@1@%%@AS@%Futility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20923. %@CR:FUTILITY        @%%@NL@%
  20924. %@2@%%@QR:Futility@%I have measured out my life with coffee spoons.%@NL@%
  20925. %@CR:FUTILIEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  20926.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  20927.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  20928. %@AS@%                                                                  Futility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20929. %@NL@%
  20930. %@NL@%
  20931. %@2@%A constant smirk upon the face, and a whiffling activity%@EH@%
  20932. of the body, are strong indications of futility.%@NL@%
  20933. %@CR:FUTILIChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  20934.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  20935.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  20936. %@AS@%                                                                  Futility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20937. %@NL@%
  20938. %@NL@%
  20939. %@2@%As futile as a clock in an empty house.%@NL@%
  20940. %@CR:FUTILIThurber   @%%@NL@%
  20941.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  20942.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  20943. %@AS@%                                                                  Futility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20944. %@NL@%
  20945. %@NL@%
  20946. %@NL@%
  20947. %@1@%%@AS@%The Future%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20948. %@CR:THEFUTURE       @%%@NL@%
  20949. %@2@%%@QR:The Future@%Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us%@EH@%
  20950. at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts
  20951. itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday.%@NL@%
  20952. %@CR:THEFUTWayne     @%%@NL@%
  20953.                                                     John Wayne (1907-1979)%@NL@%
  20954.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  20955. %@AS@%                                                                The Future%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20956. %@NL@%
  20957. %@NL@%
  20958. %@2@%The future is called "perhaps," which is the only possible%@EH@%
  20959. thing to call the future. And the important thing is not to allow
  20960. that to scare you.%@NL@%
  20961. %@CR:THEFUTWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  20962.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  20963.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  20964. %@AS@%                                                                The Future%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20965. %@NL@%
  20966. %@NL@%
  20967. %@2@%Future. That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our%@EH@%
  20968. friends are true and our happiness is assured.%@NL@%
  20969. %@CR:THEFUTBierce    @%%@NL@%
  20970.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  20971.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  20972. %@AS@%                                                                The Future%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20973. %@NL@%
  20974. %@NL@%
  20975. %@2@%We should all be concerned about the future because we will%@EH@%
  20976. have to spend the rest of our lives there.%@NL@%
  20977. %@CR:THEFUTKettering @%%@NL@%
  20978.                                                C. F. Kettering (1876-1958)%@NL@%
  20979.                                           American engineer, industrialist%@NL@%
  20980. %@AS@%                                                                The Future%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20981. %@NL@%
  20982. %@NL@%
  20983.      %@2@%I have a Vision of the Future, chum.%@NL@%
  20984.      the workers' flats in fields of soya beans%@NL@%
  20985.      Tower up like silver pencils.%@NL@%
  20986. %@CR:THEFUTBetjeman  @%%@NL@%
  20987.                                                  John Betjeman (1906-1984)%@NL@%
  20988.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  20989. %@AS@%                                                                The Future%@AE@%%@NL@%
  20990. %@NL@%
  20991. %@NL@%
  20992. %@NL@%
  20993. %@1@%%@AS@%Gambling%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  20994. %@CR:GAMBLING        @%%@NL@%
  20995. %@2@%See:%@QR:Gambling@%%@NL@%
  20996.      Faith: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:           de9f5@%%@NL@%
  20997. %@NL@%
  20998. %@2@%Gambling promises the poor what property performs for the rich - something%@EH@%
  20999. for nothing.%@NL@%
  21000. %@CR:GAMBLIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21001.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  21002.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  21003. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21004. %@NL@%
  21005. %@NL@%
  21006. %@2@%There are two great pleasures in gambling: that of winning%@EH@%
  21007. and that of losing.%@NL@%
  21008. %@CR:GAMBLIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21009.                                                             French proverb%@NL@%
  21010. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21011. %@NL@%
  21012. %@NL@%
  21013. %@2@%It is the child of avarice, the brother of iniquity, and the%@EH@%
  21014. father of mischief.%@NL@%
  21015. %@CR:GAMBLIWashington@%%@NL@%
  21016.                                              George Washington (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  21017.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  21018. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21019. %@NL@%
  21020. %@NL@%
  21021. %@2@%No wife can endure a gambling husband unless he is a steady%@EH@%
  21022. winner.%@NL@%
  21023. %@CR:GAMBLIDewar     @%%@NL@%
  21024.                                                     Lord Dewar (1864-1930)%@NL@%
  21025.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  21026. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21027. %@NL@%
  21028. %@NL@%
  21029. %@2@%The only man who makes money following the races is one who%@EH@%
  21030. does it with a broom and shovel.%@NL@%
  21031. %@CR:GAMBLIHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  21032.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  21033.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21034. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21035. %@NL@%
  21036. %@NL@%
  21037. %@2@%Time spent in a casino is time given to death, a foretaste%@EH@%
  21038. of the hour when one's flesh will be diverted to the purposes of
  21039. the worm and not the will.%@NL@%
  21040. %@CR:GAMBLIWest2     @%%@NL@%
  21041.                                                   Rebecca West (1892-1983)%@NL@%
  21042.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  21043. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21044. %@NL@%
  21045. %@NL@%
  21046. %@2@%Death and dice level all distinctions.%@NL@%
  21047. %@CR:GAMBLIFoote     @%%@NL@%
  21048.                                                   Samuel Foote (1720-1777)%@NL@%
  21049.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  21050. %@AS@%                                                                  Gambling%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21051. %@NL@%
  21052. %@NL@%
  21053. %@NL@%
  21054. %@1@%%@AS@%Gardens%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21055. %@CR:GARDENS         @%%@NL@%
  21056. %@2@%%@QR:Gardens@%God Almighty first planted a garden. And indeed it is the purest%@EH@%
  21057. of human pleasures.%@NL@%
  21058. %@CR:GARDENBacon     @%%@NL@%
  21059.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  21060.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  21061. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21062. %@NL@%
  21063. %@NL@%
  21064.      %@2@%Annihilating all that's made%@NL@%
  21065.      To a green thought in a green shade.%@NL@%
  21066. %@CR:GARDENMarvell   @%%@NL@%
  21067.                                                 Andrew Marvell (1621-1678)%@NL@%
  21068.                                                  English metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  21069. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21070. %@NL@%
  21071. %@NL@%
  21072. %@2@%Every flower is a soul blossoming out to nature.%@NL@%
  21073. %@CR:GARDENNerval    @%%@NL@%
  21074.                                               Gerard de Nerval (1808-1855)%@NL@%
  21075.                                                  French writer, translator%@NL@%
  21076. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21077. %@NL@%
  21078. %@NL@%
  21079.      %@2@%These flowers, which were splendid and sprightly,%@NL@%
  21080.      Waking in the dawn of the morning,%@NL@%
  21081.      In the evening will be a pitiful frivolity,%@NL@%
  21082.      Sleeping in the night's cold arms.%@NL@%
  21083. %@CR:GARDENlaBarca   @%%@NL@%
  21084.                                     Pedro Calderon de la Barca (1600-1681)%@NL@%
  21085.                                                         Spanish playwright%@NL@%
  21086. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21087. %@NL@%
  21088. %@NL@%
  21089. %@2@%What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered.%@NL@%
  21090. %@CR:GARDENEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  21091.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  21092.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  21093. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21094. %@NL@%
  21095. %@NL@%
  21096. %@2@%Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond;%@EH@%
  21097. cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education.%@NL@%
  21098. %@CR:GARDENTwain     @%%@NL@%
  21099.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  21100.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21101. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21102. %@NL@%
  21103. %@NL@%
  21104. %@2@%What a man needs in gardening is a cast-iron back, with a hinge%@EH@%
  21105. in it.%@NL@%
  21106. %@CR:GARDENWarner    @%%@NL@%
  21107.                                              Charles D. Warner (1829-1900)%@NL@%
  21108.                                                American essayist, novelist%@NL@%
  21109. %@AS@%                                                                   Gardens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21110. %@NL@%
  21111. %@NL@%
  21112. %@NL@%
  21113. %@1@%%@AS@%Gays%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21114. %@CR:GAYS            @%%@NL@%
  21115. %@2@%See:%@QR:Gays@%%@NL@%
  21116.      AIDS: %@AB@%Kramer%@AE@%%@BO:           1496a@%%@NL@%
  21117. %@NL@%
  21118. %@2@%This sort of thing may be tolerated by the French - but%@EH@%
  21119. we are British, thank God.%@NL@%
  21120. %@CR:GAYS  ViscountMo@%%@NL@%
  21121.                                            Viscount Montgomery (1887-1976)%@NL@%
  21122.                                                            British soldier%@NL@%
  21123. %@AS@%                                                                      Gays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21124. %@NL@%
  21125. %@NL@%
  21126. %@2@%Homosexuality is a sickness, just as are baby-rape or wanting%@EH@%
  21127. to become head of General Motors.%@NL@%
  21128. %@CR:GAYS  Cleaver   @%%@NL@%
  21129.                                                 Eldridge Cleaver (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  21130.                                              American black leader, writer%@NL@%
  21131. %@AS@%                                                                      Gays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21132. %@NL@%
  21133. %@NL@%
  21134. %@2@%There is probably no sensitive heterosexual alive who is not%@EH@%
  21135. preoccupied with his latent homosexuality.%@NL@%
  21136. %@CR:GAYS  Mailer    @%%@NL@%
  21137.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  21138.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21139. %@AS@%                                                                      Gays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21140. %@NL@%
  21141. %@NL@%
  21142. %@2@%This is a celebration of individual freedom, not of homosexuality.%@EH@%
  21143. No government has the right to tell its citizens when or whom to
  21144. love. The only queer people are those who don't love anybody.%@NL@%
  21145. %@CR:GAYS  Brown5    @%%@NL@%
  21146.                                                   Rita Mae Brown (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  21147.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  21148.                                                  of the Gay Olympics, 1982%@NL@%
  21149. %@AS@%                                                                      Gays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21150. %@NL@%
  21151. %@NL@%
  21152. %@2@%The only way we'll have real pride is when we demand recognition%@EH@%
  21153. of a culture that isn't just sexual. It's all there - all
  21154. through history we've been there; but we have to claim it, and identify
  21155. who was in it, and articulate what's in our minds and hearts and
  21156. all our creative contributions to this earth. And until we do that,
  21157. and until we organize ourselves block by neighborhood by city by
  21158. state into a united visible community that fights back, we're doomed.%@NL@%
  21159. %@CR:GAYS  Kramer    @%%@NL@%
  21160.                                                      Ned, %@AI@%The Normal Heart%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21161.                                                     Larry Kramer (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  21162.                                              American playwright, novelist%@NL@%
  21163. %@AS@%                                                                      Gays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21164. %@NL@%
  21165. %@NL@%
  21166. %@NL@%
  21167. %@1@%%@AS@%Generals%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21168. %@CR:GENERALS        @%%@NL@%
  21169. %@2@%See:%@QR:Generals@%%@NL@%
  21170.      %@AB@%The Army%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           2a13e@%%@NL@%
  21171.      Politicians: %@AB@%Montgomery%@AE@%%@BO:          1ecbdd@%%@NL@%
  21172. %@NL@%
  21173. %@2@%I made all my generals out of mud.%@NL@%
  21174. %@CR:GENERANapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  21175.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  21176.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  21177. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21178. %@NL@%
  21179. %@NL@%
  21180. %@2@%One murder made a villain, millions a hero.%@NL@%
  21181. %@CR:GENERAPorteous  @%%@NL@%
  21182.                                                Beilby Porteous (1731-1808)%@NL@%
  21183.                                                  English clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  21184. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21185. %@NL@%
  21186. %@NL@%
  21187. %@2@%All though history it's the nations that have given most to%@EH@%
  21188. the generals and the least to the people that have been the first
  21189. to fall.%@NL@%
  21190. %@CR:GENERATruman    @%%@NL@%
  21191.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  21192.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  21193. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21194. %@NL@%
  21195. %@NL@%
  21196. %@2@%Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives%@EH@%
  21197. acclaim earned in the blood of his followers and the sacrifices
  21198. of his friends.%@NL@%
  21199. %@CR:GENERAEisenhower@%%@NL@%
  21200.                                           Dwight D. Eisenhower (1890-1969)%@NL@%
  21201.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  21202. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21203. %@NL@%
  21204. %@NL@%
  21205. %@2@%Soldiers win battles and generals get the credit.%@NL@%
  21206. %@CR:GENERANapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  21207.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  21208.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  21209. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21210. %@NL@%
  21211. %@NL@%
  21212. %@2@%The best generals I have known were stupid or absent-minded%@EH@%
  21213. men  . . .  Not only does a good army commander not need any special
  21214. qualities, on the contrary he needs the absence of the highest
  21215. and best human attributes - love, poetry, tenderness, and philosophic
  21216. inquiring doubt. He should be limited, firmly convinced that what
  21217. he is doing is very important (otherwise he will not have sufficient
  21218. patience), and only then will he be a brave leader. God forbid
  21219. that he should be humane, should love, or pity, or think of what
  21220. is just and unjust.%@NL@%
  21221. %@CR:GENERATolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  21222.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  21223.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  21224.                                                         from %@AI@%War and Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21225.                                             trans. Louise and Aylmer Maude%@NL@%
  21226. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21227. %@NL@%
  21228. %@NL@%
  21229. %@2@%It is better to have a lion at the head of an army of sheep%@EH@%
  21230. than a sheep at the head of an army of lions.%@NL@%
  21231. %@CR:GENERADefoe     @%%@NL@%
  21232.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  21233.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  21234. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21235. %@NL@%
  21236. %@NL@%
  21237. %@2@%My center is giving way, my right is in retreat; situation%@EH@%
  21238. excellent. I shall attack.%@NL@%
  21239. %@CR:GENERAFoch      @%%@NL@%
  21240.                                                 Ferdinand Foch (1851-1929)%@NL@%
  21241.                                                             French general%@NL@%
  21242. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21243. %@NL@%
  21244. %@NL@%
  21245. %@2@%Put your trust in God, my boys, and keep your powder dry.%@NL@%
  21246. %@CR:GENERABlacker   @%%@NL@%
  21247.                                              Valentine Blacker (1778-1823)%@NL@%
  21248.                                                 British soldier, historian%@NL@%
  21249.                                                         of Oliver Cromwell%@NL@%
  21250. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21251. %@NL@%
  21252. %@NL@%
  21253. %@2@%You must not fight too often with one enemy, or you will teach%@EH@%
  21254. him all your art of war.%@NL@%
  21255. %@CR:GENERANapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  21256.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  21257.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  21258. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21259. %@NL@%
  21260. %@NL@%
  21261. %@2@%War is too important a matter to be left to the generals.%@NL@%
  21262. %@CR:GENERAClemenceau@%%@NL@%
  21263.                                             Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929)%@NL@%
  21264.                                          French politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  21265. %@AS@%                                                                  Generals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21266. %@NL@%
  21267. %@NL@%
  21268. %@NL@%
  21269. %@1@%%@AS@%The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21270. %@CR:THEGENERATIONGAP@%%@NL@%
  21271. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Generation Gap@%%@NL@%
  21272.      %@AB@%Age%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            cf01@%%@NL@%
  21273.      Arrogance: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:           2d33e@%; %@AB@%Harris%@AE@%%@BO:           2d03b@%%@NL@%
  21274. %@NL@%
  21275. %@2@%Every generation is a secret society and has incommunicable%@EH@%
  21276. enthusiasms, tastes and interests which are a mystery both to its
  21277. predecessors and to posterity.%@NL@%
  21278. %@CR:THEGENChapman1  @%%@NL@%
  21279.                                                 Arthur Chapman (1873-1935)%@NL@%
  21280.                                                      American poet, author%@NL@%
  21281. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21282. %@NL@%
  21283. %@NL@%
  21284. %@2@%Our tastes greatly alter. The lad does not care for the child's%@EH@%
  21285. rattle, and the old man does not care for the young man's whore.%@NL@%
  21286. %@CR:THEGENJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  21287.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  21288.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  21289. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21290. %@NL@%
  21291. %@NL@%
  21292. %@2@%The old know what they want; the young are sad and bewildered.%@NL@%
  21293. %@CR:THEGENSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  21294.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  21295.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  21296. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21297. %@NL@%
  21298. %@NL@%
  21299. %@2@%We have to hate our immediate predecessors to get free of their%@EH@%
  21300. authority.%@NL@%
  21301. %@CR:THEGENLawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  21302.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  21303.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  21304. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21305. %@NL@%
  21306. %@NL@%
  21307. %@2@%The denunciation of the young is a necessary part of the hygiene%@EH@%
  21308. of older people, and greatly assists the circulation of their blood.%@NL@%
  21309. %@CR:THEGENSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  21310.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  21311.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  21312. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21313. %@NL@%
  21314. %@NL@%
  21315. %@2@%It is all that the young can do for the old, to shock them%@EH@%
  21316. and keep them up to date.%@NL@%
  21317. %@CR:THEGENShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21318.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  21319.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  21320. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21321. %@NL@%
  21322. %@NL@%
  21323. %@2@%One of these days there will be a terrible revolt of the old%@EH@%
  21324. against the young.%@NL@%
  21325. %@CR:THEGENErvine    @%%@NL@%
  21326.                                                St. John Ervine (1888-1971)%@NL@%
  21327.                                                British dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  21328. %@AS@%                                                        The Generation Gap%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21329. %@NL@%
  21330. %@NL@%
  21331. %@NL@%
  21332. %@1@%%@AS@%Generosity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21333. %@CR:GENEROSITY      @%%@NL@%
  21334. %@2@%See:%@QR:Generosity@%%@NL@%
  21335.      Government: %@AB@%Lever%@AE@%%@BO:          1176f5@%%@NL@%
  21336. %@NL@%
  21337.      %@2@%Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore%@NL@%
  21338.      Of nicely-calculated less or more.%@NL@%
  21339. %@CR:GENEROWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  21340.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  21341.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  21342. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21343. %@NL@%
  21344. %@NL@%
  21345. %@2@%Liberality consists less in giving a great deal than in gifts%@EH@%
  21346. well-timed.%@NL@%
  21347. %@CR:GENEROlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  21348.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  21349.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  21350. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21351. %@NL@%
  21352. %@NL@%
  21353. %@2@%What is called generosity is usually only the vanity of giving;%@EH@%
  21354. we enjoy the vanity more than the thing given.%@NL@%
  21355. %@CR:GENEROLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  21356.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  21357.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  21358. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21359. %@NL@%
  21360. %@NL@%
  21361. %@2@%We must be aware of the dangers which lie in our most generous%@EH@%
  21362. wishes. Some paradox of our nature leads us, when once we have
  21363. made our fellow men the objects of our enlightened interest, to
  21364. go on to make them the objects of our pity, then of our wisdom,
  21365. ultimately of our coercion.%@NL@%
  21366. %@CR:GENEROTrilling  @%%@NL@%
  21367.                                                Lionel Trilling (1905-1975)%@NL@%
  21368.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  21369. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21370. %@NL@%
  21371. %@NL@%
  21372. %@2@%As for the largest-hearted of us, what is the word we write%@EH@%
  21373. most often in our chequebooks? - "Self."%@NL@%
  21374. %@CR:GENEROPhilpotts @%%@NL@%
  21375.                                                 Eden Philpotts (1862-1960)%@NL@%
  21376.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  21377. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21378. %@NL@%
  21379. %@NL@%
  21380. %@2@%Don't be selfish. If you have something you do not want, and%@EH@%
  21381. know someone who has no use for it, give. In this way you can be
  21382. generous without expenditure of self-denial and also help another
  21383. to be the same.%@NL@%
  21384. %@CR:GENEROHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  21385.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  21386.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21387. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21388. %@NL@%
  21389. %@NL@%
  21390. %@2@%It is always so pleasant to be generous, though very vexatious%@EH@%
  21391. to pay debts.%@NL@%
  21392. %@CR:GENEROEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  21393.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  21394.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  21395. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21396. %@NL@%
  21397. %@NL@%
  21398. %@2@%It's better to give than to lend, and it costs about the same.%@NL@%
  21399. %@CR:GENEROGibbs1    @%%@NL@%
  21400.                                               Sir Philip Gibbs (1877-1962)%@NL@%
  21401.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  21402. %@AS@%                                                                Generosity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21403. %@NL@%
  21404. %@NL@%
  21405. %@NL@%
  21406. %@1@%%@AS@%Genius%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21407. %@CR:GENIUS          @%%@NL@%
  21408. %@2@%See:%@QR:Genius@%%@NL@%
  21409.      Innovation: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          14f43e@%%@NL@%
  21410.      Self-image: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2489d2@%%@NL@%
  21411.      Shakespeare: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:          24ff4e@%; %@AB@%Jonson%@AE@%%@BO:          24f9dd@%%@NL@%
  21412.      Work: %@AB@%Reynolds%@AE@%%@BO:          2c378b@%%@NL@%
  21413.      Writers: %@AB@%Heine%@AE@%%@BO:          2c9ce8@%; %@AB@%Lowell%@AE@%%@BO:          2c7af6@%%@NL@%
  21414. %@NL@%
  21415. %@2@%The divine egoism that is genius.%@NL@%
  21416. %@CR:GENIUSWebb3     @%%@NL@%
  21417.                                                      Mary Webb (1881-1927)%@NL@%
  21418.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  21419. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21420. %@NL@%
  21421. %@NL@%
  21422. %@2@%The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the%@EH@%
  21423. suspicion that they will come to a bad end.%@NL@%
  21424. %@CR:GENIUSBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  21425.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  21426.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  21427. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21428. %@NL@%
  21429. %@NL@%
  21430. %@2@%To mediocrity genius is unforgivable.%@NL@%
  21431. %@CR:GENIUSHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  21432.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  21433.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21434. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21435. %@NL@%
  21436. %@NL@%
  21437. %@2@%Doing easily what others find difficult is talent; doing what%@EH@%
  21438. is impossible for talent is genius.%@NL@%
  21439. %@CR:GENIUSAmiel     @%%@NL@%
  21440.                                                    Henri Amiel (1821-1881)%@NL@%
  21441.                                                    Swiss philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  21442. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21443. %@NL@%
  21444. %@NL@%
  21445. %@2@%Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly%@EH@%
  21446. recognizes genius.%@NL@%
  21447. %@CR:GENIUSDoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  21448.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  21449.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  21450. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21451. %@NL@%
  21452. %@NL@%
  21453. %@2@%Every man of genius is considerably helped by being dead.%@NL@%
  21454. %@CR:GENIUSLynd      @%%@NL@%
  21455.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  21456.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  21457. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21458. %@NL@%
  21459. %@NL@%
  21460. %@2@%The measure of a master is his success in bringing all men%@EH@%
  21461. round to his opinion twenty years later.%@NL@%
  21462. %@CR:GENIUSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  21463.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  21464.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  21465. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21466. %@NL@%
  21467. %@NL@%
  21468. %@2@%Masterpieces are not single and solitary births; they are the%@EH@%
  21469. outcome of many years of thinking in common, of thinking by the
  21470. body of the people, so that the experience of the mass is behind
  21471. the single voice.%@NL@%
  21472. %@CR:GENIUSWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  21473.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  21474.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  21475. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21476. %@NL@%
  21477. %@NL@%
  21478. %@2@%If we are to have genius we must put up with the inconvenience%@EH@%
  21479. of genius, and that the world will never do; it wants geniuses,
  21480. but would like them just like other people.%@NL@%
  21481. %@CR:GENIUSMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  21482.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  21483.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  21484. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21485. %@NL@%
  21486. %@NL@%
  21487. %@2@%Since when was genius found respectable?%@NL@%
  21488. %@CR:GENIUSBrowning1 @%%@NL@%
  21489.                                     Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)%@NL@%
  21490.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  21491. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21492. %@NL@%
  21493. %@NL@%
  21494. %@2@%Great wits are sure to madness near allied.%@NL@%
  21495. %@CR:GENIUSDryden    @%%@NL@%
  21496.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  21497.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  21498. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21499. %@NL@%
  21500. %@NL@%
  21501. %@2@%The most effective way of shutting our minds against a great%@EH@%
  21502. man's ideas is to take them for granted and admit he was great
  21503. and have done with him.%@NL@%
  21504. %@CR:GENIUSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21505.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  21506.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  21507. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21508. %@NL@%
  21509. %@NL@%
  21510. %@2@%Everybody denies I am a genius - but nobody ever called%@EH@%
  21511. me one!%@NL@%
  21512. %@CR:GENIUSWelles    @%%@NL@%
  21513.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  21514.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  21515. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21516. %@NL@%
  21517. %@NL@%
  21518. %@2@%Good God! What a genius I had when I wrote that book.%@NL@%
  21519. %@CR:GENIUSSwift     @%%@NL@%
  21520.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  21521.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  21522.                                                       of %@AI@%The Tale of a Tub%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21523. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21524. %@NL@%
  21525. %@NL@%
  21526. %@2@%A man who is a genius and doesn't know it probably isn't.%@NL@%
  21527. %@CR:GENIUSLec       @%%@NL@%
  21528.                                                Stanislaus J. Lec (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  21529.                                                                Polish poet%@NL@%
  21530. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21531. %@NL@%
  21532. %@NL@%
  21533. %@2@%Milton, Madam, was a genius that could cut a Colossus from%@EH@%
  21534. a rock; but he could not carve heads upon cherry-stones.%@NL@%
  21535. %@CR:GENIUSJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  21536.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  21537.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  21538. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21539. %@NL@%
  21540. %@NL@%
  21541. %@2@%Man can climb to the highest summits, but he cannot dwell there%@EH@%
  21542. long.%@NL@%
  21543. %@CR:GENIUSShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21544.                                                            Morell, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21545.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  21546.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  21547. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21548. %@NL@%
  21549. %@NL@%
  21550. %@2@%The genius of Einstein leads to Hiroshima.%@NL@%
  21551. %@CR:GENIUSPicasso   @%%@NL@%
  21552.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  21553.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  21554. %@AS@%                                                                    Genius%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21555. %@NL@%
  21556. %@NL@%
  21557. %@NL@%
  21558. %@1@%%@AS@%Genocide%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21559. %@CR:GENOCIDE        @%%@NL@%
  21560. %@2@%%@QR:Genocide@%A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.%@NL@%
  21561. %@CR:GENOCIStalin    @%%@NL@%
  21562.                                                   Josef Stalin (1879-1953)%@NL@%
  21563.                                                              USSR dictator%@NL@%
  21564. %@AS@%                                                                  Genocide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21565. %@NL@%
  21566. %@NL@%
  21567. %@2@%After all there is but one race - humanity.%@NL@%
  21568. %@CR:GENOCIMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  21569.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  21570.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  21571. %@AS@%                                                                  Genocide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21572. %@NL@%
  21573. %@NL@%
  21574. %@NL@%
  21575. %@1@%%@AS@%Gentlemen%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21576. %@CR:GENTLEMEN       @%%@NL@%
  21577. %@2@%See:%@QR:Gentlemen@%%@NL@%
  21578.      The Army: %@AB@%Cromwell%@AE@%%@BO:           2b5ea@%%@NL@%
  21579.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           43e51@%%@NL@%
  21580.      Examinations: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           d4e77@%%@NL@%
  21581.      The Navy: %@AB@%Macaulay%@AE@%%@BO:          1b82c0@%%@NL@%
  21582.      University: %@AB@%Congreve%@AE@%%@BO:          29daca@%%@NL@%
  21583. %@NL@%
  21584. %@2@%I can make a lord, but only God almighty can make a gentleman.%@NL@%
  21585. %@CR:GENTLEJamesI    @%%@NL@%
  21586.                                        King James I of England (1566-1625)%@NL@%
  21587. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21588. %@NL@%
  21589. %@NL@%
  21590. %@2@%Education begins a gentleman, conversation completes him.%@NL@%
  21591. %@CR:GENTLEENGLISHPRO@%%@NL@%
  21592.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  21593. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21594. %@NL@%
  21595. %@NL@%
  21596. %@2@%He was the product of an English public school and university%@EH@%
  21597.  . . .  no scholar, but essentially a gentleman.%@NL@%
  21598. %@CR:GENTLEMerriman  @%%@NL@%
  21599.                                              H. Seton Merriman (1862-1903)%@NL@%
  21600.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  21601. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21602. %@NL@%
  21603. %@NL@%
  21604. %@2@%A gentleman is one who never hurts anyone's feelings unintentionally.%@NL@%
  21605. %@CR:GENTLEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  21606.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  21607.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  21608. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21609. %@NL@%
  21610. %@NL@%
  21611. %@2@%Almost an Emperor and not quite a gentleman.%@NL@%
  21612. %@CR:GENTLEAncaster  @%%@NL@%
  21613.                                                  Lord Ancaster (1867-1951)%@NL@%
  21614.                                          British politician, administrator%@NL@%
  21615.                                              of Hugh, 5th earl of Lonsdale%@NL@%
  21616. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21617. %@NL@%
  21618. %@NL@%
  21619. %@2@%He is every other inch a gentleman.%@NL@%
  21620. %@CR:GENTLEWest2     @%%@NL@%
  21621.                                                   Rebecca West (1892-1983)%@NL@%
  21622.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  21623. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21624. %@NL@%
  21625. %@NL@%
  21626. %@2@%I am parshial to ladies if they are nice. I suppose it is my%@EH@%
  21627. nature. I am not quite a gentleman but you would hardly notice
  21628. it.%@NL@%
  21629. %@CR:GENTLEAshford   @%%@NL@%
  21630.                                                  Daisy Ashford (1881-1972)%@NL@%
  21631.                   British writer of %@AB@%The Young Visiters,%@AE@% aged 9%@NL@%
  21632. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21633. %@NL@%
  21634. %@NL@%
  21635. %@2@%It is at unimportant moments that a man is a gentleman. At%@EH@%
  21636. important moments he ought to be something better.%@NL@%
  21637. %@CR:GENTLEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  21638.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  21639.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  21640. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21641. %@NL@%
  21642. %@NL@%
  21643. %@2@%Anyone can be heroic from time to time, but a gentleman is%@EH@%
  21644. something you have to be all the time.%@NL@%
  21645. %@CR:GENTLEPirandello@%%@NL@%
  21646.                                               Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  21647.                                                 Italian playwright, author%@NL@%
  21648. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21649. %@NL@%
  21650. %@NL@%
  21651. %@2@%I do not know the American gentleman, God forgive me for putting%@EH@%
  21652. two such words together.%@NL@%
  21653. %@CR:GENTLEDickens   @%%@NL@%
  21654.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  21655.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  21656. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21657. %@NL@%
  21658. %@NL@%
  21659. %@2@%The only infallible rule we know is, that the man who is always%@EH@%
  21660. talking about being a gentleman never is one.%@NL@%
  21661. %@CR:GENTLESurtees   @%%@NL@%
  21662.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  21663.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  21664. %@AS@%                                                                 Gentlemen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21665. %@NL@%
  21666. %@NL@%
  21667. %@NL@%
  21668. %@1@%%@AS@%Germany%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21669. %@CR:GERMANY         @%%@NL@%
  21670. %@2@%%@QR:Germany@%We Germans will never produce another Goethe, but we may produce%@EH@%
  21671. another Caesar.%@NL@%
  21672. %@CR:GERMANSpengler  @%%@NL@%
  21673.                                                Oswald Spengler (1880-1936)%@NL@%
  21674.                                              German philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  21675.                                                                    in 1925%@NL@%
  21676. %@AS@%                                                                   Germany%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21677. %@NL@%
  21678. %@NL@%
  21679. %@2@%They are a fine people but quick to catch the disease of anti-humanity.%@EH@%
  21680. I think it's because of their poor elimination. Germany is a headquarters
  21681. for constipation.%@NL@%
  21682. %@CR:GERMANGrosz     @%%@NL@%
  21683.                                                   George Grosz (1893-1959)%@NL@%
  21684.                                                              German artist%@NL@%
  21685. %@AS@%                                                                   Germany%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21686. %@NL@%
  21687. %@NL@%
  21688. %@2@%Everything ponderous, viscous, and solemnly clumsy, all long-winded%@EH@%
  21689. and boring types of style are developed in profuse variety among
  21690. Germans.%@NL@%
  21691. %@CR:GERMANNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  21692.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  21693.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  21694. %@AS@%                                                                   Germany%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21695. %@NL@%
  21696. %@NL@%
  21697. %@2@%Whenever the literary German dives into a sentence, that is%@EH@%
  21698. the last you are going to see of him till he emerges on the other
  21699. side of his Atlantic with his verb in his mouth.%@NL@%
  21700. %@CR:GERMANTwain     @%%@NL@%
  21701.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  21702.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  21703. %@AS@%                                                                   Germany%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21704. %@NL@%
  21705. %@NL@%
  21706. %@NL@%
  21707. %@1@%%@AS@%Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21708. %@CR:GETTINGAHEAD    @%%@NL@%
  21709. %@2@%See:%@QR:Getting Ahead@%%@NL@%
  21710.      %@AB@%Ambition%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           15f2e@%%@NL@%
  21711.      %@AB@%Promotion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          208b8d@%%@NL@%
  21712.      The Scots: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@BO:          23db98@%%@NL@%
  21713.      %@AB@%Success%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          271adc@%%@NL@%
  21714.      %@AB@%Winning%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b4020@%%@NL@%
  21715. %@NL@%
  21716. %@2@%There are only two ways of getting ahead in the world: by one's%@EH@%
  21717. own industry, or by the stupidity of others.%@NL@%
  21718. %@CR:GETTINlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  21719.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  21720.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  21721. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21722. %@NL@%
  21723. %@NL@%
  21724. %@2@%No one rises so high as he who knows not whither he is going.%@NL@%
  21725. %@CR:GETTINCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  21726.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  21727.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  21728. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21729. %@NL@%
  21730. %@NL@%
  21731. %@2@%When you are getting kicked from the rear it means you're in%@EH@%
  21732. front.%@NL@%
  21733. %@CR:GETTINSheen     @%%@NL@%
  21734.                                                Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979)%@NL@%
  21735.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  21736. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21737. %@NL@%
  21738. %@NL@%
  21739. %@2@%You have to be a bastard to make it, and that's a fact. And%@EH@%
  21740. the Beatles are the biggest bastards on Earth.%@NL@%
  21741. %@CR:GETTINLennon    @%%@NL@%
  21742.                                                    John Lennon (1940-1980)%@NL@%
  21743.                                            English rock singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  21744. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21745. %@NL@%
  21746. %@NL@%
  21747. %@2@%The path of social advancement is, and must be, strewn with%@EH@%
  21748. broken friendships.%@NL@%
  21749. %@CR:GETTINWells     @%%@NL@%
  21750.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  21751.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  21752. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21753. %@NL@%
  21754. %@NL@%
  21755. %@2@%To establish oneself in the world, one does all one can to%@EH@%
  21756. seem established there already.%@NL@%
  21757. %@CR:GETTINLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  21758.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  21759.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  21760. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21761. %@NL@%
  21762. %@NL@%
  21763. %@2@%The trouble with the rat-race is that even if you win, you're%@EH@%
  21764. still a rat.%@NL@%
  21765. %@CR:GETTINTomlin    @%%@NL@%
  21766.                                                      Lily Tomlin (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  21767.                                                    American comedy actress%@NL@%
  21768. %@AS@%                                                             Getting Ahead%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21769. %@NL@%
  21770. %@NL@%
  21771. %@NL@%
  21772. %@1@%%@AS@%Give and Take%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21773. %@CR:GIVEANDTAKE     @%%@NL@%
  21774. %@2@%%@QR:Give and Take@%Do unto the other fellow the way he's like to do unto you an'%@EH@%
  21775. do it fust.%@NL@%
  21776. %@CR:GIVEANWestcott  @%%@NL@%
  21777.                                          Edward Noyes Westcott (1847-1898)%@NL@%
  21778.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  21779. %@AS@%                                                             Give and Take%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21780. %@NL@%
  21781. %@NL@%
  21782. %@2@%Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto%@EH@%
  21783. you. Their tastes may not be the same.%@NL@%
  21784. %@CR:GIVEANShaw      @%%@NL@%
  21785.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  21786.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  21787. %@AS@%                                                             Give and Take%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21788. %@NL@%
  21789. %@NL@%
  21790. %@2@%It is explained that all relationships require a little give%@EH@%
  21791. and take. This is untrue. Any partnership demands that we give
  21792. and give and give and at the last, as we flop into our graves exhausted,
  21793. we are told that we didn't give enough.%@NL@%
  21794. %@CR:GIVEANCrisp     @%%@NL@%
  21795.                                                    Quentin Crisp (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  21796.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  21797. %@AS@%                                                             Give and Take%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21798. %@NL@%
  21799. %@NL@%
  21800. %@NL@%
  21801. %@1@%%@AS@%Glory%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21802. %@CR:GLORY           @%%@NL@%
  21803. %@2@%See:%@QR:Glory@%%@NL@%
  21804.      Popularity: %@AB@%Hugo%@AE@%%@BO:          1f2149@%%@NL@%
  21805. %@NL@%
  21806. %@2@%Avoid shame but do not seek glory - nothing so expensive%@EH@%
  21807. as glory.%@NL@%
  21808. %@CR:GLORY Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  21809.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  21810.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  21811. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21812. %@NL@%
  21813. %@NL@%
  21814. %@2@%The paths of glory lead but to the grave.%@NL@%
  21815. %@CR:GLORY Gray      @%%@NL@%
  21816.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  21817.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  21818. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21819. %@NL@%
  21820. %@NL@%
  21821. %@2@%Military glory - the attractive rainbow that rises in showers%@EH@%
  21822. of blood.%@NL@%
  21823. %@CR:GLORY Lincoln   @%%@NL@%
  21824.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  21825.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  21826. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21827. %@NL@%
  21828. %@NL@%
  21829.      %@2@%Is it not passing brave to be a King,%@NL@%
  21830.      And ride in triumph through Persepolis?%@NL@%
  21831. %@CR:GLORY Marlowe   @%%@NL@%
  21832.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  21833.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  21834. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21835. %@NL@%
  21836. %@NL@%
  21837.      %@2@%I have touch'd the highest point of all my greatness,%@NL@%
  21838.      And from that full meridian of my glory%@NL@%
  21839.      I haste now to my setting.%@NL@%
  21840. %@CR:GLORY Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  21841.                                                    Wolsey, %@AI@%King Henry VIII%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21842.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  21843.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  21844. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21845. %@NL@%
  21846. %@NL@%
  21847. %@2@%The final event to himself has been, that as he rose like a%@EH@%
  21848. rocket, he fell like the stick.%@NL@%
  21849. %@CR:GLORY Paine     @%%@NL@%
  21850.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  21851.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  21852.                                                            of Edmund Burke%@NL@%
  21853. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21854. %@NL@%
  21855. %@NL@%
  21856. %@2@%What is glory? It is to have a lot of nonsense talked about%@EH@%
  21857. you.%@NL@%
  21858. %@CR:GLORY Flaubert  @%%@NL@%
  21859.                                               Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880)%@NL@%
  21860.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  21861. %@AS@%                                                                     Glory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21862. %@NL@%
  21863. %@NL@%
  21864. %@NL@%
  21865. %@1@%%@AS@%God%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  21866. %@CR:GOD             @%%@NL@%
  21867. %@2@%See:%@QR:God@%%@NL@%
  21868.      Art: %@AB@%Merton%@AE@%%@BO:           2e93e@%%@NL@%
  21869.      The British: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           4c04a@%%@NL@%
  21870.      %@AB@%Creation%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           8ad28@%%@NL@%
  21871.      Faith: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:           df7c2@%%@NL@%
  21872.      Forgiveness: %@AB@%Heine%@AE@%%@BO:           f7a4b@%%@NL@%
  21873.      Luck: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          1891fd@%; %@AB@%Greek proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          189358@%%@NL@%
  21874.      Miracles: %@AB@%Cary%@AE@%%@BO:          1a7500@%%@NL@%
  21875.      Prayer: %@AB@%Day%@AE@%%@BO:          1fbec2@%%@NL@%
  21876.      Privilege: %@AB@%Saint Peter%@AE@%%@BO:          205765@%%@NL@%
  21877.      The Status Quo: %@AB@%Saint Paul%@AE@%%@BO:          26e2c4@%%@NL@%
  21878. %@NL@%
  21879. %@2@%Of course there's no such thing as a totally objective person,%@EH@%
  21880. except Almighty God, if she exists.%@NL@%
  21881. %@CR:GOD   Fraser    @%%@NL@%
  21882.                                              Lady Antonia Fraser (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  21883.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  21884. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21885. %@NL@%
  21886. %@NL@%
  21887. %@2@%God is an unutterable sigh, planted in the depths of the soul.%@NL@%
  21888. %@CR:GOD   Richter2  @%%@NL@%
  21889.                                              Jean Paul Richter (1763-1825)%@NL@%
  21890.                                                              German author%@NL@%
  21891. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21892. %@NL@%
  21893. %@NL@%
  21894. %@2@%The most beautiful of all emblems is that of God, whom Timaeus%@EH@%
  21895. of Locris describes under the image of "A circle whose center
  21896. is everywhere and circumference nowhere."%@NL@%
  21897. %@CR:GOD   Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  21898.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  21899.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  21900. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21901. %@NL@%
  21902. %@NL@%
  21903. %@2@%God, that dumping ground of our dreams.%@NL@%
  21904. %@CR:GOD   Rostand2  @%%@NL@%
  21905.                                                   Jean Rostand (1894-1977)%@NL@%
  21906.                                                   French biologist, writer%@NL@%
  21907. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21908. %@NL@%
  21909. %@NL@%
  21910. %@2@%The only excuse for God is that he doesn't exist.%@NL@%
  21911. %@CR:GOD   Stendhal  @%%@NL@%
  21912.                                                       Stendhal (1783-1842)%@NL@%
  21913.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  21914. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21915. %@NL@%
  21916. %@NL@%
  21917. %@2@%I believe in the incomprehensibility of God.%@NL@%
  21918. %@CR:GOD   Balzac    @%%@NL@%
  21919.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  21920.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  21921. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21922. %@NL@%
  21923. %@NL@%
  21924. %@2@%A comprehended God is no God.%@NL@%
  21925. %@CR:GOD   Chrysostom@%%@NL@%
  21926.                                                  John Chrysostom (345-407)%@NL@%
  21927.                                                   Greek ecclesiast, hermit%@NL@%
  21928. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21929. %@NL@%
  21930. %@NL@%
  21931. %@2@%Every conjecture we can form with regard to the works of God%@EH@%
  21932. has as little probability as the conjectures of a child with regard
  21933. to the works of a man.%@NL@%
  21934. %@CR:GOD   Reid      @%%@NL@%
  21935.                                                    Thomas Reid (1710-1796)%@NL@%
  21936.                                                       Scottish philosopher%@NL@%
  21937. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21938. %@NL@%
  21939. %@NL@%
  21940. %@2@%No statement about God is simply, literally true. God is far%@EH@%
  21941. more than can be measured, described, defined in ordinary language,
  21942. or pinned down to any particular happening.%@NL@%
  21943. %@CR:GOD   Jenkins   @%%@NL@%
  21944.                                                    David Jenkins (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  21945.                                               theologian, Bishop of Durham%@NL@%
  21946. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21947. %@NL@%
  21948. %@NL@%
  21949. %@2@%If God made us in His image we have certainly returned the%@EH@%
  21950. compliment.%@NL@%
  21951. %@CR:GOD   Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  21952.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  21953.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  21954. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21955. %@NL@%
  21956. %@NL@%
  21957. %@2@%If the triangles made a god, they would give him three sides.%@NL@%
  21958. %@CR:GOD   Montesquie@%%@NL@%
  21959.                                         Charles de Montesquieu (1689-1755)%@NL@%
  21960.                                         French philosopher, writer, lawyer%@NL@%
  21961. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21962. %@NL@%
  21963. %@NL@%
  21964. %@2@%Somewhere in the Bible it say Jesus' hair was like lamb's wool,%@EH@%
  21965. I say. Well, say Shug, if he came to any of these churches we talking
  21966. bout he'd have to have it conked before anybody paid him any attention.
  21967. The last thing niggers want to think about they God is that his
  21968. hair kinky.%@NL@%
  21969. %@CR:GOD   Walker1   @%%@NL@%
  21970.                                                     Alice Walker (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  21971.                                                    American author, critic%@NL@%
  21972. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21973. %@NL@%
  21974. %@NL@%
  21975.      %@2@%And almost every one when age,%@NL@%
  21976.      Disease, or sorrows strike him,%@NL@%
  21977.      Inclines to think there is a God,%@NL@%
  21978.      Or something very like Him.%@NL@%
  21979. %@CR:GOD   Clough    @%%@NL@%
  21980.                                                   A. H. Clough (1819-1861)%@NL@%
  21981.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  21982. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21983. %@NL@%
  21984. %@NL@%
  21985. %@2@%God is for men and religion for women.%@NL@%
  21986. %@CR:GOD   Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  21987.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  21988.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  21989. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21990. %@NL@%
  21991. %@NL@%
  21992. %@2@%But if God had wanted us to think with our wombs, why did He%@EH@%
  21993. give us a brain?%@NL@%
  21994. %@CR:GOD   Luce      @%%@NL@%
  21995.                                              Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987)%@NL@%
  21996.                                                  American diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  21997. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  21998. %@NL@%
  21999. %@NL@%
  22000. %@2@%God uses lust to impel men to marry, ambition to office, avarice%@EH@%
  22001. to earning, and fear to faith. God led me like an old blind goat.%@NL@%
  22002. %@CR:GOD   Luther    @%%@NL@%
  22003.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  22004.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  22005. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22006. %@NL@%
  22007. %@NL@%
  22008. %@2@%A man with God is always in the majority.%@NL@%
  22009. %@CR:GOD   Knox2     @%%@NL@%
  22010.                                                      John Knox (1505-1572)%@NL@%
  22011.                                               Scottish Presbyterian leader%@NL@%
  22012. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22013. %@NL@%
  22014. %@NL@%
  22015. %@2@%One, with God, is always a majority, but many a martyr has%@EH@%
  22016. been burned at the stake while the votes were being counted.%@NL@%
  22017. %@CR:GOD   Reed      @%%@NL@%
  22018.                                                 Thomas B. Reed (1839-1902)%@NL@%
  22019.                                                American lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  22020. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22021. %@NL@%
  22022. %@NL@%
  22023. %@2@%As you know, God is generally on the side of the big squadrons%@EH@%
  22024. against the small ones.%@NL@%
  22025. %@CR:GOD   BussyRabut@%%@NL@%
  22026.                                         Comte de Bussy-Rabutin (1618-1693)%@NL@%
  22027.                                                     French soldier, writer%@NL@%
  22028. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22029. %@NL@%
  22030. %@NL@%
  22031. %@2@%God is not on the side of the big battalions, but on the side%@EH@%
  22032. of those who shoot best.%@NL@%
  22033. %@CR:GOD   Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  22034.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  22035.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  22036. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22037. %@NL@%
  22038. %@NL@%
  22039. %@2@%To believe in God for me is to feel that there is a God, not%@EH@%
  22040. a dead one, or a stuffed one, but a living one, who with irresistible
  22041. force urges us toward more loving.%@NL@%
  22042. %@CR:GOD   VanGogh   @%%@NL@%
  22043.                                               Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890)%@NL@%
  22044.                                                              Dutch painter%@NL@%
  22045. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22046. %@NL@%
  22047. %@NL@%
  22048.      %@2@%In the faces of men and women I see%@NL@%
  22049.      God, and in my own face in the glass,%@NL@%
  22050.      I find letters from God dropt in the street, and every one%@NL@%
  22051.      is sign'd by God's name.%@NL@%
  22052.      And I leave them where they are, for I know that wheresoe'er I go,%@NL@%
  22053.      Others will punctually come for ever and ever.%@NL@%
  22054. %@CR:GOD   Whitman   @%%@NL@%
  22055.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  22056.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  22057. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22058. %@NL@%
  22059. %@NL@%
  22060. %@2@%No man hates God without first hating himself.%@NL@%
  22061. %@CR:GOD   Sheen     @%%@NL@%
  22062.                                                Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979)%@NL@%
  22063.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  22064. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22065. %@NL@%
  22066. %@NL@%
  22067.      %@2@%Throw away thy rod,%@NL@%
  22068.      Throw away thy wrath;%@NL@%
  22069.      O my God,%@NL@%
  22070.      Take the gentle path.%@NL@%
  22071. %@CR:GOD   Herbert2  @%%@NL@%
  22072.                                                 George Herbert (1593-1633)%@NL@%
  22073.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  22074. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22075. %@NL@%
  22076. %@NL@%
  22077. %@2@%God will forgive me the foolish remarks I have made about Him%@EH@%
  22078. just as I will forgive my opponents the foolish things they have
  22079. written about me, even though they are spiritually as inferior
  22080. to me as I to thee, O God!%@NL@%
  22081. %@CR:GOD   Heine     @%%@NL@%
  22082.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  22083.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  22084. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22085. %@NL@%
  22086. %@NL@%
  22087. %@2@%God will provide - ah, if only He would till He does!%@NL@%
  22088. %@CR:GOD   Heine     @%%@NL@%
  22089.                                                            Yiddish proverb%@NL@%
  22090. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22091. %@NL@%
  22092. %@NL@%
  22093. %@2@%By the year 2000 we will, I hope, raise our children to believe%@EH@%
  22094. in human potential, not God.%@NL@%
  22095. %@CR:GOD   Steinem   @%%@NL@%
  22096.                                                   Gloria Steinem (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  22097.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  22098. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22099. %@NL@%
  22100. %@NL@%
  22101. %@2@%If God wants us to do a thing, He should make his wishes sufficiently%@EH@%
  22102. clear. Sensible people will wait till He has done this before paying
  22103. much attention to Him.%@NL@%
  22104. %@CR:GOD   Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  22105.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  22106.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  22107. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22108. %@NL@%
  22109. %@NL@%
  22110. %@2@%God is a verb, not a noun.%@NL@%
  22111. %@CR:GOD   Fuller1   @%%@NL@%
  22112.                                          R. Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983)%@NL@%
  22113.                                               American architect, engineer%@NL@%
  22114. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22115. %@NL@%
  22116. %@NL@%
  22117. %@2@%We were deceived by the wisdom of the serpent, but we are freed%@EH@%
  22118. by the foolishness of God.%@NL@%
  22119. %@CR:GOD   SaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  22120.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  22121.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  22122. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22123. %@NL@%
  22124. %@NL@%
  22125. %@2@%An act of God was defined as %@AI@%something which no reasonable%@EH@%
  22126. %@AI@%man could have expected.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22127. %@CR:GOD   Herbert1  @%%@NL@%
  22128.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  22129.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  22130. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22131. %@NL@%
  22132. %@NL@%
  22133. %@2@%I have never understood why it should be considered derogatory%@EH@%
  22134. to the Creator to suppose that he has a sense of humour.%@NL@%
  22135. %@CR:GOD   Inge      @%%@NL@%
  22136.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  22137.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  22138. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22139. %@NL@%
  22140. %@NL@%
  22141. %@2@%Why is it when we talk to God, we're said to be praying - but%@EH@%
  22142. when God talks to us, we're schizophrenic?%@NL@%
  22143. %@CR:GOD   Tomlin    @%%@NL@%
  22144.                                                      Lily Tomlin (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  22145.                                                    American comedy actress%@NL@%
  22146. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22147. %@NL@%
  22148. %@NL@%
  22149. %@2@%Gawd knows, an' 'E won't split on a pal.%@NL@%
  22150. %@CR:GOD   Kipling   @%%@NL@%
  22151.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  22152.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  22153. %@AS@%                                                                       God%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22154. %@NL@%
  22155. %@NL@%
  22156. %@NL@%
  22157. %@1@%%@AS@%Goddesses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22158. %@CR:GODDESSES       @%%@NL@%
  22159. %@2@%%@QR:Goddesses@%A woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet,%@EH@%
  22160. and upon her head a crown of twelve stars.%@NL@%
  22161. %@CR:GODDESJohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  22162.                                        John the Divine (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  22163.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  22164. %@AS@%                                                                 Goddesses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22165. %@NL@%
  22166. %@NL@%
  22167. %@2@%And some to Mecca turn to pray, and I toward thy bed, Yasmin.%@NL@%
  22168. %@CR:GODDESFlecker   @%%@NL@%
  22169.                                            James Elroy Flecker (1884-1915)%@NL@%
  22170.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22171. %@AS@%                                                                 Goddesses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22172. %@NL@%
  22173. %@NL@%
  22174. %@2@%What, when drunk, one sees in other women, one sees in Garbo%@EH@%
  22175. sober.%@NL@%
  22176. %@CR:GODDESTynan     @%%@NL@%
  22177.                                                  Kenneth Tynan (1927-1980)%@NL@%
  22178.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  22179. %@AS@%                                                                 Goddesses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22180. %@NL@%
  22181. %@NL@%
  22182. %@NL@%
  22183. %@1@%%@AS@%Golf%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22184. %@CR:GOLF            @%%@NL@%
  22185. %@2@%%@QR:Golf@%A day spent in a round of strenuous idleness.%@NL@%
  22186. %@CR:GOLF  Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  22187.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  22188.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22189. %@AS@%                                                                      Golf%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22190. %@NL@%
  22191. %@NL@%
  22192. %@2@%It is almost impossible to remember how tragic a place the%@EH@%
  22193. world is when one is playing golf.%@NL@%
  22194. %@CR:GOLF  Lynd      @%%@NL@%
  22195.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  22196.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  22197. %@AS@%                                                                      Golf%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22198. %@NL@%
  22199. %@NL@%
  22200. %@2@%Golf is a good walk spoiled.%@NL@%
  22201. %@CR:GOLF  Twain     @%%@NL@%
  22202.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  22203.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  22204. %@AS@%                                                                      Golf%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22205. %@NL@%
  22206. %@NL@%
  22207. %@2@%A golf course outside a big town serves an excellent purpose%@EH@%
  22208. in that it segregates, as though in a concentration camp, all the
  22209. idle and idiot well-to-do.%@NL@%
  22210. %@CR:GOLF  Sitwell2  @%%@NL@%
  22211.                                             Sir Osbert Sitwell (1892-1969)%@NL@%
  22212.                                                       British writer, poet%@NL@%
  22213. %@AS@%                                                                      Golf%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22214. %@NL@%
  22215. %@NL@%
  22216. %@2@%Golf is a game whose aim is to hit a very small ball into an%@EH@%
  22217. even smaller hole, with weapons singularly ill-designed for the
  22218. purpose.%@NL@%
  22219. %@CR:GOLF  Churchill3@%%@NL@%
  22220.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  22221.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  22222. %@AS@%                                                                      Golf%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22223. %@NL@%
  22224. %@NL@%
  22225. %@NL@%
  22226. %@1@%%@AS@%Good Deeds%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22227. %@CR:GOODDEEDS       @%%@NL@%
  22228. %@2@%See:%@QR:Good Deeds@%%@NL@%
  22229.      %@AB@%Altruism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           1573d@%%@NL@%
  22230.      %@AB@%Benefactors%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3dc19@%%@NL@%
  22231.      %@AB@%Charity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           5b4e3@%%@NL@%
  22232.      Intentions: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          155cb9@%%@NL@%
  22233.      Motives: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          1b261d@%%@NL@%
  22234.      Style: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          270bee@%%@NL@%
  22235. %@NL@%
  22236. %@2@%The luxury of doing good surpasses every other personal enjoyment.%@NL@%
  22237. %@CR:GOODDEGay       @%%@NL@%
  22238.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  22239.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  22240. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22241. %@NL@%
  22242. %@NL@%
  22243. %@2@%It is the mark of a good action that it appears inevitable%@EH@%
  22244. in retrospect.%@NL@%
  22245. %@CR:GOODDEStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  22246.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  22247.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  22248. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22249. %@NL@%
  22250. %@NL@%
  22251.      %@2@%That best portion of a good man's life,%@NL@%
  22252.      His little, nameless, unremembered acts%@NL@%
  22253.      Of kindness and love.%@NL@%
  22254. %@CR:GOODDEWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  22255.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  22256.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22257. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22258. %@NL@%
  22259. %@NL@%
  22260. %@2@%The greatest pleasure I know is to do a good action by stealth,%@EH@%
  22261. and to have it found out by accident.%@NL@%
  22262. %@CR:GOODDELamb1     @%%@NL@%
  22263.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  22264.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  22265. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22266. %@NL@%
  22267. %@NL@%
  22268.      %@2@%Verily the kindness that gazes upon
  22269.      itself in a mirror turns to stone,%@NL@%
  22270.      And a good deed that calls itself by
  22271.      tender names becomes the parent
  22272.      to a curse.%@NL@%
  22273. %@CR:GOODDEGibran    @%%@NL@%
  22274.                                                  Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)%@NL@%
  22275.                                                        Syrian mystic, poet%@NL@%
  22276. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22277. %@NL@%
  22278. %@NL@%
  22279. %@2@%The deed is all, not the glory.%@NL@%
  22280. %@CR:GOODDEGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  22281.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  22282.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  22283. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22284. %@NL@%
  22285. %@NL@%
  22286. %@2@%Every good deed is more than three parts pride.%@NL@%
  22287. %@CR:GOODDEFlaubert  @%%@NL@%
  22288.                                               Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880)%@NL@%
  22289.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  22290. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22291. %@NL@%
  22292. %@NL@%
  22293.      %@2@%The last temptation is the greatest treason:%@NL@%
  22294.      To do the right deed for the wrong reason.%@NL@%
  22295. %@CR:GOODDEEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  22296.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  22297.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  22298. %@AS@%                                                                Good Deeds%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22299. %@NL@%
  22300. %@NL@%
  22301. %@NL@%
  22302. %@1@%%@AS@%Goodness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22303. %@CR:GOODNESS        @%%@NL@%
  22304. %@2@%See:%@QR:Goodness@%%@NL@%
  22305.      %@AB@%Kindness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1664b4@%%@NL@%
  22306. %@NL@%
  22307. %@2@%People cannot remain good unless good is expected of them.%@NL@%
  22308. %@CR:GOODNEBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  22309.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  22310.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  22311. %@AS@%                                                                  Goodness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22312. %@NL@%
  22313. %@NL@%
  22314. %@2@%To be good, according to the vulgar standard of goodness, is%@EH@%
  22315. obviously quite easy. It merely requires a certain amount of sordid
  22316. terror, a certain lack of imaginative thought, and a certain low
  22317. passion for middle-class respectability.%@NL@%
  22318. %@CR:GOODNEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  22319.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  22320.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  22321. %@AS@%                                                                  Goodness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22322. %@NL@%
  22323. %@NL@%
  22324. %@2@%When I'm good, I'm very good, but when I'm bad I'm better.%@NL@%
  22325. %@CR:GOODNEWest1     @%%@NL@%
  22326.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  22327.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  22328. %@AS@%                                                                  Goodness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22329. %@NL@%
  22330. %@NL@%
  22331. %@NL@%
  22332. %@1@%%@AS@%Gossip%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22333. %@CR:GOSSIP          @%%@NL@%
  22334. %@2@%See:%@QR:Gossip@%%@NL@%
  22335.      History: %@AB@%Creighton%@AE@%%@BO:          12e35c@%%@NL@%
  22336.      Reputation: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:          226238@%%@NL@%
  22337.      Scandal: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2387d4@%%@NL@%
  22338.      Slander: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          256b77@%%@NL@%
  22339.      Suicide: %@AB@%Connolly%@AE@%%@BO:          275bf0@%%@NL@%
  22340. %@NL@%
  22341.      %@2@%And all who told it added something new,%@NL@%
  22342.      And all who heard it made enlargements too.%@NL@%
  22343. %@CR:GOSSIPPope      @%%@NL@%
  22344.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  22345.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22346. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22347. %@NL@%
  22348. %@NL@%
  22349. %@2@%If it is abuse - why one is always sure to hear of it from%@EH@%
  22350. one damned good-natured friend or other!%@NL@%
  22351. %@CR:GOSSIPSheridan  @%%@NL@%
  22352.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  22353.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  22354. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22355. %@NL@%
  22356. %@NL@%
  22357. %@2@%It takes your enemy and your friend, working together, to hurt%@EH@%
  22358. you to the heart: the one to slander you and the other to get the
  22359. news to you.%@NL@%
  22360. %@CR:GOSSIPTwain     @%%@NL@%
  22361.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  22362.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  22363. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22364. %@NL@%
  22365. %@NL@%
  22366.      %@2@%Alas! they had been friends in youth;%@NL@%
  22367.      But whispering tongues can poison truth.%@NL@%
  22368. %@CR:GOSSIPColeridge @%%@NL@%
  22369.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  22370.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22371. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22372. %@NL@%
  22373. %@NL@%
  22374. %@2@%There is a demon that puts wings on certain tales and launches%@EH@%
  22375. them like eagles into space.%@NL@%
  22376. %@CR:GOSSIPDumas1    @%%@NL@%
  22377.                                                Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870)%@NL@%
  22378.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  22379. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22380. %@NL@%
  22381. %@NL@%
  22382. %@2@%Gossip is the art of saying nothing in a way that leaves practically%@EH@%
  22383. nothing unsaid.%@NL@%
  22384. %@CR:GOSSIPWinchell  @%%@NL@%
  22385.                                                Walter Winchell (1897-1972)%@NL@%
  22386.                                                         American columnist%@NL@%
  22387. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22388. %@NL@%
  22389. %@NL@%
  22390. %@2@%Gossip: sociologists on a mean and petty scale.%@NL@%
  22391. %@CR:GOSSIPWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  22392.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  22393.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  22394. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22395. %@NL@%
  22396. %@NL@%
  22397. %@2@%Nobody's interested in sweetness and light.%@NL@%
  22398. %@CR:GOSSIPHopper    @%%@NL@%
  22399.                                                   Hedda Hopper (1890-1966)%@NL@%
  22400.                                    American film actress, gossip columnist%@NL@%
  22401. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22402. %@NL@%
  22403. %@NL@%
  22404. %@2@%Show me someone who never gossips, and I'll show you someone%@EH@%
  22405. who isn't interested in people.%@NL@%
  22406. %@CR:GOSSIPWalters1  @%%@NL@%
  22407.                                                  Barbara Walters (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  22408.                                            American television personality%@NL@%
  22409. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22410. %@NL@%
  22411. %@NL@%
  22412. %@2@%Gossip is vice enjoyed vicariously.%@NL@%
  22413. %@CR:GOSSIPHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  22414.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  22415.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  22416. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22417. %@NL@%
  22418. %@NL@%
  22419. %@2@%At every word a reputation dies.%@NL@%
  22420. %@CR:GOSSIPPope      @%%@NL@%
  22421.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  22422.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22423. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22424. %@NL@%
  22425. %@NL@%
  22426. %@2@%Confidante. One entrusted by A with the secrets of B confided%@EH@%
  22427. to herself by C.%@NL@%
  22428. %@CR:GOSSIPBierce    @%%@NL@%
  22429.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  22430.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  22431. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22432. %@NL@%
  22433. %@NL@%
  22434. %@2@%If all men knew what others say of them, there would not be%@EH@%
  22435. four friends in the world.%@NL@%
  22436. %@CR:GOSSIPPascal    @%%@NL@%
  22437.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  22438.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  22439. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22440. %@NL@%
  22441. %@NL@%
  22442. %@2@%How awful to reflect that what people say of us is true.%@NL@%
  22443. %@CR:GOSSIPSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  22444.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  22445.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  22446. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22447. %@NL@%
  22448. %@NL@%
  22449. %@2@%The sewing-circle - the Protestant confessional%@EH@%
  22450. where each one confesses, not her own sins,
  22451. but the sins of her neighbors.%@NL@%
  22452. %@CR:GOSSIPFairbanks @%%@NL@%
  22453.                                           Charles B. Fairbanks (1827-1859)%@NL@%
  22454. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22455. %@NL@%
  22456. %@NL@%
  22457. %@2@%They come together like the coroner's inquest, to sit upon%@EH@%
  22458. the murdered reputations of the week.%@NL@%
  22459. %@CR:GOSSIPCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  22460.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  22461.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  22462. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22463. %@NL@%
  22464. %@NL@%
  22465. %@2@%None are so fond of secrets as those who do not mean to keep%@EH@%
  22466. them.%@NL@%
  22467. %@CR:GOSSIPColton    @%%@NL@%
  22468.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  22469.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  22470. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22471. %@NL@%
  22472. %@NL@%
  22473. %@2@%In scandal as in robbery, the receiver is always thought as%@EH@%
  22474. bad as the thief.%@NL@%
  22475. %@CR:GOSSIPChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  22476.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  22477.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  22478. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22479. %@NL@%
  22480. %@NL@%
  22481. %@2@%Backbite. To "speak of a man as you find him" when he can't%@EH@%
  22482. find you.%@NL@%
  22483. %@CR:GOSSIPBierce    @%%@NL@%
  22484.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  22485.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  22486. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22487. %@NL@%
  22488. %@NL@%
  22489. %@2@%Tattlers also and busybodies, speaking things which they ought%@EH@%
  22490. not.%@NL@%
  22491. %@CR:GOSSIPSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  22492.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  22493.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  22494. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22495. %@NL@%
  22496. %@NL@%
  22497. %@2@%She poured a little social sewage into his ears.%@NL@%
  22498. %@CR:GOSSIPMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  22499.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  22500.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  22501. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22502. %@NL@%
  22503. %@NL@%
  22504. %@2@%Ah, well, the truth is always one thing, but in a way it's%@EH@%
  22505. the other thing, the gossip, that counts. It shows where people's
  22506. hearts lie.%@NL@%
  22507. %@CR:GOSSIPScott3    @%%@NL@%
  22508.                                                     Paul Scott (1920-1978)%@NL@%
  22509.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  22510. %@AS@%                                                                    Gossip%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22511. %@NL@%
  22512. %@NL@%
  22513. %@NL@%
  22514. %@1@%%@AS@%Government%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22515. %@CR:GOVERNMENT      @%%@NL@%
  22516. %@2@%See:%@QR:Government@%%@NL@%
  22517.      Corruption: %@AB@%Colton%@AE@%%@BO:           8508a@%; %@AB@%Ickes%@AE@%%@BO:           851e2@%%@NL@%
  22518.      Elections: %@AB@%graffito%@AE@%%@BO:           c40b3@%%@NL@%
  22519.      Jokers: %@AB@%Rogers%@AE@%%@BO:          1600fc@%%@NL@%
  22520.      Newspapers: %@AB@%Phillips%@AE@%%@BO:          1bd1e4@%%@NL@%
  22521.      Opposition: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          1c6253@%%@NL@%
  22522.      The Press: %@AB@%Jefferson%@AE@%%@BO:          1ff5ae@%%@NL@%
  22523.      Religion: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          223cc6@%; %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          2232d0@%%@NL@%
  22524.      Secrets: %@AB@%Bentham%@AE@%%@BO:          240b64@%%@NL@%
  22525.      Taxation: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          27da69@%; %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:          27d8d9@%%@NL@%
  22526. %@NL@%
  22527. %@2@%The Athenians govern the Greek; I govern the Athenians; you,%@EH@%
  22528. my wife, govern me; your son governs you.%@NL@%
  22529. %@CR:GOVERNThemistocl@%%@NL@%
  22530.                                            Themistocles (c. 528-c. 462 BC)%@NL@%
  22531.                                                         Athenian statesman%@NL@%
  22532. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22533. %@NL@%
  22534. %@NL@%
  22535. %@2@%The punishment which the wise suffer who refuse to take part%@EH@%
  22536. in the government, is to live under the government of worse men.%@NL@%
  22537. %@CR:GOVERNPlato     @%%@NL@%
  22538.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  22539.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  22540. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22541. %@NL@%
  22542. %@NL@%
  22543. %@2@%Men are not governed by justice, but by law or persuasion.%@EH@%
  22544. When they refuse to be governed by law or persuasion, they have
  22545. to be governed by force or fraud, or both.%@NL@%
  22546. %@CR:GOVERNShaw      @%%@NL@%
  22547.                                              Lord Summerhayes, %@AI@%Misalliance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22548.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  22549.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  22550. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22551. %@NL@%
  22552. %@NL@%
  22553. %@2@%Governments need to have both shepherds and butchers.%@NL@%
  22554. %@CR:GOVERNVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  22555.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  22556.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  22557. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22558. %@NL@%
  22559. %@NL@%
  22560. %@2@%Government is like a baby. An alimentary canal with a big appetite%@EH@%
  22561. at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.%@NL@%
  22562. %@CR:GOVERNReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  22563.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  22564.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  22565. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22566. %@NL@%
  22567. %@NL@%
  22568. %@2@%Government is emphatically a machine: to the discontented a%@EH@%
  22569. "taxing machine," to the contented a "machine for securing property."%@NL@%
  22570. %@CR:GOVERNCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  22571.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  22572.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  22573. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22574. %@NL@%
  22575. %@NL@%
  22576. %@2@%Government has no other end than the preservation of property.%@NL@%
  22577. %@CR:GOVERNLocke     @%%@NL@%
  22578.                                                     John Locke (1632-1704)%@NL@%
  22579.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  22580. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22581. %@NL@%
  22582. %@NL@%
  22583. %@2@%The hatred Americans have for their own government is pathological%@EH@%
  22584.  . . .  at one level it is simply thwarted greed: since our religion
  22585. is making a buck, giving a part of that buck to any government
  22586. is an act against nature.%@NL@%
  22587. %@CR:GOVERNVidal     @%%@NL@%
  22588.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  22589.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  22590. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22591. %@NL@%
  22592. %@NL@%
  22593. %@2@%The business of Government is to see that no other organization%@EH@%
  22594. is as strong as itself.%@NL@%
  22595. %@CR:GOVERNWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  22596.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  22597.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  22598. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22599. %@NL@%
  22600. %@NL@%
  22601. %@2@%The marvel of all history is the patience with which men and%@EH@%
  22602. women submit to burdens unnecessarily laid upon them by their governments.%@NL@%
  22603. %@CR:GOVERNBorah     @%%@NL@%
  22604.                                               William E. Borah (1865-1940)%@NL@%
  22605.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  22606. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22607. %@NL@%
  22608. %@NL@%
  22609. %@2@%To be governed is to be watched, inspected, spied upon, directed,%@EH@%
  22610. lawridden, regulated, penned up, indoctrinated, preached at, checked,
  22611. appraised, seized, censured, commanded by beings who have neither
  22612. title, knowledge nor virtue.%@NL@%
  22613. %@CR:GOVERNProudhon  @%%@NL@%
  22614.                                         Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  22615.                                                     French social theorist%@NL@%
  22616. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22617. %@NL@%
  22618. %@NL@%
  22619. %@2@%Nothing is so galling to a people not broken in from the birth%@EH@%
  22620. as a paternal, or in other words a meddling government, a government
  22621. which tells them what to read and say and eat and drink and wear.%@NL@%
  22622. %@CR:GOVERNMacaulay3 @%%@NL@%
  22623.                                      Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  22624.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  22625. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22626. %@NL@%
  22627. %@NL@%
  22628. %@2@%We mustn't be stiff and stand-off, you know. We must be thoroughly%@EH@%
  22629. democratic, and patronize everybody without distinction of class.%@NL@%
  22630. %@CR:GOVERNShaw      @%%@NL@%
  22631.                                        Broadbent, %@AI@%John Bull's Other Island%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22632.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  22633.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  22634. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22635. %@NL@%
  22636. %@NL@%
  22637. %@2@%The government of the world I live in was not framed, like%@EH@%
  22638. that of Britain, in after-dinner conversations over the wine.%@NL@%
  22639. %@CR:GOVERNThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  22640.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  22641.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  22642. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22643. %@NL@%
  22644. %@NL@%
  22645. %@2@%At the very heart of British government there is a luxuriant%@EH@%
  22646. and voluntary exclusion of talent.%@NL@%
  22647. %@CR:GOVERNChapman2  @%%@NL@%
  22648.                                                    Brian Chapman (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  22649.                                                           British academic%@NL@%
  22650. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22651. %@NL@%
  22652. %@NL@%
  22653. %@2@%It is the duty of Her Majesty's Government neither to flap%@EH@%
  22654. nor to falter.%@NL@%
  22655. %@CR:GOVERNMacmillan @%%@NL@%
  22656.                                Harold Macmillan, Lord Stockton (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  22657.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  22658. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22659. %@NL@%
  22660. %@NL@%
  22661. %@2@%The authorities were at their wit's end, nor had it taken them%@EH@%
  22662. long to get there.%@NL@%
  22663. %@CR:GOVERNMacCarthy @%%@NL@%
  22664.                                              Desmond MacCarthy (1877-1952)%@NL@%
  22665.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  22666. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22667. %@NL@%
  22668. %@NL@%
  22669. %@2@%Generosity is a part of my character, and I therefore hasten%@EH@%
  22670. to assure this Government that I will never make an allegation
  22671. of dishonesty against it wherever a simple explanation of stupidity
  22672. will suffice.%@NL@%
  22673. %@CR:GOVERNLever2    @%%@NL@%
  22674.                                            Leslie, Baron Lever (1905-1977)%@NL@%
  22675.                                       British solicitor, Labour politician%@NL@%
  22676. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22677. %@NL@%
  22678. %@NL@%
  22679. %@2@%The art of government is the organization of idolatry.%@NL@%
  22680. %@CR:GOVERNShaw      @%%@NL@%
  22681.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  22682.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  22683. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22684. %@NL@%
  22685. %@NL@%
  22686. %@2@%The object of government in peace and in war is not the glory%@EH@%
  22687. of rulers or of races, but the happiness of the common man.%@NL@%
  22688. %@CR:GOVERNBeveridge @%%@NL@%
  22689.                                              William Beveridge (1879-1963)%@NL@%
  22690.                                                          British economist%@NL@%
  22691. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22692. %@NL@%
  22693. %@NL@%
  22694.      %@2@%For forms of government let fools contest,%@NL@%
  22695.      Whate'er is best administered is best.%@NL@%
  22696. %@CR:GOVERNPope      @%%@NL@%
  22697.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  22698.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22699. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22700. %@NL@%
  22701. %@NL@%
  22702. %@2@%Mankind, when left to themselves, are unfit for their own government.%@NL@%
  22703. %@CR:GOVERNWashington@%%@NL@%
  22704.                                              George Washington (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  22705.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  22706. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22707. %@NL@%
  22708. %@NL@%
  22709. %@2@%Let us treat men and women well; treat them as if they were%@EH@%
  22710. real; perhaps they are.%@NL@%
  22711. %@CR:GOVERNEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  22712.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  22713.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  22714. %@AS@%                                                                Government%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22715. %@NL@%
  22716. %@NL@%
  22717. %@NL@%
  22718. %@1@%%@AS@%Graffiti%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22719. %@CR:GRAFFITI        @%%@NL@%
  22720. %@2@%%@QR:Graffiti@%There was so much handwriting on the wall that even the wall%@EH@%
  22721. fell down.%@NL@%
  22722. %@CR:GRAFFIMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  22723.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  22724.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  22725. %@AS@%                                                                  Graffiti%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22726. %@NL@%
  22727. %@NL@%
  22728. %@NL@%
  22729. %@1@%%@AS@%Gratitude%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22730. %@CR:GRATITUDE       @%%@NL@%
  22731. %@2@%%@QR:Gratitude@%Maybe the only thing worse than having to give gratitude constantly%@EH@%
  22732.  . . .  is having to accept it.%@NL@%
  22733. %@CR:GRATITFaulkner  @%%@NL@%
  22734.                                               William Faulkner (1897-1962)%@NL@%
  22735.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  22736. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22737. %@NL@%
  22738. %@NL@%
  22739. %@2@%In most of mankind gratitude is merely a secret hope of further%@EH@%
  22740. favors.%@NL@%
  22741. %@CR:GRATITLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  22742.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  22743.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  22744. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22745. %@NL@%
  22746. %@NL@%
  22747. %@2@%Gratitude is a sickness suffered by dogs.%@NL@%
  22748. %@CR:GRATITStalin    @%%@NL@%
  22749.                                                   Josef Stalin (1879-1953)%@NL@%
  22750.                                                              USSR dictator%@NL@%
  22751. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22752. %@NL@%
  22753. %@NL@%
  22754. %@2@%There are minds so impatient of inferiority that their gratitude%@EH@%
  22755. is a species of revenge, and they return benefits, not because
  22756. recompense is a pleasure but because obligation is a pain.%@NL@%
  22757. %@CR:GRATITJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  22758.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  22759.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  22760. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22761. %@NL@%
  22762. %@NL@%
  22763. %@2@%We seldom find people ungrateful so long as we are in a condition%@EH@%
  22764. to render them service.%@NL@%
  22765. %@CR:GRATITLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  22766.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  22767.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  22768. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22769. %@NL@%
  22770. %@NL@%
  22771. %@2@%He receives comfort like cold porridge.%@NL@%
  22772. %@CR:GRATITShakespear@%%@NL@%
  22773.                                                     Sebastian, %@AI@%The Tempest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22774.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  22775.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  22776. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22777. %@NL@%
  22778. %@NL@%
  22779. %@2@%Is it not possible to eat me without insisting that I sing%@EH@%
  22780. the praises of my devourer?%@NL@%
  22781. %@CR:GRATITDostoievsk@%%@NL@%
  22782.                                             Feodor Dostoievski (1821-1881)%@NL@%
  22783.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  22784. %@AS@%                                                                 Gratitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22785. %@NL@%
  22786. %@NL@%
  22787. %@NL@%
  22788. %@1@%%@AS@%Greatness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22789. %@CR:GREATNESS       @%%@NL@%
  22790. %@2@%See:%@QR:Greatness@%%@NL@%
  22791.      Death: %@AB@%Froude%@AE@%%@BO:           9a839@%%@NL@%
  22792.      Glory: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          10d08d@%%@NL@%
  22793.      Heroes: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          12a8b9@%%@NL@%
  22794.      Motives: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          1b2972@%%@NL@%
  22795.      Public Life: %@AB@%de la Bruyere%@AE@%%@BO:          2108e8@%%@NL@%
  22796.      Scholarship: %@AB@%Holmes%@AE@%%@BO:          238f0c@%%@NL@%
  22797. %@NL@%
  22798. %@2@%Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have%@EH@%
  22799. greatness thrust upon'em.%@NL@%
  22800. %@CR:GREATNShakespear@%%@NL@%
  22801.                                    Malvolio, quoting letter, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22802.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  22803.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  22804. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22805. %@NL@%
  22806. %@NL@%
  22807. %@2@%Great men hallow a whole people, and lift up all who live in%@EH@%
  22808. their time.%@NL@%
  22809. %@CR:GREATNSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  22810.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  22811.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  22812. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22813. %@NL@%
  22814. %@NL@%
  22815. %@2@%The great are only great because we carry them on our shoulders.%@NL@%
  22816. %@CR:GREATNMontandre @%%@NL@%
  22817.                               Claude Dubosc de Montandre (b. 17th century)%@NL@%
  22818.                                                 French writer, pamphleteer%@NL@%
  22819. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22820. %@NL@%
  22821. %@NL@%
  22822. %@2@%Great men are rarely isolated mountain-peaks; they are summits%@EH@%
  22823. of ranges.%@NL@%
  22824. %@CR:GREATNHigginson @%%@NL@%
  22825.                                                T. W. Higginson (1823-1911)%@NL@%
  22826.                                                 American clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  22827. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22828. %@NL@%
  22829. %@NL@%
  22830. %@2@%Everybody comes along at the right time  . . .  Leonardo was%@EH@%
  22831. lucky because he came along at the right time. Oscar Wilde was
  22832. lucky because he came at the right time - if he hadn't gone
  22833. to court and been martyred he wouldn't be such a cult hero now.
  22834. Or Jesus Christ - if he came back now he would really be up
  22835. the shit because there's no capital punishment.%@NL@%
  22836. %@CR:GREATNBailey1   @%%@NL@%
  22837.                                                     David Bailey (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  22838.                                                       British photographer%@NL@%
  22839. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22840. %@NL@%
  22841. %@NL@%
  22842. %@2@%Nothing great will ever be achieved without great men, and%@EH@%
  22843. men are great only if they are determined to be so.%@NL@%
  22844. %@CR:GREATNdeGaulle  @%%@NL@%
  22845.                                      General Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970)%@NL@%
  22846.                                                           French president%@NL@%
  22847. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22848. %@NL@%
  22849. %@NL@%
  22850. %@2@%Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.%@EH@%
  22851. Great men are almost always bad men.%@NL@%
  22852. %@CR:GREATNActon     @%%@NL@%
  22853.                                                     Lord Acton (1834-1902)%@NL@%
  22854.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  22855. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22856. %@NL@%
  22857. %@NL@%
  22858. %@2@%What millions died that Caesar might be great!%@NL@%
  22859. %@CR:GREATNCampbell3 @%%@NL@%
  22860.                                                Thomas Campbell (1777-1844)%@NL@%
  22861.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  22862. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22863. %@NL@%
  22864. %@NL@%
  22865. %@2@%No great man lives in vain. The history of the world is but%@EH@%
  22866. the biography of great men.%@NL@%
  22867. %@CR:GREATNCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  22868.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  22869.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  22870. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22871. %@NL@%
  22872. %@NL@%
  22873. %@2@%The world, will, in the end, follow only those who have despised%@EH@%
  22874. as well as served it.%@NL@%
  22875. %@CR:GREATNButler4   @%%@NL@%
  22876.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  22877.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  22878. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22879. %@NL@%
  22880. %@NL@%
  22881. %@2@%It is a melancholy truth that even great men have their poor%@EH@%
  22882. relations.%@NL@%
  22883. %@CR:GREATNDickens   @%%@NL@%
  22884.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  22885.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  22886. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22887. %@NL@%
  22888. %@NL@%
  22889. %@2@%We are both great men, but I have succeeded better in keeping%@EH@%
  22890. it a profound secret than he has.%@NL@%
  22891. %@CR:GREATNNye       @%%@NL@%
  22892.                                               Bill(E. W.)  Nye (1850-1896)%@NL@%
  22893.                                       American journalist, humorous writer%@NL@%
  22894. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22895. %@NL@%
  22896. %@NL@%
  22897. %@2@%To have a great man for a friend seems pleasant to those who%@EH@%
  22898. have never tried it; those who have, fear it.%@NL@%
  22899. %@CR:GREATNHorace    @%%@NL@%
  22900.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  22901.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  22902. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22903. %@NL@%
  22904. %@NL@%
  22905. %@2@%To be great is to be misunderstood.%@NL@%
  22906. %@CR:GREATNEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  22907.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  22908.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  22909. %@AS@%                                                                 Greatness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22910. %@NL@%
  22911. %@NL@%
  22912. %@NL@%
  22913. %@1@%%@AS@%Greed%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22914. %@CR:GREED           @%%@NL@%
  22915. %@2@%See:%@QR:Greed@%%@NL@%
  22916.      Drink: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:           b8e96@%%@NL@%
  22917. %@NL@%
  22918. %@2@%Avarice, sphincter of the heart.%@NL@%
  22919. %@CR:GREED Green1    @%%@NL@%
  22920.                                                  Matthew Green (1696-1737)%@NL@%
  22921.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22922. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22923. %@NL@%
  22924. %@NL@%
  22925. %@2@%Avarice, the spur of industry.%@NL@%
  22926. %@CR:GREED Hume      @%%@NL@%
  22927.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  22928.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  22929. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22930. %@NL@%
  22931. %@NL@%
  22932. %@2@%The love of money is the root of all evil.%@NL@%
  22933. %@CR:GREED SaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  22934.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  22935.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  22936. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22937. %@NL@%
  22938. %@NL@%
  22939. %@2@%Greed, like the love of comfort, is a kind of fear.%@NL@%
  22940. %@CR:GREED Connolly  @%%@NL@%
  22941.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  22942.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  22943. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22944. %@NL@%
  22945. %@NL@%
  22946. %@2@%Avarice is generally the last passion of those lives of which%@EH@%
  22947. the first part has been squandered in pleasure, and the second
  22948. devoted to ambition.%@NL@%
  22949. %@CR:GREED Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  22950.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  22951.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  22952. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22953. %@NL@%
  22954. %@NL@%
  22955.      %@2@%So for a good old-gentlemanly vice,%@NL@%
  22956.      I think I must take up with avarice.%@NL@%
  22957. %@CR:GREED Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  22958.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  22959.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  22960. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22961. %@NL@%
  22962. %@NL@%
  22963. %@2@%There is enough for the needy but not for the greedy.%@NL@%
  22964. %@CR:GREED Gandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  22965.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  22966.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  22967. %@AS@%                                                                     Greed%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22968. %@NL@%
  22969. %@NL@%
  22970. %@NL@%
  22971. %@1@%%@AS@%Grief%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  22972. %@CR:GRIEF           @%%@NL@%
  22973. %@2@%See:%@QR:Grief@%%@NL@%
  22974.      Drink: %@AB@%Calverley%@AE@%%@BO:           b7afa@%%@NL@%
  22975.      Money: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          1ac7fa@%%@NL@%
  22976.      %@AB@%Unhappiness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29b831@%%@NL@%
  22977.      Widowhood: %@AB@%Fuller%@AE@%%@BO:          2b16b6@%%@NL@%
  22978. %@NL@%
  22979.      %@2@%Grief fills the room up of my absent child,%@NL@%
  22980.      Lies in his bed, walks up and down with me,%@NL@%
  22981.      Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words.%@NL@%
  22982. %@CR:GRIEF Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  22983.                                                       Constance, %@AI@%King John%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22984.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  22985.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  22986. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22987. %@NL@%
  22988. %@NL@%
  22989. %@2@%Grief is the agony of an instant: the indulgence of grief the%@EH@%
  22990. blunder of a life.%@NL@%
  22991. %@CR:GRIEF Disraeli  @%%@NL@%
  22992.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  22993.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  22994. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  22995. %@NL@%
  22996. %@NL@%
  22997. %@2@%What we call mourning for our dead is perhaps not so much grief%@EH@%
  22998. at not being able to call them back as it is grief at not being
  22999. able to want to do so.%@NL@%
  23000. %@CR:GRIEF Mann      @%%@NL@%
  23001.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  23002.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  23003. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23004. %@NL@%
  23005. %@NL@%
  23006. %@2@%The display of grief makes more demands than grief itself.%@EH@%
  23007. How few men are sad in their own company.%@NL@%
  23008. %@CR:GRIEF Seneca    @%%@NL@%
  23009.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  23010.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  23011. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23012. %@NL@%
  23013. %@NL@%
  23014. %@2@%We often console ourselves for being unhappy by a certain pleasure%@EH@%
  23015. in appearing so.%@NL@%
  23016. %@CR:GRIEF LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  23017.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  23018.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  23019. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23020. %@NL@%
  23021. %@NL@%
  23022. %@2@%Pain hardens, and great pain hardens greatly, whatever the%@EH@%
  23023. comforters say, and suffering does not ennoble, though it may occasionally
  23024. lend a certain rigid dignity of manner to the suffering frame.%@NL@%
  23025. %@CR:GRIEF Byatt     @%%@NL@%
  23026.                                                      A. S. Byatt (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  23027.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  23028. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23029. %@NL@%
  23030. %@NL@%
  23031. %@2@%In all the silent manliness of grief.%@NL@%
  23032. %@CR:GRIEF Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  23033.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  23034.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  23035. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23036. %@NL@%
  23037. %@NL@%
  23038. %@2@%Sorrow, the great idealizer.%@NL@%
  23039. %@CR:GRIEF Lowell2   @%%@NL@%
  23040.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  23041.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  23042. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23043. %@NL@%
  23044. %@NL@%
  23045. %@2@%People in distress never think that you feel enough.%@NL@%
  23046. %@CR:GRIEF Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  23047.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  23048.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  23049. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23050. %@NL@%
  23051. %@NL@%
  23052. %@2@%Nothing becomes so offensive so quickly as grief. When fresh%@EH@%
  23053. it finds someone to console it, but when it becomes chronic, it
  23054. is ridiculed, and rightly.%@NL@%
  23055. %@CR:GRIEF Seneca    @%%@NL@%
  23056.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  23057.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  23058. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23059. %@NL@%
  23060. %@NL@%
  23061. %@2@%Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.%@NL@%
  23062. %@CR:GRIEF BiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  23063.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  23064. %@AS@%                                                                     Grief%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23065. %@NL@%
  23066. %@NL@%
  23067. %@NL@%
  23068. %@1@%%@AS@%The Grotesque%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23069. %@CR:THEGROTESQUE    @%%@NL@%
  23070. %@2@%%@QR:The Grotesque@%She resembles the Venus de Milo: she is very old, has no teeth,%@EH@%
  23071. and has white spots on her yellow skin.%@NL@%
  23072. %@CR:THEGROHeine     @%%@NL@%
  23073.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  23074.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  23075. %@AS@%                                                             The Grotesque%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23076. %@NL@%
  23077. %@NL@%
  23078. %@2@%Her skin was white as leprosy.%@NL@%
  23079. %@CR:THEGROColeridge @%%@NL@%
  23080.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  23081.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  23082. %@AS@%                                                             The Grotesque%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23083. %@NL@%
  23084. %@NL@%
  23085. %@NL@%
  23086. %@1@%%@AS@%Grudges%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23087. %@CR:GRUDGES         @%%@NL@%
  23088. %@2@%See:%@QR:Grudges@%%@NL@%
  23089.      Prejudice: %@AB@%Bible%@AE@%%@CF:PREJUDBible     @%%@NL@%
  23090. %@NL@%
  23091.      %@2@%I was angry with my friend.%@NL@%
  23092.      I told my wrath, my wrath did end.%@NL@%
  23093.      I was angry with my foe:%@NL@%
  23094.      I told it not, my wrath did grow.%@NL@%
  23095. %@CR:GRUDGEBlake     @%%@NL@%
  23096.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  23097.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  23098. %@AS@%                                                                   Grudges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23099. %@NL@%
  23100. %@NL@%
  23101. %@2@%Kindnesses are easily forgotten; but injuries? - what worthy%@EH@%
  23102. man does not keep those in mind?%@NL@%
  23103. %@CR:GRUDGEThackeray @%%@NL@%
  23104.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  23105.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  23106. %@AS@%                                                                   Grudges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23107. %@NL@%
  23108. %@NL@%
  23109. %@2@%To have a grievance is to have a purpose in life.%@NL@%
  23110. %@CR:GRUDGEHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  23111.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  23112.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  23113. %@AS@%                                                                   Grudges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23114. %@NL@%
  23115. %@NL@%
  23116. %@NL@%
  23117. %@1@%%@AS@%Guerrilla Warfare%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23118. %@CR:GUERRILLAWARFARE@%%@NL@%
  23119. %@2@%%@QR:Guerrilla Warfare@%Insurrection - by means of guerrilla bands - is the true%@EH@%
  23120. method of warfare for all nations desirous of emancipating themselves
  23121. from a foreign yoke  . . .  It is invincible, indestructible.%@NL@%
  23122. %@CR:GUERRIMazzini   @%%@NL@%
  23123.                                               Giuseppi Mazzini (1805-1872)%@NL@%
  23124.                                                 Italian nationalist leader%@NL@%
  23125. %@AS@%                                                         Guerrilla Warfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23126. %@NL@%
  23127. %@NL@%
  23128. %@2@%It is necessary to turn political crisis into armed crisis%@EH@%
  23129. by performing violent actions that will force those in power to
  23130. transform the military situation into a political situation. That
  23131. will alienate the masses, who, from then on, will revolt against
  23132. the army and the police and blame them for this state of things.%@NL@%
  23133. %@CR:GUERRIMarighella@%%@NL@%
  23134.                                             Carlos Marighella (b. d. 1969)%@NL@%
  23135.                                                 Brazilian guerrilla leader%@NL@%
  23136.                                 from his %@AI@%Minimanual of the Urban Guerrilla%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23137. %@AS@%                                                         Guerrilla Warfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23138. %@NL@%
  23139. %@NL@%
  23140. %@2@%The conventional army loses if it does not win. The guerrilla%@EH@%
  23141. wins if he does not lose.%@NL@%
  23142. %@CR:GUERRIKissinger @%%@NL@%
  23143.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  23144.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  23145. %@AS@%                                                         Guerrilla Warfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23146. %@NL@%
  23147. %@NL@%
  23148. %@NL@%
  23149. %@1@%%@AS@%Guests%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23150. %@CR:GUESTS          @%%@NL@%
  23151. %@2@%See:%@QR:Guests@%%@NL@%
  23152.      %@AB@%Dinner Parties%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           a93f4@%%@NL@%
  23153.      %@AB@%Hospitality%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          13610b@%%@NL@%
  23154. %@NL@%
  23155. %@2@%Mankind is divisible into two great classes: hosts and guests.%@NL@%
  23156. %@CR:GUESTSBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  23157.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  23158.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  23159. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23160. %@NL@%
  23161. %@NL@%
  23162. %@2@%The first day a man is a guest, the second a burden, the third%@EH@%
  23163. a pest.%@NL@%
  23164. %@CR:GUESTSLaboulaye @%%@NL@%
  23165.                                              Edouard Laboulaye (1811-1883)%@NL@%
  23166.                                                    French writer, satirist%@NL@%
  23167. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23168. %@NL@%
  23169. %@NL@%
  23170. %@2@%Some people can stay longer in an hour than others can in a%@EH@%
  23171. week.%@NL@%
  23172. %@CR:GUESTSHowells   @%%@NL@%
  23173.                                           William Dean Howells (1837-1920)%@NL@%
  23174.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  23175. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23176. %@NL@%
  23177. %@NL@%
  23178. %@2@%Fish and visitors smell in three days.%@NL@%
  23179. %@CR:GUESTSFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  23180.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  23181.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  23182. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23183. %@NL@%
  23184. %@NL@%
  23185. %@2@%If you'd lose a troublesome visitor, lend him money.%@NL@%
  23186. %@CR:GUESTSFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  23187.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  23188.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  23189. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23190. %@NL@%
  23191. %@NL@%
  23192. %@2@%Frank Harris is invited to all the great houses in England - once.%@NL@%
  23193. %@CR:GUESTSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  23194.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  23195.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  23196. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23197. %@NL@%
  23198. %@NL@%
  23199. %@2@%When a man has been highly honored and has eaten a little he%@EH@%
  23200. is most benevolent.%@NL@%
  23201. %@CR:GUESTSNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  23202.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  23203.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  23204. %@AS@%                                                                    Guests%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23205. %@NL@%
  23206. %@NL@%
  23207. %@NL@%
  23208. %@1@%%@AS@%Guilt%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23209. %@CR:GUILT           @%%@NL@%
  23210. %@2@%%@QR:Guilt@%Guilt has very quick ears to an accusation.%@NL@%
  23211. %@CR:GUILT Fielding  @%%@NL@%
  23212.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  23213.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  23214. %@AS@%                                                                     Guilt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23215. %@NL@%
  23216. %@NL@%
  23217.      %@2@%I had most need of blessing, and "Amen"%@NL@%
  23218.      Stuck in my throat.%@NL@%
  23219. %@CR:GUILT Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  23220.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23221.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  23222.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  23223. %@AS@%                                                                     Guilt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23224. %@NL@%
  23225. %@NL@%
  23226. %@2@%The offender never forgives.%@NL@%
  23227. %@CR:GUILT RUSSIANPRO@%%@NL@%
  23228.                                                            Russian proverb%@NL@%
  23229. %@AS@%                                                                     Guilt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23230. %@NL@%
  23231. %@NL@%
  23232. %@2@%True guilt is guilt at the obligation one owes to oneself to%@EH@%
  23233. be oneself.%@NL@%
  23234. %@CR:GUILT Laing     @%%@NL@%
  23235.                                                    R. D. Laing (1927-1989)%@NL@%
  23236.                                                       British psychiatrist%@NL@%
  23237. %@AS@%                                                                     Guilt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23238. %@NL@%
  23239. %@NL@%
  23240. %@NL@%
  23241. %@1@%%@AS@%Habit%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23242. %@CR:HABIT           @%%@NL@%
  23243. %@2@%See:%@QR:Habit@%%@NL@%
  23244.      Tradition: %@AB@%Book of Common Prayer%@AE@%%@BO:          290640@%; %@AB@%Mill%@AE@%%@BO:          2902e7@%%@NL@%
  23245. %@NL@%
  23246. %@2@%Custom, then, is the great guide of human life.%@NL@%
  23247. %@CR:HABIT Hume      @%%@NL@%
  23248.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  23249.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  23250. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23251. %@NL@%
  23252. %@NL@%
  23253.      %@2@%Habit with him was all the test of truth,%@NL@%
  23254.      "It must be right: I've done it from my youth."%@NL@%
  23255. %@CR:HABIT Crabbe    @%%@NL@%
  23256.                                                  George Crabbe (1754-1832)%@NL@%
  23257.                                                    English poet, clergyman%@NL@%
  23258. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23259. %@NL@%
  23260. %@NL@%
  23261. %@2@%The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are%@EH@%
  23262. too strong to be broken.%@NL@%
  23263. %@CR:HABIT Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  23264.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  23265.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  23266. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23267. %@NL@%
  23268. %@NL@%
  23269. %@2@%The second half of a man's life is made up of nothing but the%@EH@%
  23270. habits he has acquired during the first half.%@NL@%
  23271. %@CR:HABIT Dostoievsk@%%@NL@%
  23272.                                             Feodor Dostoievski (1821-1881)%@NL@%
  23273.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  23274. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23275. %@NL@%
  23276. %@NL@%
  23277. %@2@%Choose the best life, habit will make it pleasant.%@NL@%
  23278. %@CR:HABIT Epictetus @%%@NL@%
  23279.                                                   Epictetus (c. 55-c. 135)%@NL@%
  23280.                                                          Stoic philosopher%@NL@%
  23281. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23282. %@NL@%
  23283. %@NL@%
  23284. %@2@%To fall into a habit is to begin to cease to be.%@NL@%
  23285. %@CR:HABIT Unamuno   @%%@NL@%
  23286.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  23287.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  23288. %@AS@%                                                                     Habit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23289. %@NL@%
  23290. %@NL@%
  23291. %@NL@%
  23292. %@1@%%@AS@%Hair%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23293. %@CR:HAIR            @%%@NL@%
  23294. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hair@%%@NL@%
  23295.      %@AB@%Baldness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3979e@%%@NL@%
  23296.      %@AB@%Beards%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           3aa96@%%@NL@%
  23297. %@NL@%
  23298.      %@2@%Fair tresses man's imperial race ensnare,%@NL@%
  23299.      And beauty draws us with a single hair.%@NL@%
  23300. %@CR:HAIR  Pope      @%%@NL@%
  23301.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  23302.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  23303. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23304. %@NL@%
  23305. %@NL@%
  23306. %@2@%The hair in the head is worth two in the brush.%@NL@%
  23307. %@CR:HAIR  Herford   @%%@NL@%
  23308.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  23309.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  23310. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23311. %@NL@%
  23312. %@NL@%
  23313. %@2@%The only thing that can stop hair falling is the floor.%@NL@%
  23314. %@CR:HAIR  Rogers3   @%%@NL@%
  23315.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  23316.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  23317. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23318. %@NL@%
  23319. %@NL@%
  23320. %@2@%Hair, in fact, is probably the bane of most women's lives.%@NL@%
  23321. %@CR:HAIR  Collins2  @%%@NL@%
  23322.                                                     Joan Collins (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  23323.                                        British film and television actress%@NL@%
  23324. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23325. %@NL@%
  23326. %@NL@%
  23327.      %@2@%The lovely hair that Galla wears%@NL@%
  23328.      Is hers - who could have thought it?%@NL@%
  23329.      She swears 'tis hers; and true she swears,%@NL@%
  23330.      For I know where she bought it!%@NL@%
  23331. %@CR:HAIR  Martial   @%%@NL@%
  23332.                                                     Martial (c. 40-c. 104)%@NL@%
  23333.                                                                 Roman poet%@NL@%
  23334. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23335. %@NL@%
  23336. %@NL@%
  23337. %@2@%Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.%@NL@%
  23338. %@CR:HAIR  BibleGenes@%%@NL@%
  23339.                                                             Bible, Genesis%@NL@%
  23340. %@AS@%                                                                      Hair%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23341. %@NL@%
  23342. %@NL@%
  23343. %@NL@%
  23344. %@1@%%@AS@%Handshakes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23345. %@CR:HANDSHAKES      @%%@NL@%
  23346. %@2@%%@QR:Handshakes@%There is a hand that has no heart in it, there is a claw or%@EH@%
  23347. paw, a flipper or fin, a bit of wet cloth to take hold of, a piece
  23348. of unbaked dough on the cook's trencher, a cold clammy thing we
  23349. recoil from.%@NL@%
  23350. %@CR:HANDSHBartol    @%%@NL@%
  23351.                                                   C. A. Bartol (1813-1900)%@NL@%
  23352.                                                         American clergyman%@NL@%
  23353. %@AS@%                                                                Handshakes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23354. %@NL@%
  23355. %@NL@%
  23356. %@2@%His handshake ought not to be used except as a tourniquet.%@NL@%
  23357. %@CR:HANDSHHalsey    @%%@NL@%
  23358.                                                  Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  23359.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  23360. %@AS@%                                                                Handshakes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23361. %@NL@%
  23362. %@NL@%
  23363. %@2@%I hate the giving of the hand unless the whole man accompanies%@EH@%
  23364. it.%@NL@%
  23365. %@CR:HANDSHEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  23366.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  23367.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  23368. %@AS@%                                                                Handshakes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23369. %@NL@%
  23370. %@NL@%
  23371. %@2@%Never extend your hand further than you can withdraw it.%@NL@%
  23372. %@CR:HANDSHMacManus  @%%@NL@%
  23373.                                                Seumas MacManus (1869-1960)%@NL@%
  23374.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  23375. %@AS@%                                                                Handshakes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23376. %@NL@%
  23377. %@NL@%
  23378. %@NL@%
  23379. %@1@%%@AS@%Happiness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23380. %@CR:HAPPINESS       @%%@NL@%
  23381. %@2@%See:%@QR:Happiness@%%@NL@%
  23382.      Company: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           77884@%%@NL@%
  23383.      %@AB@%Contentment%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           80876@%%@NL@%
  23384.      Home: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          131a32@%%@NL@%
  23385.      Men: and Women: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          1a2175@%%@NL@%
  23386.      Sacrifice: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          234d4c@%%@NL@%
  23387.      Unhappiness: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          29c829@%%@NL@%
  23388. %@NL@%
  23389. %@2@%We all want to be happy, and we're all going to die.  . . . %@EH@%
  23390. You might say those are the only two unchallengeably true facts
  23391. that apply to every human being on this planet.%@NL@%
  23392. %@CR:HAPPINBoyd      @%%@NL@%
  23393.                                                     William Boyd (b. 1952)%@NL@%
  23394.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  23395. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23396. %@NL@%
  23397. %@NL@%
  23398. %@2@%We are never happy: we can only remember that we were so once.%@NL@%
  23399. %@CR:HAPPINSmith2    @%%@NL@%
  23400.                                                Alexander Smith (1830-1867)%@NL@%
  23401.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  23402. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23403. %@NL@%
  23404. %@NL@%
  23405. %@2@%One is never as unhappy as one thinks, nor as happy as one%@EH@%
  23406. had hoped to be.%@NL@%
  23407. %@CR:HAPPINLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  23408.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  23409.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  23410. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23411. %@NL@%
  23412. %@NL@%
  23413. %@2@%Ask yourself whether you are happy, and you cease to be so.%@NL@%
  23414. %@CR:HAPPINMill      @%%@NL@%
  23415.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  23416.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  23417. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23418. %@NL@%
  23419. %@NL@%
  23420. %@2@%Happiness is a mystery, like religion, and should never be%@EH@%
  23421. rationalised.%@NL@%
  23422. %@CR:HAPPINChesterton@%%@NL@%
  23423.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  23424.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  23425. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23426. %@NL@%
  23427. %@NL@%
  23428. %@2@%Give a man health and a course to steer, and he'll never stop%@EH@%
  23429. to trouble about whether he's happy or not.%@NL@%
  23430. %@CR:HAPPINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  23431.                                Brassbound, %@AI@%Captain Brassbound's Conversion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23432.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  23433.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  23434. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23435. %@NL@%
  23436. %@NL@%
  23437. %@2@%The search for happiness is one of the chief sources of unhappiness.%@NL@%
  23438. %@CR:HAPPINHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  23439.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  23440.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  23441. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23442. %@NL@%
  23443. %@NL@%
  23444. %@2@%Happiness is an imaginary condition formerly often attributed%@EH@%
  23445. by the living to the dead, now usually attributed by adults to
  23446. children, and by children to adults.%@NL@%
  23447. %@CR:HAPPINSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  23448.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  23449.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  23450. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23451. %@NL@%
  23452. %@NL@%
  23453.      %@2@%%@AI@%Sotto%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23454.      %@AI@%Ogni clima, ogni ciel, si chiama indarno%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23455.      %@AI@%Felicita, vive tristezza e regna.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23456. %@NL@%
  23457. %@2@%Under all skies, all weathers, man's happiness lies always
  23458. elsewhere; sorrow lives and reigns.%@NL@%
  23459. %@CR:HAPPINLeopardi  @%%@NL@%
  23460.                                               Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837)%@NL@%
  23461.                                                               Italian poet%@NL@%
  23462. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23463. %@NL@%
  23464. %@NL@%
  23465. %@2@%If we only wanted to be happy it would be easy; but we want%@EH@%
  23466. to be happier than other people, which is almost always difficult,
  23467. since we think them happier than they are.%@NL@%
  23468. %@CR:HAPPINMontesquie@%%@NL@%
  23469.                                         Charles de Montesquieu (1689-1755)%@NL@%
  23470.                                         French philosopher, writer, lawyer%@NL@%
  23471. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23472. %@NL@%
  23473. %@NL@%
  23474. %@2@%I can sympathise with people's pains, but not with their pleasures.%@EH@%
  23475. There is something curiously boring about somebody else's happiness.%@NL@%
  23476. %@CR:HAPPINHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  23477.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  23478.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  23479. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23480. %@NL@%
  23481. %@NL@%
  23482. %@2@%Oh! how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through%@EH@%
  23483. another man's eyes.%@NL@%
  23484. %@CR:HAPPINShakespear@%%@NL@%
  23485.                                                    Orlando, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23486.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  23487.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  23488. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23489. %@NL@%
  23490. %@NL@%
  23491. %@2@%Grief can take care of itself, but to get the full value from%@EH@%
  23492. joy you must have somebody to divide it with.%@NL@%
  23493. %@CR:HAPPINTwain     @%%@NL@%
  23494.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  23495.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  23496. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23497. %@NL@%
  23498. %@NL@%
  23499. %@2@%We have no more right to consume happiness without producing%@EH@%
  23500. it than to consume wealth without producing it.%@NL@%
  23501. %@CR:HAPPINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  23502.                                                            Morell, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23503.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  23504.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  23505. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23506. %@NL@%
  23507. %@NL@%
  23508. %@2@%Love kills happiness, happiness kills love.%@NL@%
  23509. %@CR:HAPPINUnamuno   @%%@NL@%
  23510.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  23511.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  23512. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23513. %@NL@%
  23514. %@NL@%
  23515. %@2@%The happiest time in any man's life is when he is in red-hot%@EH@%
  23516. pursuit of a dollar with a reasonable prospect of overtaking it.%@NL@%
  23517. %@CR:HAPPINBillings  @%%@NL@%
  23518.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  23519.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  23520. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23521. %@NL@%
  23522. %@NL@%
  23523. %@2@%The greatest happiness of the greatest number is the foundation%@EH@%
  23524. of morals and legislation.%@NL@%
  23525. %@CR:HAPPINBentham   @%%@NL@%
  23526.                                                 Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)%@NL@%
  23527.                            English philosopher, political theorist, jurist%@NL@%
  23528. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23529. %@NL@%
  23530. %@NL@%
  23531. %@2@%Happiness is no laughing matter.%@NL@%
  23532. %@CR:HAPPINWhately   @%%@NL@%
  23533.                                                Richard Whately (1787-1863)%@NL@%
  23534.                                                       Archbishop of Dublin%@NL@%
  23535. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23536. %@NL@%
  23537. %@NL@%
  23538. %@2@%Here's a new day. O Pendulum move slowly!%@NL@%
  23539. %@CR:HAPPINMunro1    @%%@NL@%
  23540.                                                   Harold Munro (1879-1932)%@NL@%
  23541.                                                       British poet, critic%@NL@%
  23542. %@AS@%                                                                 Happiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23543. %@NL@%
  23544. %@NL@%
  23545. %@NL@%
  23546. %@1@%%@AS@%Hard Times%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23547. %@CR:HARDTIMES       @%%@NL@%
  23548. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hard Times@%%@NL@%
  23549.      %@AB@%Adversity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            8d75@%%@NL@%
  23550. %@NL@%
  23551. %@2@%When you are down and out something always turns up - and%@EH@%
  23552. it is usually the noses of your friends.%@NL@%
  23553. %@CR:HARDTIWelles    @%%@NL@%
  23554.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  23555.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  23556. %@AS@%                                                                Hard Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23557. %@NL@%
  23558. %@NL@%
  23559. %@2@%There were times my pants were so thin I could sit on a dime%@EH@%
  23560. and tell if it was heads or tails.%@NL@%
  23561. %@CR:HARDTITracy     @%%@NL@%
  23562.                                                  Spencer Tracy (1900-1967)%@NL@%
  23563.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  23564. %@AS@%                                                                Hard Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23565. %@NL@%
  23566. %@NL@%
  23567. %@2@%Life isn't meant to be easy. It's hard to take being on the%@EH@%
  23568. top - or on the bottom. I guess I'm something of a fatalist.
  23569. You have to have a sense of history, I think, to survive some of
  23570. these things  . . .  Life is one crisis after another.%@NL@%
  23571. %@CR:HARDTINixon     @%%@NL@%
  23572.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  23573.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  23574. %@AS@%                                                                Hard Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23575. %@NL@%
  23576. %@NL@%
  23577.      %@2@%Thy fate is the common fate of all;%@NL@%
  23578.      Into each life some rain must fall.%@NL@%
  23579. %@CR:HARDTILongfellow@%%@NL@%
  23580.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  23581.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  23582. %@AS@%                                                                Hard Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23583. %@NL@%
  23584. %@NL@%
  23585. %@NL@%
  23586. %@1@%%@AS@%Haste%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23587. %@CR:HASTE           @%%@NL@%
  23588. %@2@%See:%@QR:Haste@%%@NL@%
  23589.      Age: %@AB@%Browning%@AE@%%@BO:            dc1b@%%@NL@%
  23590.      Modern Times: %@AB@%Carroll%@AE@%%@BO:          1aae87@%%@NL@%
  23591. %@NL@%
  23592. %@2@%A nation rushing hastily too and fro, busily employed in idleness.%@NL@%
  23593. %@CR:HASTE Phaedrus  @%%@NL@%
  23594.                                               Phaedrus (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  23595.                                                             Roman fabulist%@NL@%
  23596. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23597. %@NL@%
  23598. %@NL@%
  23599. %@2@%He sows hurry and reaps indigestion.%@NL@%
  23600. %@CR:HASTE Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  23601.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  23602.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  23603. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23604. %@NL@%
  23605. %@NL@%
  23606.      %@2@%No-wher so bisy a man as he ther nas,%@NL@%
  23607.      And yet he semed bisier than he was.%@NL@%
  23608. %@CR:HASTE Chaucer   @%%@NL@%
  23609.                                               Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400)%@NL@%
  23610.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  23611. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23612. %@NL@%
  23613. %@NL@%
  23614. %@2@%Whoever is in a hurry, shows that the thing he is about is%@EH@%
  23615. too big for him.%@NL@%
  23616. %@CR:HASTE Chesterfie@%%@NL@%
  23617.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  23618.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  23619. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23620. %@NL@%
  23621. %@NL@%
  23622. %@2@%No man who is in a hurry is quite civilized.%@NL@%
  23623. %@CR:HASTE Durant    @%%@NL@%
  23624.                                                    Will Durant (1885-1981)%@NL@%
  23625.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  23626. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23627. %@NL@%
  23628. %@NL@%
  23629. %@2@%What is the use of running when you are on the wrong road?%@NL@%
  23630. %@CR:HASTE Durant    @%%@NL@%
  23631.                                                                    proverb%@NL@%
  23632. %@AS@%                                                                     Haste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23633. %@NL@%
  23634. %@NL@%
  23635. %@NL@%
  23636. %@1@%%@AS@%Hate%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23637. %@CR:HATE            @%%@NL@%
  23638. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hate@%%@NL@%
  23639.      Antipathy: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:           21a23@%%@NL@%
  23640.      Love: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          1835db@%; %@AB@%Strindberg%@AE@%%@BO:          18345d@%%@NL@%
  23641. %@NL@%
  23642. %@2@%Men hate more steadily than they love.%@NL@%
  23643. %@CR:HATE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  23644.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  23645.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  23646. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23647. %@NL@%
  23648. %@NL@%
  23649.      %@2@%Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure;%@NL@%
  23650.      Men love in haste, but they detest at leisure.%@NL@%
  23651. %@CR:HATE  Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  23652.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  23653.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  23654. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23655. %@NL@%
  23656. %@NL@%
  23657. %@2@%What we need is hatred. From it our ideas are born.%@NL@%
  23658. %@CR:HATE  Genet     @%%@NL@%
  23659.                                                     Jean Genet (1910-1986)%@NL@%
  23660.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  23661. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23662. %@NL@%
  23663. %@NL@%
  23664.      %@2@%We hold our hate too choice a thing%@NL@%
  23665.      For light and careless lavishing.%@NL@%
  23666. %@CR:HATE  Watson    @%%@NL@%
  23667.                                             Sir William Watson (1858-1935)%@NL@%
  23668.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  23669. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23670. %@NL@%
  23671. %@NL@%
  23672. %@2@%Impotent hatred is the most horrible of all emotions; one should%@EH@%
  23673. hate nobody whom one cannot destroy.%@NL@%
  23674. %@CR:HATE  Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  23675.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  23676.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  23677. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23678. %@NL@%
  23679. %@NL@%
  23680. %@2@%It is human nature to hate the man whom you have hurt.%@NL@%
  23681. %@CR:HATE  Tacitus   @%%@NL@%
  23682.                                                     Tacitus (c. 55-c. 120)%@NL@%
  23683.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  23684. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23685. %@NL@%
  23686. %@NL@%
  23687. %@2@%Always remember others may hate you but those who hate you%@EH@%
  23688. don't win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself.%@NL@%
  23689. %@CR:HATE  Nixon     @%%@NL@%
  23690.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  23691.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  23692. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23693. %@NL@%
  23694. %@NL@%
  23695. %@2@%I never hated a man enough to give him his diamonds back.%@NL@%
  23696. %@CR:HATE  Gabor     @%%@NL@%
  23697.                                                    Zsa Zsa Gabor (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  23698.                                                     Hungarian film actress%@NL@%
  23699. %@AS@%                                                                      Hate%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23700. %@NL@%
  23701. %@NL@%
  23702. %@NL@%
  23703. %@1@%%@AS@%Health%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23704. %@CR:HEALTH          @%%@NL@%
  23705. %@2@%See:%@QR:Health@%%@NL@%
  23706.      Anxiety: %@AB@%Haldane%@AE@%%@BO:           22714@%%@NL@%
  23707. %@NL@%
  23708. %@2@%He had had much experience of physicians, and said "the only%@EH@%
  23709. way to keep your health is to eat what you don't want, drink what
  23710. you don't like, and do what you druther not."%@NL@%
  23711. %@CR:HEALTHTwain     @%%@NL@%
  23712.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  23713.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  23714. %@AS@%                                                                    Health%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23715. %@NL@%
  23716. %@NL@%
  23717. %@2@%Attention to health is the great hindrance to life.%@NL@%
  23718. %@CR:HEALTHPlato     @%%@NL@%
  23719.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  23720.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  23721. %@AS@%                                                                    Health%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23722. %@NL@%
  23723. %@NL@%
  23724. %@2@%Cheerfulness, sir, is the principal ingredient in the composition%@EH@%
  23725. of health.%@NL@%
  23726. %@CR:HEALTHMurphy    @%%@NL@%
  23727.                                                  Arthur Murphy (1727-1805)%@NL@%
  23728.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  23729. %@AS@%                                                                    Health%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23730. %@NL@%
  23731. %@NL@%
  23732. %@2@%The preservation of health is a %@AI@%duty.%@AE@% Few seem conscious%@EH@%
  23733. that there is such a thing as physical morality.%@NL@%
  23734. %@CR:HEALTHSpencer   @%%@NL@%
  23735.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  23736.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  23737. %@AS@%                                                                    Health%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23738. %@NL@%
  23739. %@NL@%
  23740. %@NL@%
  23741. %@1@%%@AS@%Heartbreak%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23742. %@CR:HEARTBREAK      @%%@NL@%
  23743. %@2@%%@QR:Heartbreak@%Had we never loved sae kindly,%@NL@%
  23744.      Had we never loved sae blindly,%@NL@%
  23745.      Never met - or never parted -%@NL@%
  23746.      We had ne'er been broken-hearted.%@NL@%
  23747. %@CR:HEARTBBurns     @%%@NL@%
  23748.                                                   Robert Burns (1759-1796)%@NL@%
  23749.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  23750. %@AS@%                                                                Heartbreak%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23751. %@NL@%
  23752. %@NL@%
  23753. %@2@%When your heart is broken, your boats are burned: nothing matters%@EH@%
  23754. any more. It is the end of happiness and the beginning of peace.%@NL@%
  23755. %@CR:HEARTBShaw      @%%@NL@%
  23756.                                                    Ellie, %@AI@%Heartbreak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23757.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  23758.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  23759. %@AS@%                                                                Heartbreak%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23760. %@NL@%
  23761. %@NL@%
  23762.      %@2@%How else but through a broken heart%@NL@%
  23763.      May Lord Christ enter in?%@NL@%
  23764. %@CR:HEARTBWilde     @%%@NL@%
  23765.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  23766.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  23767. %@AS@%                                                                Heartbreak%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23768. %@NL@%
  23769. %@NL@%
  23770. %@NL@%
  23771. %@1@%%@AS@%Heaven%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23772. %@CR:HEAVEN          @%%@NL@%
  23773. %@2@%See:%@QR:Heaven@%%@NL@%
  23774.      Paradise: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:          1caa91@%%@NL@%
  23775. %@NL@%
  23776. %@2@%It is a curious thing that every creed promises a paradise%@EH@%
  23777. which will be absolutely uninhabitable for anyone of civilised
  23778. taste.%@NL@%
  23779. %@CR:HEAVENWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  23780.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  23781.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  23782. %@AS@%                                                                    Heaven%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23783. %@NL@%
  23784. %@NL@%
  23785. %@2@%Heaven is the place where the donkey at last catches up with%@EH@%
  23786. the carrot.%@NL@%
  23787. %@CR:HEAVENWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  23788.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  23789. %@AS@%                                                                    Heaven%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23790. %@NL@%
  23791. %@NL@%
  23792. %@2@%What they do in heaven we are ignorant of; what they do%@EH@%
  23793. not do we are told expressly.%@NL@%
  23794. %@CR:HEAVENSwift     @%%@NL@%
  23795.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  23796.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  23797. %@AS@%                                                                    Heaven%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23798. %@NL@%
  23799. %@NL@%
  23800. %@2@%Hell is paved with good intentions, but heaven goes in for%@EH@%
  23801. something more dependable. Solid gold.%@NL@%
  23802. %@CR:HEAVENCary      @%%@NL@%
  23803.                                                     Joyce Cary (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  23804.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  23805. %@AS@%                                                                    Heaven%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23806. %@NL@%
  23807. %@NL@%
  23808.      %@2@%Our remedies oft in ourselves do lie,%@NL@%
  23809.      Which we ascribe to heaven.%@NL@%
  23810. %@CR:HEAVENShakespear@%%@NL@%
  23811.                                          Helena, %@AI@%All's Well That Ends Well%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23812.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  23813.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  23814. %@AS@%                                                                    Heaven%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23815. %@NL@%
  23816. %@NL@%
  23817. %@NL@%
  23818. %@1@%%@AS@%Hell%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23819. %@CR:HELL            @%%@NL@%
  23820. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hell@%%@NL@%
  23821.      Immortality: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1483e8@%%@NL@%
  23822.      Intentions: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          155cb9@%%@NL@%
  23823.      Leisure: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          172bf4@%%@NL@%
  23824.      London: %@AB@%Shelley%@AE@%%@BO:          17c170@%%@NL@%
  23825.      Music: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1b4ed2@%%@NL@%
  23826. %@NL@%
  23827. %@2@%Abandon all hope, you who enter here!%@NL@%
  23828. %@CR:HELL  Dante     @%%@NL@%
  23829.                                                          Dante (1265-1321)%@NL@%
  23830.                                                               Italian poet%@NL@%
  23831. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23832. %@NL@%
  23833. %@NL@%
  23834. %@2@%The most frightening idea that has ever corroded human nature - the%@EH@%
  23835. idea of eternal punishment.%@NL@%
  23836. %@CR:HELL  Morley2   @%%@NL@%
  23837.                                              John, Lord Morley (1838-1923)%@NL@%
  23838.                                         English writer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  23839. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23840. %@NL@%
  23841. %@NL@%
  23842. %@2@%Hell is paved with priests' skulls.%@NL@%
  23843. %@CR:HELL  Chrysostom@%%@NL@%
  23844.                                                  John Chrysostom (345-407)%@NL@%
  23845.                                                   Greek ecclesiast, hermit%@NL@%
  23846. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23847. %@NL@%
  23848. %@NL@%
  23849. %@2@%They order things so damnably in hell.%@NL@%
  23850. %@CR:HELL  Belloc    @%%@NL@%
  23851.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  23852.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  23853. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23854. %@NL@%
  23855. %@NL@%
  23856. %@2@%Here there is no hope, and consequently no duty, no work, nothing%@EH@%
  23857. to be gained by praying, nothing to be lost by doing what you like.
  23858. Hell, in short, is a place where you have nothing to do but amuse
  23859. yourself.%@NL@%
  23860. %@CR:HELL  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  23861.                                               The Statue, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23862.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  23863.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  23864. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23865. %@NL@%
  23866. %@NL@%
  23867. %@2@%A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell.%@NL@%
  23868. %@CR:HELL  Fuller2   @%%@NL@%
  23869.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  23870.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  23871. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23872. %@NL@%
  23873. %@NL@%
  23874. %@2@%Hell is oneself; Hell is alone, the other figures in it%@EH@%
  23875. merely projections. There is nothing to escape from and nothing
  23876. to escape to. One is always alone.%@NL@%
  23877. %@CR:HELL  Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  23878.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  23879.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  23880. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23881. %@NL@%
  23882. %@NL@%
  23883. %@2@%Hell is other people.%@NL@%
  23884. %@CR:HELL  Sartre    @%%@NL@%
  23885.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  23886.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  23887. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23888. %@NL@%
  23889. %@NL@%
  23890.      %@2@%Hell hath no limits, nor is circumscribed%@NL@%
  23891.      In one self place; for where we are is hell,%@NL@%
  23892.      And where hell is, must we ever be.%@NL@%
  23893. %@CR:HELL  Marlowe   @%%@NL@%
  23894.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  23895.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  23896. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23897. %@NL@%
  23898. %@NL@%
  23899. %@2@%If there were only some shorter and more direct route to the%@EH@%
  23900. devil, it would save an awful lot of sorrow and anxiety in this
  23901. world.%@NL@%
  23902. %@CR:HELL  Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  23903.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  23904.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  23905. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23906. %@NL@%
  23907. %@NL@%
  23908. %@2@%I hold it to be the inalienable right of anybody to go to hell%@EH@%
  23909. in his own way.%@NL@%
  23910. %@CR:HELL  Frost2    @%%@NL@%
  23911.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  23912.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  23913. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23914. %@NL@%
  23915. %@NL@%
  23916. %@2@%I verily think that a man buyeth hell here with so much pain%@EH@%
  23917. that he might have heaven with less than the one-half.%@NL@%
  23918. %@CR:HELL  More      @%%@NL@%
  23919.                                                Sir Thomas More (1478-1535)%@NL@%
  23920.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  23921. %@AS@%                                                                      Hell%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23922. %@NL@%
  23923. %@NL@%
  23924. %@NL@%
  23925. %@1@%%@AS@%Heresy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  23926. %@CR:HERESY          @%%@NL@%
  23927. %@2@%See:%@QR:Heresy@%%@NL@%
  23928.      %@AB@%Dissent%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           af576@%%@NL@%
  23929. %@NL@%
  23930. %@2@%All evolution in thought and conduct must at first appear as%@EH@%
  23931. heresy and misconduct.%@NL@%
  23932. %@CR:HERESYShaw      @%%@NL@%
  23933.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  23934.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  23935. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23936. %@NL@%
  23937. %@NL@%
  23938. %@2@%Heresy is only another word for freedom of thought.%@NL@%
  23939. %@CR:HERESYGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  23940.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  23941.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  23942. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23943. %@NL@%
  23944. %@NL@%
  23945. %@2@%A heresy can spring only from a system that is in full vigor.%@NL@%
  23946. %@CR:HERESYHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  23947.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  23948.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  23949. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23950. %@NL@%
  23951. %@NL@%
  23952. %@2@%A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things%@EH@%
  23953. only because his pastor says so, or the assembly so determines,
  23954. without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the
  23955. very truth he holds becomes his heresy.%@NL@%
  23956. %@CR:HERESYMilton    @%%@NL@%
  23957.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  23958.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  23959. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23960. %@NL@%
  23961. %@NL@%
  23962. %@2@%Even heresy has been an effort to narrow the Church.%@NL@%
  23963. %@CR:HERESYChesterton@%%@NL@%
  23964.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  23965.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  23966. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23967. %@NL@%
  23968. %@NL@%
  23969. %@2@%The appellation of heretics has always been applied to the%@EH@%
  23970. less numerous party.%@NL@%
  23971. %@CR:HERESYGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  23972.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  23973.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  23974. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23975. %@NL@%
  23976. %@NL@%
  23977. %@2@%His hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against%@EH@%
  23978. him.%@NL@%
  23979. %@CR:HERESYBibleGenes@%%@NL@%
  23980.                                                             Bible, Genesis%@NL@%
  23981. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23982. %@NL@%
  23983. %@NL@%
  23984. %@2@%That is the whole problem with being a heretic. One usually%@EH@%
  23985. must think out everything for oneself.%@NL@%
  23986. %@CR:HERESYMenen     @%%@NL@%
  23987.                                                     Aubrey Menen (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  23988.                                                 British novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  23989. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23990. %@NL@%
  23991. %@NL@%
  23992. %@2@%What forests of laurel we bring, and the tears of mankind,%@EH@%
  23993. to those who stood firm against the opinion of their contemporaries!%@NL@%
  23994. %@CR:HERESYEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  23995.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  23996.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  23997. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  23998. %@NL@%
  23999. %@NL@%
  24000. %@2@%For my name and memory I leave to men's charitable speeches,%@EH@%
  24001. and to foreign nations and the next ages.%@NL@%
  24002. %@CR:HERESYBacon     @%%@NL@%
  24003.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  24004.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  24005. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24006. %@NL@%
  24007. %@NL@%
  24008. %@2@%You pronounce sentence upon me with greater fear than I receive%@EH@%
  24009. it.%@NL@%
  24010. %@CR:HERESYBruno     @%%@NL@%
  24011.                                                 Giordano Bruno (1548-1600)%@NL@%
  24012.                                                        Italian philosopher%@NL@%
  24013.                          to the inquisitors who had condemned him to death%@NL@%
  24014. %@AS@%                                                                    Heresy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24015. %@NL@%
  24016. %@NL@%
  24017. %@NL@%
  24018. %@1@%%@AS@%Hermits%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24019. %@CR:HERMITS         @%%@NL@%
  24020. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hermits@%%@NL@%
  24021.      %@AB@%Solitude%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          260490@%%@NL@%
  24022. %@NL@%
  24023.      %@2@%The hunchback in the park%@NL@%
  24024.      A solitary mister%@NL@%
  24025.      Propped between trees and water.%@NL@%
  24026. %@CR:HERMITThomas1   @%%@NL@%
  24027.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  24028.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  24029. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24030. %@NL@%
  24031. %@NL@%
  24032. %@2@%The life of a solitary man will be certainly miserable, but%@EH@%
  24033. not certainly devout.%@NL@%
  24034. %@CR:HERMITJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  24035.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  24036.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  24037. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24038. %@NL@%
  24039. %@NL@%
  24040. %@2@%To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind.%@NL@%
  24041. %@CR:HERMITByron2    @%%@NL@%
  24042.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  24043.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24044. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24045. %@NL@%
  24046. %@NL@%
  24047. %@2@%He travels fastest who travels alone.%@NL@%
  24048. %@CR:HERMITKipling   @%%@NL@%
  24049.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  24050.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  24051. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24052. %@NL@%
  24053. %@NL@%
  24054.      %@2@%Like two doomed ships that pass in storm%@NL@%
  24055.      We had crossed each other's way:%@NL@%
  24056.      But we made no sign, we said no word,%@NL@%
  24057.      We had no word to say.%@NL@%
  24058. %@CR:HERMITWilde     @%%@NL@%
  24059.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  24060.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  24061. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24062. %@NL@%
  24063. %@NL@%
  24064. %@2@%The world forgetting, by the world forgot.%@NL@%
  24065. %@CR:HERMITPope      @%%@NL@%
  24066.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  24067.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24068. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24069. %@NL@%
  24070. %@NL@%
  24071. %@2@%Wandering stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness%@EH@%
  24072. forever.%@NL@%
  24073. %@CR:HERMITBibleJude @%%@NL@%
  24074.                                                                Bible, Jude%@NL@%
  24075. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24076. %@NL@%
  24077. %@NL@%
  24078. %@2@%The true ascetic counts nothing his own save his harp.%@NL@%
  24079. %@CR:HERMITJoachimofF@%%@NL@%
  24080.                                         Joachim of Flora (c. 1130-c. 1202)%@NL@%
  24081.                                                 Italian mystic, theologian%@NL@%
  24082. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24083. %@NL@%
  24084. %@NL@%
  24085.      %@2@%And meanwhile we have gone on living,%@NL@%
  24086.      Living and partly living,%@NL@%
  24087.      Picking together the pieces,%@NL@%
  24088.      Gathering faggots at nightfall,%@NL@%
  24089.      Building a partial shelter,%@NL@%
  24090.      For sleeping and eating and drinking and laughter.%@NL@%
  24091. %@CR:HERMITEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  24092.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  24093.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  24094. %@AS@%                                                                   Hermits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24095. %@NL@%
  24096. %@NL@%
  24097. %@NL@%
  24098. %@1@%%@AS@%Heroes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24099. %@CR:HEROES          @%%@NL@%
  24100. %@2@%See:%@QR:Heroes@%%@NL@%
  24101.      Generals: %@AB@%Porteous%@AE@%%@BO:          104d85@%%@NL@%
  24102.      Sainthood: %@AB@%Geldof%@AE@%%@BO:          2359cc@%%@NL@%
  24103.      Self-image: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          24850b@%%@NL@%
  24104. %@NL@%
  24105.      %@2@%How can man die better%@NL@%
  24106.      Than facing fearful odds,%@NL@%
  24107.      For the ashes of his fathers%@NL@%
  24108.      And the temples of his Gods?%@NL@%
  24109. %@CR:HEROESMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  24110.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  24111.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  24112. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24113. %@NL@%
  24114. %@NL@%
  24115. %@2@%A hero is no braver than an ordinary man, but he is brave five%@EH@%
  24116. minutes longer.%@NL@%
  24117. %@CR:HEROESEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  24118.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  24119.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  24120. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24121. %@NL@%
  24122. %@NL@%
  24123. %@2@%How prudently we proud men compete for nameless graves, while%@EH@%
  24124. now and then some starveling of Fate forgets himself into immortality.%@NL@%
  24125. %@CR:HEROESPhillips  @%%@NL@%
  24126.                                               Wendell Phillips (1811-1884)%@NL@%
  24127.                                              American abolitionist, orator%@NL@%
  24128. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24129. %@NL@%
  24130. %@NL@%
  24131. %@2@%Heroes are created by popular demand, sometimes out of the%@EH@%
  24132. scantiest materials.%@NL@%
  24133. %@CR:HEROESJohnson2  @%%@NL@%
  24134.                                              Gerald W. Johnson (1890-1980)%@NL@%
  24135.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24136. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24137. %@NL@%
  24138. %@NL@%
  24139.      %@2@%If we are marked to die, we are enow%@NL@%
  24140.      To do our country loss; and to live,%@NL@%
  24141.      The fewer men, the greater share of honour.%@NL@%
  24142. %@CR:HEROESShakespear@%%@NL@%
  24143.                                                   King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry V%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24144.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  24145.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  24146. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24147. %@NL@%
  24148. %@NL@%
  24149. %@2@%Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear%@EH@%
  24150. ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last
  24151. for a thousand years, men will still say, "This was their finest
  24152. hour."%@NL@%
  24153. %@CR:HEROESChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  24154.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  24155.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  24156. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24157. %@NL@%
  24158. %@NL@%
  24159. %@2@%Unhappy the land that is in need of heroes.%@NL@%
  24160. %@CR:HEROESBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  24161.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  24162.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  24163. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24164. %@NL@%
  24165. %@NL@%
  24166. %@2@%No pain, no palm; no thorns, no throne; no gall, no glory;%@EH@%
  24167. no cross, no crown.%@NL@%
  24168. %@CR:HEROESPenn      @%%@NL@%
  24169.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  24170.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  24171. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24172. %@NL@%
  24173. %@NL@%
  24174. %@2@%Had we lived I should have had a tale to tell of the hardihood,%@EH@%
  24175. endurance and courage of my companions which would have stirred
  24176. the heart of every Englishman. These rough notes and our dead
  24177. bodies must tell the tale.%@NL@%
  24178. %@CR:HEROESScott2    @%%@NL@%
  24179.                                             Captain R. F.Scott (1868-1912)%@NL@%
  24180.                                                 British antarctic explorer%@NL@%
  24181.                                                               last message%@NL@%
  24182. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24183. %@NL@%
  24184. %@NL@%
  24185. %@2@%Having seen what my injuries were, I knew it was not necessary%@EH@%
  24186. to die.%@NL@%
  24187. %@CR:HEROESPringle   @%%@NL@%
  24188.                                  Lieut.-Gen. Sir Steuart Pringle (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  24189.                                                              Royal Marines%@NL@%
  24190.                                         following bomb attempt on his life%@NL@%
  24191. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24192. %@NL@%
  24193. %@NL@%
  24194.      %@2@%One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,%@NL@%
  24195.      Never doubted clouds would break,%@NL@%
  24196.      Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph.%@NL@%
  24197.      Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,%@NL@%
  24198.      Sleep to wake.%@NL@%
  24199. %@CR:HEROESBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  24200.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  24201.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24202. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24203. %@NL@%
  24204. %@NL@%
  24205. %@2@%What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes%@EH@%
  24206. to live in.%@NL@%
  24207. %@CR:HEROESLloydGeorg@%%@NL@%
  24208.                                             David Lloyd George (1863-1945)%@NL@%
  24209.                                   Welsh Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  24210. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24211. %@NL@%
  24212. %@NL@%
  24213. %@2@%I am convinced that a light supper, a good night's sleep, and%@EH@%
  24214. a fine morning, have sometimes made a hero of the same man, who,
  24215. by an indigestion, a restless night, and rainy morning, would
  24216. have proved a coward.%@NL@%
  24217. %@CR:HEROESChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  24218.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  24219.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  24220. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24221. %@NL@%
  24222. %@NL@%
  24223. %@2@%Claret is the liquor for boys; port for men; but he who aspires%@EH@%
  24224. to be a hero must drink brandy.%@NL@%
  24225. %@CR:HEROESJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  24226.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  24227.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  24228. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24229. %@NL@%
  24230. %@NL@%
  24231. %@2@%The more characteristic American hero in the earlier day, and%@EH@%
  24232. the more beloved type at all times, was not the hustler but the
  24233. whittler.%@NL@%
  24234. %@CR:HEROESSullivan3 @%%@NL@%
  24235.                                                  Mark Sullivan (1874-1952)%@NL@%
  24236.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  24237. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24238. %@NL@%
  24239. %@NL@%
  24240. %@2@%The really great man is the man who makes every man feel great.%@NL@%
  24241. %@CR:HEROESChesterton@%%@NL@%
  24242.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  24243.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  24244. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24245. %@NL@%
  24246. %@NL@%
  24247.      %@2@%Now stiff on a pillar with phallic air%@NL@%
  24248.      Nelson's stylite in Trafalgar Square%@NL@%
  24249.      Reminds the British what once they were.%@NL@%
  24250. %@CR:HEROESDurrell2  @%%@NL@%
  24251.                                                 Lawrence Durrell (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  24252.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  24253. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24254. %@NL@%
  24255. %@NL@%
  24256. %@2@%Ultimately a hero is a man who would argue with the Gods, and%@EH@%
  24257. awakens devils to contest his vision.%@NL@%
  24258. %@CR:HEROESMailer    @%%@NL@%
  24259.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  24260.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24261. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24262. %@NL@%
  24263. %@NL@%
  24264. %@2@%Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy.%@NL@%
  24265. %@CR:HEROESFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  24266.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  24267.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24268. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24269. %@NL@%
  24270. %@NL@%
  24271. %@2@%The greatest obstacle to being heroic is the doubt whether%@EH@%
  24272. one may not be going to prove one's self a fool.%@NL@%
  24273. %@CR:HEROESHawthorne @%%@NL@%
  24274.                                            Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)%@NL@%
  24275.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  24276. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24277. %@NL@%
  24278. %@NL@%
  24279. %@2@%You cannot be a hero without being a coward.%@NL@%
  24280. %@CR:HEROESShaw      @%%@NL@%
  24281.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  24282.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  24283. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24284. %@NL@%
  24285. %@NL@%
  24286. %@2@%Seldom any splendid story is wholly true.%@NL@%
  24287. %@CR:HEROESJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  24288.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  24289.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  24290. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24291. %@NL@%
  24292. %@NL@%
  24293. %@2@%Every hero becomes a bore at last.%@NL@%
  24294. %@CR:HEROESEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  24295.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  24296.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  24297. %@AS@%                                                                    Heroes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24298. %@NL@%
  24299. %@NL@%
  24300. %@NL@%
  24301. %@1@%%@AS@%Hero-worship%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24302. %@CR:HEROWORSHIP     @%%@NL@%
  24303. %@2@%%@QR:Hero-worship@%I do honour the very flea of his dog.%@NL@%
  24304. %@CR:HEROWOJonson    @%%@NL@%
  24305.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  24306.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  24307. %@AS@%                                                              Hero-worship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24308. %@NL@%
  24309. %@NL@%
  24310. %@2@%Sir, you are making a monarchy of what should be a republic.%@NL@%
  24311. %@CR:HEROWOGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  24312.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  24313.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  24314.                          reproving Boswell's idolization of Johnson's work%@NL@%
  24315. %@AS@%                                                              Hero-worship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24316. %@NL@%
  24317. %@NL@%
  24318. %@2@%Hero-worship is strongest where there is least regard for human%@EH@%
  24319. freedom.%@NL@%
  24320. %@CR:HEROWOSpencer   @%%@NL@%
  24321.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  24322.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  24323. %@AS@%                                                              Hero-worship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24324. %@NL@%
  24325. %@NL@%
  24326. %@NL@%
  24327. %@1@%%@AS@%Historians%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24328. %@CR:HISTORIANS      @%%@NL@%
  24329. %@2@%%@QR:Historians@%Events in the past may be roughly divided into those which%@EH@%
  24330. probably never happened and those which do not matter. That is
  24331. what makes the trade of historian so attractive.%@NL@%
  24332. %@CR:HISTORInge      @%%@NL@%
  24333.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  24334.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  24335. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24336. %@NL@%
  24337. %@NL@%
  24338. %@2@%Very few things happen at the right time, and the rest do not%@EH@%
  24339. happen at all; the conscientious historian will correct these defects.%@NL@%
  24340. %@CR:HISTORHerodotus @%%@NL@%
  24341.                                                     Herodotus (484-425 BC)%@NL@%
  24342.                                                            Greek historian%@NL@%
  24343. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24344. %@NL@%
  24345. %@NL@%
  24346. %@2@%History repeats itself; historians repeat each other.%@NL@%
  24347. %@CR:HISTORGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  24348.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  24349.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  24350. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24351. %@NL@%
  24352. %@NL@%
  24353. %@2@%Historians are like deaf people who go on answering questions%@EH@%
  24354. that no one has asked them.%@NL@%
  24355. %@CR:HISTORTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  24356.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  24357.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  24358. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24359. %@NL@%
  24360. %@NL@%
  24361. %@2@%God cannot alter the past; that is why he is obliged to connive%@EH@%
  24362. at the existence of historians.%@NL@%
  24363. %@CR:HISTORButler4   @%%@NL@%
  24364.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  24365.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  24366. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24367. %@NL@%
  24368. %@NL@%
  24369. %@2@%A historian is a prophet in reverse.%@NL@%
  24370. %@CR:HISTORSchlegel  @%%@NL@%
  24371.                                         Friedrich von Schlegel (1772-1829)%@NL@%
  24372.                                          German historian, literary critic%@NL@%
  24373. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24374. %@NL@%
  24375. %@NL@%
  24376. %@2@%Historian: an unsuccessful novelist.%@NL@%
  24377. %@CR:HISTORMencken   @%%@NL@%
  24378.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  24379.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  24380. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24381. %@NL@%
  24382. %@NL@%
  24383. %@2@%The first duty of an historian is to be on his guard against%@EH@%
  24384. his own sympathies.%@NL@%
  24385. %@CR:HISTORFroude    @%%@NL@%
  24386.                                                   J. A. Froude (1818-1894)%@NL@%
  24387.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  24388. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24389. %@NL@%
  24390. %@NL@%
  24391. %@2@%The middle sort of historians (of which the most part are)%@EH@%
  24392. spoil all; they will chew our meat for us.%@NL@%
  24393. %@CR:HISTORMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  24394.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  24395.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  24396. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24397. %@NL@%
  24398. %@NL@%
  24399. %@2@%To give an accurate and exhaustive account of that period would%@EH@%
  24400. need a far less brilliant pen than mine.%@NL@%
  24401. %@CR:HISTORBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  24402.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  24403.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  24404. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24405. %@NL@%
  24406. %@NL@%
  24407. %@2@%Another damned, thick, square book! Always scribble, scribble,%@EH@%
  24408. scribble! Eh! Mr Gibbon?%@NL@%
  24409. %@CR:HISTORDukeofGlou@%%@NL@%
  24410.                              William Henry, Duke of Gloucester (1743-1805)%@NL@%
  24411.                                                      brother of George III%@NL@%
  24412. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24413. %@NL@%
  24414. %@NL@%
  24415. %@2@%Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer.%@NL@%
  24416. %@CR:HISTORByron2    @%%@NL@%
  24417.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  24418.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24419.                                                                  of Gibbon%@NL@%
  24420. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24421. %@NL@%
  24422. %@NL@%
  24423. %@2@%In analyzing history do not be too profound, for often the%@EH@%
  24424. causes are quite superficial.%@NL@%
  24425. %@CR:HISTOREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  24426.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  24427.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  24428. %@AS@%                                                                Historians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24429. %@NL@%
  24430. %@NL@%
  24431. %@NL@%
  24432. %@1@%%@AS@%History%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24433. %@CR:HISTORY         @%%@NL@%
  24434. %@2@%See:%@QR:History@%%@NL@%
  24435.      Minorities: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          1a6bbc@%%@NL@%
  24436.      Women: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          2be14d@%%@NL@%
  24437. %@NL@%
  24438. %@2@%The principal office of history I take to be this: to prevent%@EH@%
  24439. virtuous actions from being forgotten, and that evil words and
  24440. deeds should fear an infamous reputation with posterity.%@NL@%
  24441. %@CR:HISTORTacitus   @%%@NL@%
  24442.                                                     Tacitus (c. 55-c. 120)%@NL@%
  24443.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  24444. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24445. %@NL@%
  24446. %@NL@%
  24447. %@2@%Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat%@EH@%
  24448. it.%@NL@%
  24449. %@CR:HISTORSantayana @%%@NL@%
  24450.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  24451.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  24452. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24453. %@NL@%
  24454. %@NL@%
  24455. %@2@%History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce.%@NL@%
  24456. %@CR:HISTORMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  24457.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  24458.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  24459. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24460. %@NL@%
  24461. %@NL@%
  24462. %@2@%Every time history repeats itself the price goes up.%@NL@%
  24463. %@CR:HISTORMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  24464.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  24465. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24466. %@NL@%
  24467. %@NL@%
  24468. %@2@%History is Philosophy teaching by examples.%@NL@%
  24469. %@CR:HISTORStJohn    @%%@NL@%
  24470.                           Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke (1678-1751)%@NL@%
  24471.                                              English politician, intriguer%@NL@%
  24472. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24473. %@NL@%
  24474. %@NL@%
  24475. %@2@%But what experience and historian teach is this - that peoples%@EH@%
  24476. and governments have never learned anything from history, or acted
  24477. on the principles deduced from it.%@NL@%
  24478. %@CR:HISTORHegel     @%%@NL@%
  24479.                                                   George Hegel (1770-1831)%@NL@%
  24480.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  24481. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24482. %@NL@%
  24483. %@NL@%
  24484. %@2@%History is bunk.%@NL@%
  24485. %@CR:HISTORFord2     @%%@NL@%
  24486.                                                     Henry Ford (1863-1947)%@NL@%
  24487.                                                     American industrialist%@NL@%
  24488. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24489. %@NL@%
  24490. %@NL@%
  24491. %@2@%There is nothing new in the world except the history you do%@EH@%
  24492. not know.%@NL@%
  24493. %@CR:HISTORTruman    @%%@NL@%
  24494.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  24495.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  24496. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24497. %@NL@%
  24498. %@NL@%
  24499. %@2@%Only the history of free peoples is worth our attention; the%@EH@%
  24500. history of men under a despotism is merely a collection of anecdotes.%@NL@%
  24501. %@CR:HISTORChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  24502.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  24503.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  24504. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24505. %@NL@%
  24506. %@NL@%
  24507. %@2@%The essential matter of history is not what happened but what%@EH@%
  24508. people thought or said about it.%@NL@%
  24509. %@CR:HISTORMaitland  @%%@NL@%
  24510.                                           Frederic W. Maitland (1850-1906)%@NL@%
  24511.                                                      English writer on law%@NL@%
  24512. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24513. %@NL@%
  24514. %@NL@%
  24515. %@2@%History, a distillation of Rumour.%@NL@%
  24516. %@CR:HISTORCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  24517.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  24518.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  24519. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24520. %@NL@%
  24521. %@NL@%
  24522. %@2@%Ancient histories are but fables that have been agreed upon.%@NL@%
  24523. %@CR:HISTORVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  24524.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  24525.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  24526. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24527. %@NL@%
  24528. %@NL@%
  24529. %@2@%History is the crystallization of popular beliefs.%@NL@%
  24530. %@CR:HISTORPiatt     @%%@NL@%
  24531.                                                     Donn Piatt (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  24532.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  24533. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24534. %@NL@%
  24535. %@NL@%
  24536. %@2@%Gossip is none the less gossip because it comes from venerable%@EH@%
  24537. antiquity.%@NL@%
  24538. %@CR:HISTORCreighton @%%@NL@%
  24539.                                              Mandell Creighton (1843-1901)%@NL@%
  24540.                                                 English prelate, historian%@NL@%
  24541. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24542. %@NL@%
  24543. %@NL@%
  24544. %@2@%If a man could say nothing against a character but what he%@EH@%
  24545. can prove, history could not be written.%@NL@%
  24546. %@CR:HISTORJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  24547.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  24548.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  24549. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24550. %@NL@%
  24551. %@NL@%
  24552. %@2@%History is better written from letters  . . .  No public character%@EH@%
  24553. has ever stood the revelation of private utterance and correspondence.%@NL@%
  24554. %@CR:HISTORActon     @%%@NL@%
  24555.                                                     Lord Acton (1834-1902)%@NL@%
  24556.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  24557. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24558. %@NL@%
  24559. %@NL@%
  24560. %@2@%The so-called lessons of history are for the most part the%@EH@%
  24561. rationalization of the victors. History is written by the survivors.%@NL@%
  24562. %@CR:HISTORLerner    @%%@NL@%
  24563.                                                       Max Lerner (b. 1902)%@NL@%
  24564.                                              American academic, journalist%@NL@%
  24565. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24566. %@NL@%
  24567. %@NL@%
  24568. %@2@%History. An account, mostly false, of events, mostly unimportant,%@EH@%
  24569. which are brought about by rulers, mostly knaves, and soldiers,
  24570. mostly fools.%@NL@%
  24571. %@CR:HISTORBierce    @%%@NL@%
  24572.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  24573.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24574. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24575. %@NL@%
  24576. %@NL@%
  24577. %@2@%History, which is, indeed, little more than the register of%@EH@%
  24578. the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind.%@NL@%
  24579. %@CR:HISTORGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  24580.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  24581.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  24582. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24583. %@NL@%
  24584. %@NL@%
  24585. %@2@%The history of the world is the record of a man in quest of%@EH@%
  24586. his daily bread and butter.%@NL@%
  24587. %@CR:HISTORVanLoon   @%%@NL@%
  24588.                                               Hendrik Van Loon (1882-1944)%@NL@%
  24589.                                             American journalist, historian%@NL@%
  24590. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24591. %@NL@%
  24592. %@NL@%
  24593. %@2@%Who has fully realized that history is not contained in thick%@EH@%
  24594. books but lives in our very blood?%@NL@%
  24595. %@CR:HISTORJung      @%%@NL@%
  24596.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  24597.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  24598. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24599. %@NL@%
  24600. %@NL@%
  24601. %@2@%English history is all about men liking their fathers, and%@EH@%
  24602. American history is all about men hating their fathers and trying
  24603. to burn down everything they ever did.%@NL@%
  24604. %@CR:HISTORBradbury  @%%@NL@%
  24605.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  24606.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  24607. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24608. %@NL@%
  24609. %@NL@%
  24610. %@2@%That great dust-heap called "history."%@NL@%
  24611. %@CR:HISTORBirrell   @%%@NL@%
  24612.                                              Augustine Birrell (1850-1933)%@NL@%
  24613.                                                 English Liberal politician%@NL@%
  24614. %@AS@%                                                                   History%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24615. %@NL@%
  24616. %@NL@%
  24617. %@NL@%
  24618. %@1@%%@AS@%Holland%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24619. %@CR:HOLLAND         @%%@NL@%
  24620. %@2@%%@QR:Holland@%Where the broad ocean leans against the land.%@NL@%
  24621. %@CR:HOLLANGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  24622.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  24623.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  24624. %@AS@%                                                                   Holland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24625. %@NL@%
  24626. %@NL@%
  24627. %@2@%Apart from cheese and tulips, the main product of the country%@EH@%
  24628. is advocaat, a drink made from lawyers.%@NL@%
  24629. %@CR:HOLLANCoren     @%%@NL@%
  24630.                                                       Alan Coren (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  24631.                                                   British editor, humorist%@NL@%
  24632. %@AS@%                                                                   Holland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24633. %@NL@%
  24634. %@NL@%
  24635. %@NL@%
  24636. %@1@%%@AS@%Hollywood%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24637. %@CR:HOLLYWOOD       @%%@NL@%
  24638. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hollywood@%%@NL@%
  24639.      %@AB@%Cinema%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           6acfa@%%@NL@%
  24640. %@NL@%
  24641. %@2@%Strip away the phony tinsel of Hollywood and you find the real%@EH@%
  24642. tinsel underneath.%@NL@%
  24643. %@CR:HOLLYWLevant    @%%@NL@%
  24644.                                                   Oscar Levant (1906-1972)%@NL@%
  24645.                                                 American pianist, composer%@NL@%
  24646. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24647. %@NL@%
  24648. %@NL@%
  24649. %@2@%Hollywood is a place where people from Iowa mistake each other%@EH@%
  24650. for a star.%@NL@%
  24651. %@CR:HOLLYWAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  24652.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  24653.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  24654. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24655. %@NL@%
  24656. %@NL@%
  24657. %@2@%How much talent, initiative, genius, and creative ability have%@EH@%
  24658. been destroyed by the film industry in its ruthlessly efficient
  24659. sausage machine?%@NL@%
  24660. %@CR:HOLLYWBergman   @%%@NL@%
  24661.                                                   Ingmar Bergman (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  24662.                                          Swedish film and theater director%@NL@%
  24663. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24664. %@NL@%
  24665. %@NL@%
  24666. %@2@%You can't call Hollywood "The Industry" any more. Today we%@EH@%
  24667. have a chance to put our personal fantasies on film.%@NL@%
  24668. %@CR:HOLLYWFrankenhei@%%@NL@%
  24669.                                               John Frankenheimer (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  24670.                                                          American director%@NL@%
  24671. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24672. %@NL@%
  24673. %@NL@%
  24674. %@2@%Hollywood is like being nowhere and talking to nobody about%@EH@%
  24675. nothing.%@NL@%
  24676. %@CR:HOLLYWAntonioni @%%@NL@%
  24677.                                           Michelangelo Antonioni (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  24678.                                                      Italian film director%@NL@%
  24679. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24680. %@NL@%
  24681. %@NL@%
  24682. %@2@%To survive there, you need the ambition of a Latin-American%@EH@%
  24683. revolutionary, the ego of a grand opera tenor, and the physical
  24684. stamina of a cow pony.%@NL@%
  24685. %@CR:HOLLYWBurke1    @%%@NL@%
  24686.                                                   Billie Burke (1885-1970)%@NL@%
  24687.                                            American stage and film actress%@NL@%
  24688. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24689. %@NL@%
  24690. %@NL@%
  24691. %@2@%In Europe an actor is an artist. In Hollywood, if he isn't%@EH@%
  24692. working, he's a bum.%@NL@%
  24693. %@CR:HOLLYWQuinn     @%%@NL@%
  24694.                                                    Anthony Quinn (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  24695.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  24696. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24697. %@NL@%
  24698. %@NL@%
  24699. %@2@%To be an Englishman in the film business is to know what it's%@EH@%
  24700. like to be colonialised.%@NL@%
  24701. %@CR:HOLLYWGarnett2  @%%@NL@%
  24702.                                                     Tony Garnett (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  24703.                                                      British film producer%@NL@%
  24704. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24705. %@NL@%
  24706. %@NL@%
  24707. %@2@%You can seduce a man's wife there, attack his daughter and%@EH@%
  24708. wipe your hands on his canary, but if you don't like his movie
  24709. you're dead.%@NL@%
  24710. %@CR:HOLLYWSternberg @%%@NL@%
  24711.                                          Joseph  von Sternberg (1894-1969)%@NL@%
  24712.                                                          American director%@NL@%
  24713. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24714. %@NL@%
  24715. %@NL@%
  24716. %@2@%Working for Warner Brothers is like fucking a porcupine. It's%@EH@%
  24717. a hundred pricks against one.%@NL@%
  24718. %@CR:HOLLYWMizner2   @%%@NL@%
  24719.                                                  Wilson Mizner (1876-1933)%@NL@%
  24720.                                                    American dramatist, wit%@NL@%
  24721. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24722. %@NL@%
  24723. %@NL@%
  24724. %@2@%An associate producer is the only guy in Hollywood who will%@EH@%
  24725. associate with a producer.%@NL@%
  24726. %@CR:HOLLYWAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  24727.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  24728.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  24729. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24730. %@NL@%
  24731. %@NL@%
  24732. %@2@%Hollywood's a place where they'll pay you a thousand dollars%@EH@%
  24733. for a kiss, and fifty cents for your soul.%@NL@%
  24734. %@CR:HOLLYWMonroe    @%%@NL@%
  24735.                                                 Marilyn Monroe (1926-1962)%@NL@%
  24736.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  24737. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24738. %@NL@%
  24739. %@NL@%
  24740. %@2@%Hollywood is the only place in the world where an amicable%@EH@%
  24741. divorce means each one gets fifty percent of the publicity.%@NL@%
  24742. %@CR:HOLLYWBacall    @%%@NL@%
  24743.                                                    Lauren Bacall (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  24744.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  24745. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24746. %@NL@%
  24747. %@NL@%
  24748. %@2@%The way things are going I'd be more interested in seeing Cleopatra%@EH@%
  24749. play the life of Elizabeth Taylor.%@NL@%
  24750. %@CR:HOLLYWWilson2   @%%@NL@%
  24751.                                                    Earl Wilson (1907-1987)%@NL@%
  24752.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24753. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24754. %@NL@%
  24755. %@NL@%
  24756. %@2@%I've been around so long I can remember Doris Day before she%@EH@%
  24757. was a virgin.%@NL@%
  24758. %@CR:HOLLYWMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  24759.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  24760.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  24761. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24762. %@NL@%
  24763. %@NL@%
  24764. %@2@%I want a movie that starts with an earthquake and works up%@EH@%
  24765. to a climax.%@NL@%
  24766. %@CR:HOLLYWGoldwyn   @%%@NL@%
  24767.                                                 Samuel Goldwyn (1882-1974)%@NL@%
  24768.                                                     American film producer%@NL@%
  24769. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24770. %@NL@%
  24771. %@NL@%
  24772. %@2@%"Too caustic?" To hell with the cost, we'll make the picture%@EH@%
  24773. anyway.%@NL@%
  24774. %@CR:HOLLYWGoldwyn   @%%@NL@%
  24775.                                                 Samuel Goldwyn (1882-1974)%@NL@%
  24776.                                                     American film producer%@NL@%
  24777. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24778. %@NL@%
  24779. %@NL@%
  24780. %@2@%You can fool all the people all the time if the advertising%@EH@%
  24781. is right and the budget is big enough.%@NL@%
  24782. %@CR:HOLLYWLevine    @%%@NL@%
  24783.                                               Joseph E. Levine (1905-1987)%@NL@%
  24784.                                          American film producer, executive%@NL@%
  24785. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24786. %@NL@%
  24787. %@NL@%
  24788. %@2@%Hollywood's trade, which is dreams at so many dollars per thousand%@EH@%
  24789. feet, is managed by businessmen pretending to be artists and by
  24790. artists pretending to be businessmen. In this queer world nobody
  24791. stays as he was; the artist begins to lose his art, and the businessman
  24792. becomes temperamental and overbalanced.%@NL@%
  24793. %@CR:HOLLYWPriestley @%%@NL@%
  24794.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  24795.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  24796. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24797. %@NL@%
  24798. %@NL@%
  24799. %@2@%If we have to kiss Hollywood goodbye, it may be with one of%@EH@%
  24800. those tender, old-fashioned, seven-second kisses as exchanged between
  24801. two people of the opposite sex with all their clothes on.%@NL@%
  24802. %@CR:HOLLYWLoos      @%%@NL@%
  24803.                                                     Anita Loos (1893-1981)%@NL@%
  24804.                                                      American screenwriter%@NL@%
  24805. %@AS@%                                                                 Hollywood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24806. %@NL@%
  24807. %@NL@%
  24808. %@NL@%
  24809. %@1@%%@AS@%Home%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24810. %@CR:HOME            @%%@NL@%
  24811. %@2@%See:%@QR:Home@%%@NL@%
  24812.      Poverty: %@AB@%Saki%@AE@%%@BO:          1f7148@%%@NL@%
  24813. %@NL@%
  24814. %@2@%A comfortable house is a great source of happiness. It ranks%@EH@%
  24815. immediately after health and a good conscience.%@NL@%
  24816. %@CR:HOME  Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  24817.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  24818.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  24819. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24820. %@NL@%
  24821. %@NL@%
  24822.      %@2@%Home is the place where, when you have to go there,%@NL@%
  24823.      They have to take you in.%@NL@%
  24824. %@CR:HOME  Frost2    @%%@NL@%
  24825.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  24826.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  24827. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24828. %@NL@%
  24829. %@NL@%
  24830. %@2@%Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore.%@NL@%
  24831. %@CR:HOME  Campion   @%%@NL@%
  24832.                                                 Thomas Campion (1567-1620)%@NL@%
  24833.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24834. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24835. %@NL@%
  24836. %@NL@%
  24837. %@2@%Home is where the heart is.%@NL@%
  24838. %@CR:HOME  PlinytheEl@%%@NL@%
  24839.                                                    Pliny the Elder (23-79)%@NL@%
  24840.                                                              Roman scholar%@NL@%
  24841. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24842. %@NL@%
  24843. %@NL@%
  24844. %@2@%Every man likes the smell of his own farts.%@NL@%
  24845. %@CR:HOME  Kronenberg@%%@NL@%
  24846.                                             Icelandic proverb collected by%@NL@%
  24847.                                             Louis Kronenberger (1904-1980)%@NL@%
  24848.                                            American critic, editor, author%@NL@%
  24849. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24850. %@NL@%
  24851. %@NL@%
  24852. %@2@%A man's home may seem to be his castle on the outside; inside,%@EH@%
  24853. it is more often his nursery.%@NL@%
  24854. %@CR:HOME  Luce      @%%@NL@%
  24855.                                              Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987)%@NL@%
  24856.                                                  American diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  24857. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24858. %@NL@%
  24859. %@NL@%
  24860. %@2@%Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has%@EH@%
  24861. merely opened a tavern for his friends.%@NL@%
  24862. %@CR:HOME  Douglas   @%%@NL@%
  24863.                                                 Norman Douglas (1868-1952)%@NL@%
  24864.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  24865. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24866. %@NL@%
  24867. %@NL@%
  24868. %@2@%Charity begins at home, and justice begins next door.%@NL@%
  24869. %@CR:HOME  Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  24870.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  24871.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  24872. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24873. %@NL@%
  24874. %@NL@%
  24875. %@2@%I hate housework! You make the beds, you do the dishes - and%@EH@%
  24876. six months later you have to start all over again.%@NL@%
  24877. %@CR:HOME  Rivers    @%%@NL@%
  24878.                                                      Joan Rivers (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  24879.                                                        American comedienne%@NL@%
  24880. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24881. %@NL@%
  24882. %@NL@%
  24883. %@2@%Everybody's always talking about people breaking into houses%@EH@%
  24884.  . . .  but there are more people in the world who want to break
  24885. out of houses.%@NL@%
  24886. %@CR:HOME  Wilder2   @%%@NL@%
  24887.                                                Thornton Wilder (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  24888.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  24889. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24890. %@NL@%
  24891. %@NL@%
  24892. %@2@%Houses are built to live in, and not to look on: therefore%@EH@%
  24893. let use be preferred before uniformity.%@NL@%
  24894. %@CR:HOME  Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  24895.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  24896.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  24897. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24898. %@NL@%
  24899. %@NL@%
  24900. %@2@%Have nothing in your home that you do not know to be useful%@EH@%
  24901. or believe to be beautiful.%@NL@%
  24902. %@CR:HOME  Morris2   @%%@NL@%
  24903.                                                 William Morris (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  24904.                                            English artist, writer, printer%@NL@%
  24905. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24906. %@NL@%
  24907. %@NL@%
  24908. %@2@%I want a house that has got over all its troubles; I don't%@EH@%
  24909. want to spend the rest of my life bringing up a young and inexperienced
  24910. house.%@NL@%
  24911. %@CR:HOME  Jerome    @%%@NL@%
  24912.                                               Jerome K. Jerome (1859-1927)%@NL@%
  24913.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  24914. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24915. %@NL@%
  24916. %@NL@%
  24917. %@2@%A house is a machine for living in.%@NL@%
  24918. %@CR:HOME  LeCorbusie@%%@NL@%
  24919.                                                   Le Corbusier (1887-1965)%@NL@%
  24920.                                                           French architect%@NL@%
  24921. %@AS@%                                                                      Home%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24922. %@NL@%
  24923. %@NL@%
  24924. %@NL@%
  24925. %@1@%%@AS@%Honesty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  24926. %@CR:HONESTY         @%%@NL@%
  24927. %@2@%See:%@QR:Honesty@%%@NL@%
  24928.      Friends: %@AB@%Canning%@AE@%%@BO:           fea3e@%%@NL@%
  24929.      Portraits: %@AB@%Sargent%@AE@%%@BO:          1f31cb@%%@NL@%
  24930.      Sincerity: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          254df1@%%@NL@%
  24931. %@NL@%
  24932. %@2@%A few honest men are better than numbers.%@NL@%
  24933. %@CR:HONESTCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  24934.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  24935.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  24936. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24937. %@NL@%
  24938. %@NL@%
  24939. %@2@%Honest men are the soft easy cushions on which knaves repose%@EH@%
  24940. and fatten.%@NL@%
  24941. %@CR:HONESTOtway     @%%@NL@%
  24942.                                                   Thomas Otway (1652-1685)%@NL@%
  24943.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  24944. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24945. %@NL@%
  24946. %@NL@%
  24947. %@2@%It should seem that indolence itself would incline a person%@EH@%
  24948. to be honest; as it requires infinitely greater pains and contrivance
  24949. to be a knave.%@NL@%
  24950. %@CR:HONESTShenstone @%%@NL@%
  24951.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  24952.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  24953. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24954. %@NL@%
  24955. %@NL@%
  24956. %@2@%It would be ingratitude in some men to turn honest when they%@EH@%
  24957. owe all they have to their knavery.%@NL@%
  24958. %@CR:HONESTSavile    @%%@NL@%
  24959.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  24960.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  24961. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24962. %@NL@%
  24963. %@NL@%
  24964. %@2@%Though I am not naturally honest, I am so sometimes by chance.%@NL@%
  24965. %@CR:HONESTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  24966.                                               Autolycus, %@AI@%The Winter's Tale%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24967.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  24968.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  24969. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24970. %@NL@%
  24971. %@NL@%
  24972. %@2@%There's one way to find out if a man is honest - ask him.%@EH@%
  24973. If he says "yes," you know he is crooked.%@NL@%
  24974. %@CR:HONESTMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  24975.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  24976.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  24977. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24978. %@NL@%
  24979. %@NL@%
  24980. %@2@%He who says there is no such thing as an honest man, you may%@EH@%
  24981. be sure is himself a knave.%@NL@%
  24982. %@CR:HONESTBerkeley  @%%@NL@%
  24983.                                         Bishop George Berkeley (1685-1753)%@NL@%
  24984.                                                          Irish philosopher%@NL@%
  24985. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24986. %@NL@%
  24987. %@NL@%
  24988. %@2@%Nothing astonishes men so much as common sense and plain dealing.%@NL@%
  24989. %@CR:HONESTEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  24990.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  24991.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  24992. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  24993. %@NL@%
  24994. %@NL@%
  24995. %@2@%Always be ready to speak your mind, and a base man will avoid%@EH@%
  24996. you.%@NL@%
  24997. %@CR:HONESTBlake     @%%@NL@%
  24998.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  24999.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  25000. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25001. %@NL@%
  25002. %@NL@%
  25003. %@2@%Don't be ashamed to say what you are not ashamed to think.%@NL@%
  25004. %@CR:HONESTMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  25005.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  25006.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  25007. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25008. %@NL@%
  25009. %@NL@%
  25010. %@2@%I am afraid we must make the world honest before we can honestly%@EH@%
  25011. say to our children that honesty is the best policy.%@NL@%
  25012. %@CR:HONESTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  25013.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  25014.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  25015. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25016. %@NL@%
  25017. %@NL@%
  25018. %@2@%It is kindness to refuse immediately what you intend to deny.%@NL@%
  25019. %@CR:HONESTPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  25020.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  25021.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  25022. %@AS@%                                                                   Honesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25023. %@NL@%
  25024. %@NL@%
  25025. %@NL@%
  25026. %@1@%%@AS@%Honor%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25027. %@CR:HONOR           @%%@NL@%
  25028. %@2@%See:%@QR:Honor@%%@NL@%
  25029.      The Law: %@AB@%Saurin%@AE@%%@BO:          16d0c6@%%@NL@%
  25030. %@NL@%
  25031. %@2@%Fame is something which must be won; honor is something which%@EH@%
  25032. must not be lost.%@NL@%
  25033. %@CR:HONOR Schopenhau@%%@NL@%
  25034.                                            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)%@NL@%
  25035.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  25036. %@AS@%                                                                     Honor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25037. %@NL@%
  25038. %@NL@%
  25039. %@2@%Without money honor is merely a disease.%@NL@%
  25040. %@CR:HONOR Racine    @%%@NL@%
  25041.                                                    Jean Racine (1639-1699)%@NL@%
  25042.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  25043. %@AS@%                                                                     Honor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25044. %@NL@%
  25045. %@NL@%
  25046. %@2@%The louder he talked of his honor, the faster we counted our%@EH@%
  25047. spoons.%@NL@%
  25048. %@CR:HONOR Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  25049.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  25050.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  25051. %@AS@%                                                                     Honor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25052. %@NL@%
  25053. %@NL@%
  25054. %@2@%As to honour - you know - it's a very fine medieval inheritance,%@EH@%
  25055. which women never got hold of. It wasn't theirs.%@NL@%
  25056. %@CR:HONOR Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  25057.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  25058.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  25059. %@AS@%                                                                     Honor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25060. %@NL@%
  25061. %@NL@%
  25062. %@NL@%
  25063. %@1@%%@AS@%Hope%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25064. %@CR:HOPE            @%%@NL@%
  25065. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hope@%%@NL@%
  25066.      Middle Age: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          1a5883@%%@NL@%
  25067. %@NL@%
  25068.      %@2@%Hope, the patient medicine%@NL@%
  25069.      For disease, disaster, sin.%@NL@%
  25070. %@CR:HOPE  Rice      @%%@NL@%
  25071.                                                   Wallace Rice (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  25072.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  25073. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25074. %@NL@%
  25075. %@NL@%
  25076. %@2@%Take hope from the heart of man and you make him a beast of%@EH@%
  25077. prey.%@NL@%
  25078. %@CR:HOPE  laRamee   @%%@NL@%
  25079.                                Ouida, Marie Louise de la Ramee (1839-1908)%@NL@%
  25080.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  25081. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25082. %@NL@%
  25083. %@NL@%
  25084. %@2@%Hope in every sphere of life is a privilege that attaches to%@EH@%
  25085. action. No action, no hope.%@NL@%
  25086. %@CR:HOPE  Levi      @%%@NL@%
  25087.                                                       Peter Levi (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  25088.                                                British professor of poetry%@NL@%
  25089. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25090. %@NL@%
  25091. %@NL@%
  25092.      %@2@%Still bent to make some port he knows not where,%@NL@%
  25093.      Still standing for some false impossible shore.%@NL@%
  25094. %@CR:HOPE  Arnold2   @%%@NL@%
  25095.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  25096.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  25097. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25098. %@NL@%
  25099. %@NL@%
  25100. %@2@%He that lives upon hope will die fasting.%@NL@%
  25101. %@CR:HOPE  Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  25102.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  25103.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  25104. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25105. %@NL@%
  25106. %@NL@%
  25107.      %@2@%The miserable have no other medicine%@NL@%
  25108.      But only hope.%@NL@%
  25109. %@CR:HOPE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  25110.                                               Claudio, %@AI@%Measure for Measure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25111.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  25112.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  25113. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25114. %@NL@%
  25115. %@NL@%
  25116. %@2@%Vows begin when hope dies.%@NL@%
  25117. %@CR:HOPE  Vinci     @%%@NL@%
  25118.                                             Leonardo  da Vinci (1425-1519)%@NL@%
  25119.                                                  Italian artist, scientist%@NL@%
  25120. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25121. %@NL@%
  25122. %@NL@%
  25123. %@2@%Hope is the universal liar.%@NL@%
  25124. %@CR:HOPE  Ingersoll @%%@NL@%
  25125.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  25126.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  25127. %@AS@%                                                                      Hope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25128. %@NL@%
  25129. %@NL@%
  25130. %@NL@%
  25131. %@1@%%@AS@%Horses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25132. %@CR:HORSES          @%%@NL@%
  25133. %@2@%See:%@QR:Horses@%%@NL@%
  25134.      Cars: %@AB@%Salinger%@AE@%%@BO:           5361a@%%@NL@%
  25135. %@NL@%
  25136. %@2@%The horse, the horse! The symbol of surging potency and power%@EH@%
  25137. of movement, of action, in man.%@NL@%
  25138. %@CR:HORSESLawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  25139.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  25140.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25141. %@AS@%                                                                    Horses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25142. %@NL@%
  25143. %@NL@%
  25144. %@2@%Nothing does as much for the insides of a man than the outsides%@EH@%
  25145. of a horse.%@NL@%
  25146. %@CR:HORSESReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  25147.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  25148.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  25149. %@AS@%                                                                    Horses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25150. %@NL@%
  25151. %@NL@%
  25152. %@2@%They say princes learn no art truly, but the art of horsemanship.%@EH@%
  25153. The reason is, the brave beast is no flatterer. He will throw a
  25154. prince as soon as his groom.%@NL@%
  25155. %@CR:HORSESJonson    @%%@NL@%
  25156.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  25157.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  25158. %@AS@%                                                                    Horses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25159. %@NL@%
  25160. %@NL@%
  25161. %@2@%Go anywhere in England where there are natural, wholesome,%@EH@%
  25162. contented, and really nice English people; and what do you always
  25163. find? That the stables are the real centre of the household.%@NL@%
  25164. %@CR:HORSESShaw      @%%@NL@%
  25165.                                           Lady Utterwood, %@AI@%Heartbreak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25166.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  25167.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  25168. %@AS@%                                                                    Horses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25169. %@NL@%
  25170. %@NL@%
  25171. %@2@%A horse is dangerous at both ends and uncomfortable in the%@EH@%
  25172. middle.%@NL@%
  25173. %@CR:HORSESFleming   @%%@NL@%
  25174.                                                    Ian Fleming (1908-1964)%@NL@%
  25175.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  25176. %@AS@%                                                                    Horses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25177. %@NL@%
  25178. %@NL@%
  25179. %@NL@%
  25180. %@1@%%@AS@%Hospitality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25181. %@CR:HOSPITALITY     @%%@NL@%
  25182. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hospitality@%%@NL@%
  25183.      %@AB@%Guests%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          11d483@%%@NL@%
  25184.      Home: %@AB@%Douglas%@AE@%%@BO:          132370@%%@NL@%
  25185. %@NL@%
  25186. %@2@%Hospitality consists in a little fire, a little food, and an%@EH@%
  25187. immense quiet.%@NL@%
  25188. %@CR:HOSPITEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  25189.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  25190.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  25191. %@AS@%                                                               Hospitality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25192. %@NL@%
  25193. %@NL@%
  25194. %@2@%We'll teach you to drink deep ere you depart.%@NL@%
  25195. %@CR:HOSPITShakespear@%%@NL@%
  25196.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25197.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  25198.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  25199. %@AS@%                                                               Hospitality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25200. %@NL@%
  25201. %@NL@%
  25202. %@2@%Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have%@EH@%
  25203. entertained angels unawares.%@NL@%
  25204. %@CR:HOSPITBibleHebre@%%@NL@%
  25205.                                                             Bible, Hebrews%@NL@%
  25206. %@AS@%                                                               Hospitality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25207. %@NL@%
  25208. %@NL@%
  25209. %@2@%We shall always keep a spare corner in our heads to give passing%@EH@%
  25210. hospitality to our friends' opinions.%@NL@%
  25211. %@CR:HOSPITJoubert   @%%@NL@%
  25212.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  25213.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  25214. %@AS@%                                                               Hospitality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25215. %@NL@%
  25216. %@NL@%
  25217. %@NL@%
  25218. %@1@%%@AS@%Hotels%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25219. %@CR:HOTELS          @%%@NL@%
  25220. %@2@%%@QR:Hotels@%It used to be a good hotel, but that proves nothing - I%@EH@%
  25221. used to be a good boy.%@NL@%
  25222. %@CR:HOTELSTwain     @%%@NL@%
  25223.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  25224.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  25225. %@AS@%                                                                    Hotels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25226. %@NL@%
  25227. %@NL@%
  25228. %@2@%Why do they put the Gideon Bibles only in the bedrooms, where%@EH@%
  25229. it's usually too late?%@NL@%
  25230. %@CR:HOTELSMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  25231.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  25232.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  25233. %@AS@%                                                                    Hotels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25234. %@NL@%
  25235. %@NL@%
  25236. %@NL@%
  25237. %@1@%%@AS@%The House of Lords%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25238. %@CR:THEHOUSEOFLORDS @%%@NL@%
  25239. %@2@%%@QR:The House of Lords@%The dust and silence of the upper shelf.%@NL@%
  25240. %@CR:THEHOUMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  25241.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  25242.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  25243. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25244. %@NL@%
  25245. %@NL@%
  25246. %@2@%Five hundred men, ordinary men, chosen accidentally from among%@EH@%
  25247. the unemployed.%@NL@%
  25248. %@CR:THEHOULloydGeorg@%%@NL@%
  25249.                                             David Lloyd George (1863-1945)%@NL@%
  25250.                                   Welsh Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  25251. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25252. %@NL@%
  25253. %@NL@%
  25254. %@2@%Twenty thousand thieves landed at Hastings. These founders%@EH@%
  25255. of the House of Lords were greedy and ferocious dragoons, sons
  25256. of greedy and ferocious pirates.%@NL@%
  25257. %@CR:THEHOUEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  25258.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  25259.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  25260. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25261. %@NL@%
  25262. %@NL@%
  25263.      %@2@%Where might is, the right is:%@NL@%
  25264.      Long purses make strong swords.%@NL@%
  25265.      Let weakness learn meekness:%@NL@%
  25266.      God save the House of Lords!%@NL@%
  25267. %@CR:THEHOUSwinburne @%%@NL@%
  25268.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  25269.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  25270. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25271. %@NL@%
  25272. %@NL@%
  25273. %@2@%The typical backwoods peer had three qualities. He knew how%@EH@%
  25274. to kill a fox, how to get rid of a bad tenant, and how to discard
  25275. an unwanted mistress. A man with those three qualities would certainly
  25276. have something to contribute to the work of the House of Lords.%@NL@%
  25277. %@CR:THEHOUWinster   @%%@NL@%
  25278.                                                   Lord Winster (1885-1961)%@NL@%
  25279.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  25280. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25281. %@NL@%
  25282. %@NL@%
  25283. %@2@%My Lord Bath, you and I are now two as insignificant men as%@EH@%
  25284. any in England.%@NL@%
  25285. %@CR:THEHOUWalpole2  @%%@NL@%
  25286.                                             Sir Robert Walpole (1676-1745)%@NL@%
  25287.                                                          English statesman%@NL@%
  25288.                                     on his elevation to the House of Lords%@NL@%
  25289. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25290. %@NL@%
  25291. %@NL@%
  25292. %@2@%The cure for admiring the House of Lords is to go and look%@EH@%
  25293. at it.%@NL@%
  25294. %@CR:THEHOUBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  25295.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  25296.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  25297. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25298. %@NL@%
  25299. %@NL@%
  25300. %@2@%Lives the man that can figure a naked Duke of Windlestraw addressing%@EH@%
  25301. a naked House of Lords?%@NL@%
  25302. %@CR:THEHOUCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  25303.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  25304.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  25305. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25306. %@NL@%
  25307. %@NL@%
  25308. %@2@%When I'm sitting on the Woolsack in the House of Lords I amuse%@EH@%
  25309. myself by saying "Bollocks" %@AI@%sotto voce%@AE@% to the bishops.%@NL@%
  25310. %@CR:THEHOUHailsham  @%%@NL@%
  25311.                                                    Lord Hailsham (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  25312.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  25313. %@AS@%                                                        The House of Lords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25314. %@NL@%
  25315. %@NL@%
  25316. %@NL@%
  25317. %@1@%%@AS@%Human Nature%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25318. %@CR:HUMANNATURE     @%%@NL@%
  25319. %@2@%See:%@QR:Human Nature@%%@NL@%
  25320.      Killing: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          165dae@%%@NL@%
  25321. %@NL@%
  25322. %@2@%At his present best many of his [Man's] ways are so unpleasant%@EH@%
  25323. that they are unmentionable in polite society, and so painful that
  25324. he is compelled to pretend that pain is often a good.%@NL@%
  25325. %@CR:HUMANNShaw      @%%@NL@%
  25326.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  25327.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  25328. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25329. %@NL@%
  25330. %@NL@%
  25331. %@2@%It is easier to denature plutonium than to denature the evil%@EH@%
  25332. spirit of man.%@NL@%
  25333. %@CR:HUMANNEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  25334.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  25335.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  25336. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25337. %@NL@%
  25338. %@NL@%
  25339. %@2@%Men are so made that they can resist sound argument, and yet%@EH@%
  25340. yield to a glance.%@NL@%
  25341. %@CR:HUMANNBalzac    @%%@NL@%
  25342.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  25343.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  25344. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25345. %@NL@%
  25346. %@NL@%
  25347. %@2@%Only this distinguishes us from the other animals: we drink%@EH@%
  25348. when we are not thirsty and we make love on the spur of any moment.%@NL@%
  25349. %@CR:HUMANNBeaumarcha@%%@NL@%
  25350.                                         Pierre de Beaumarchais (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  25351.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  25352. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25353. %@NL@%
  25354. %@NL@%
  25355. %@2@%I have found men more kind than I expected, and less just.%@NL@%
  25356. %@CR:HUMANNJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  25357.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  25358.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  25359. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25360. %@NL@%
  25361. %@NL@%
  25362. %@2@%Even a tax-gatherer must find his feelings rather worked upon%@EH@%
  25363. at times.%@NL@%
  25364. %@CR:HUMANNDickens   @%%@NL@%
  25365.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  25366.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  25367. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25368. %@NL@%
  25369. %@NL@%
  25370. %@2@%Not one is altogether noble nor altogether trustworthy nor%@EH@%
  25371. altogether consistent; and not one is altogether vile. Not a single
  25372. one but has at some time wept.%@NL@%
  25373. %@CR:HUMANNWells     @%%@NL@%
  25374.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  25375.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  25376. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25377. %@NL@%
  25378. %@NL@%
  25379. %@2@%Yet is every man his own greatest enemy, and as it were his%@EH@%
  25380. own executioner.%@NL@%
  25381. %@CR:HUMANNBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  25382.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  25383.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  25384. %@AS@%                                                              Human Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25385. %@NL@%
  25386. %@NL@%
  25387. %@NL@%
  25388. %@1@%%@AS@%Humanism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25389. %@CR:HUMANISM        @%%@NL@%
  25390. %@2@%%@QR:Humanism@%Progressivist optimism modified by fashionable despair.%@NL@%
  25391. %@CR:HUMANIWilliams1 @%%@NL@%
  25392.                                                 Bernard Williams (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  25393.                                                British philosopher, author%@NL@%
  25394. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25395. %@NL@%
  25396. %@NL@%
  25397. %@2@%The splendour of human life, I feel sure, is greater to those%@EH@%
  25398. who are not dazzled by the divine radiance.%@NL@%
  25399. %@CR:HUMANIRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  25400.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  25401.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  25402. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25403. %@NL@%
  25404. %@NL@%
  25405. %@NL@%
  25406. %@1@%%@AS@%Humanity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25407. %@CR:HUMANITY        @%%@NL@%
  25408. %@2@%See:%@QR:Humanity@%%@NL@%
  25409.      Absurdity: %@AB@%Knox%@AE@%%@BO:             cd6@%%@NL@%
  25410.      Admiration: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:            6c98@%%@NL@%
  25411.      Business: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           4d7cc@%%@NL@%
  25412.      %@AB@%Creation%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           8ad28@%%@NL@%
  25413.      Embarrassment: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           c5728@%%@NL@%
  25414.      Evolution: %@AB@%Gilbert%@AE@%%@BO:           d470f@%%@NL@%
  25415.      Excess: %@AB@%James%@AE@%%@BO:           d6442@%%@NL@%
  25416.      Fun: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          1007c4@%%@NL@%
  25417.      Hope: %@AB@%Ouida%@AE@%%@BO:          134d21@%%@NL@%
  25418.      Idleness: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          143d54@%%@NL@%
  25419.      Laughter: %@AB@%Addison%@AE@%%@BO:          16b082@%%@NL@%
  25420.      Love: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          184e23@%%@NL@%
  25421.      Morality: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          1b026d@%%@NL@%
  25422.      Nature: %@AB@%Whitehead%@AE@%%@BO:          1b733f@%%@NL@%
  25423.      Parasites: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1cb1ae@%%@NL@%
  25424.      Self-knowledge: %@AB@%Boethius%@AE@%%@BO:          24976f@%%@NL@%
  25425.      Sociability: %@AB@%Gay%@AE@%%@BO:          25cb55@%%@NL@%
  25426. %@NL@%
  25427. %@2@%We are all more simply human than otherwise.%@NL@%
  25428. %@CR:HUMANISullivan2 @%%@NL@%
  25429.                                           Harry Stack Sullivan (1892-1949)%@NL@%
  25430.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  25431. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25432. %@NL@%
  25433. %@NL@%
  25434. %@2@%What a piece of work is man! How noble in reason! How infinite%@EH@%
  25435. in faculty! in form and moving, how express and admirable! in action,
  25436. how like an angel! in apprehension, how like a god! the beauty
  25437. of the world! the paragon of animals!%@NL@%
  25438. %@CR:HUMANIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  25439.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25440.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  25441.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  25442. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25443. %@NL@%
  25444. %@NL@%
  25445. %@2@%Man is a little soul carrying around a corpse.%@NL@%
  25446. %@CR:HUMANIEpictetus @%%@NL@%
  25447.                                                   Epictetus (c. 55-c. 135)%@NL@%
  25448.                                                          Stoic philosopher%@NL@%
  25449. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25450. %@NL@%
  25451. %@NL@%
  25452. %@2@%Man is a tool-making animal.%@NL@%
  25453. %@CR:HUMANIFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  25454.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  25455.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  25456. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25457. %@NL@%
  25458. %@NL@%
  25459. %@2@%The greatest animal in creation, the animal who cooks.%@NL@%
  25460. %@CR:HUMANIJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  25461.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  25462.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  25463. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25464. %@NL@%
  25465. %@NL@%
  25466. %@2@%Man is the only animal that can remain on friendly terms with%@EH@%
  25467. the victims he intends to eat until he eats them.%@NL@%
  25468. %@CR:HUMANIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  25469.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  25470.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25471. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25472. %@NL@%
  25473. %@NL@%
  25474.      %@2@%Self-preservation, nature's first great law,%@NL@%
  25475.      All the creatures, except man, doth awe.%@NL@%
  25476. %@CR:HUMANIMarvell   @%%@NL@%
  25477.                                                 Andrew Marvell (1621-1678)%@NL@%
  25478.                                                  English metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  25479. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25480. %@NL@%
  25481. %@NL@%
  25482. %@2@%Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps; for he is the%@EH@%
  25483. only animal that is struck with the difference between what things
  25484. are and what they might have been.%@NL@%
  25485. %@CR:HUMANIHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  25486.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  25487.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  25488. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25489. %@NL@%
  25490. %@NL@%
  25491. %@2@%Man is an exception, whatever else he is. If it is not true%@EH@%
  25492. that a divine being fell, then we can only say that one of the
  25493. animals went entirely off its head.%@NL@%
  25494. %@CR:HUMANIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  25495.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  25496.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25497. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25498. %@NL@%
  25499. %@NL@%
  25500. %@2@%One definition of man is "an intelligence served by organs."%@NL@%
  25501. %@CR:HUMANIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  25502.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  25503.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  25504. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25505. %@NL@%
  25506. %@NL@%
  25507. %@2@%A being darkly wise, and rudely great.%@NL@%
  25508. %@CR:HUMANIPope      @%%@NL@%
  25509.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  25510.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  25511. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25512. %@NL@%
  25513. %@NL@%
  25514. %@2@%Ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.%@NL@%
  25515. %@CR:HUMANIBibleGenes@%%@NL@%
  25516.                                                             Bible, Genesis%@NL@%
  25517. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25518. %@NL@%
  25519. %@NL@%
  25520. %@2@%I'm always acutely conscious of the Force Behind - (Fate,%@EH@%
  25521. God, our biological past creating our present, whatever one calls
  25522. it - Mystery certainly) - and of the eternal tragedy of
  25523. man in his glorious, self-destructive struggle to make the force
  25524. express him instead of being, as an animal is, an infinitesimal
  25525. incident in its expression.%@NL@%
  25526. %@CR:HUMANIONeill    @%%@NL@%
  25527.                                                 Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953)%@NL@%
  25528.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  25529. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25530. %@NL@%
  25531. %@NL@%
  25532. %@2@%Human affairs are not serious, but they have to be taken seriously.%@NL@%
  25533. %@CR:HUMANIMurdoch   @%%@NL@%
  25534.                                                     Iris Murdoch (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  25535.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  25536. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25537. %@NL@%
  25538. %@NL@%
  25539. %@2@%He's not the finest character that ever lived. But he's a human%@EH@%
  25540. being, and a terrible thing is happening to him. So attention must
  25541. be paid.%@NL@%
  25542. %@CR:HUMANIMiller1   @%%@NL@%
  25543.                                                    Arthur Miller (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  25544.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  25545. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25546. %@NL@%
  25547. %@NL@%
  25548.      %@2@%Humanity I love you because%@NL@%
  25549.      when you're hard up you pawn your%@NL@%
  25550.      intelligence to buy a drink.%@NL@%
  25551. %@CR:HUMANIcummings  @%%@NL@%
  25552.                                                 e. e. cummings (1894-1962)%@NL@%
  25553.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  25554. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25555. %@NL@%
  25556. %@NL@%
  25557. %@2@%Were it not for the presence of the unwashed and the half-educated,%@EH@%
  25558. the formless, queer and incomplete, the unreasonable and absurd,
  25559. the infinite shapes of the delightful human tadpole, the horizon
  25560. would not wear so wide a grin.%@NL@%
  25561. %@CR:HUMANIColby     @%%@NL@%
  25562.                                                    F. M. Colby (1865-1925)%@NL@%
  25563.                                                  American editor, essayist%@NL@%
  25564. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25565. %@NL@%
  25566. %@NL@%
  25567. %@2@%We are, to put it mildly, in a mess, and there is a strong%@EH@%
  25568. chance that we shall have exterminated ourselves by the end of
  25569. the century. Our only consolation will have to be that, as a species,
  25570. we have had an exciting term of office.%@NL@%
  25571. %@CR:HUMANIMorris1   @%%@NL@%
  25572.                                                   Desmond Morris (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  25573.                                                     British anthropologist%@NL@%
  25574. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25575. %@NL@%
  25576. %@NL@%
  25577. %@2@%Such is the human race. Often it does seem such a pity that%@EH@%
  25578. Noah  . . .  didn't miss the boat.%@NL@%
  25579. %@CR:HUMANITwain     @%%@NL@%
  25580.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  25581.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  25582. %@AS@%                                                                  Humanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25583. %@NL@%
  25584. %@NL@%
  25585. %@NL@%
  25586. %@1@%%@AS@%Humiliation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25587. %@CR:HUMILIATION     @%%@NL@%
  25588. %@2@%%@QR:Humiliation@%One can reach a point of humiliation where violence is the%@EH@%
  25589. only outlet.%@NL@%
  25590. %@CR:HUMILIKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  25591.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  25592.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  25593. %@AS@%                                                               Humiliation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25594. %@NL@%
  25595. %@NL@%
  25596. %@2@%The one thing to do is to do nothing. Wait  . . .  You will find%@EH@%
  25597. that you survive humiliation and that's an experience of incalculable
  25598. value.%@NL@%
  25599. %@CR:HUMILIEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  25600.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  25601.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  25602. %@AS@%                                                               Humiliation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25603. %@NL@%
  25604. %@NL@%
  25605. %@NL@%
  25606. %@1@%%@AS@%Humility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25607. %@CR:HUMILITY        @%%@NL@%
  25608. %@2@%See:%@QR:Humility@%%@NL@%
  25609.      Applause: %@AB@%Kissinger%@AE@%%@BO:           24dac@%%@NL@%
  25610.      Pride: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:          2028fb@%%@NL@%
  25611. %@NL@%
  25612. %@2@%It is always the secure who are humble.%@NL@%
  25613. %@CR:HUMILIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  25614.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  25615.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25616. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25617. %@NL@%
  25618. %@NL@%
  25619. %@2@%Turning the other cheek is a kind of moral jujitsu.%@NL@%
  25620. %@CR:HUMILILee       @%%@NL@%
  25621.                                             Gerald Stanley Lee (1862-1944)%@NL@%
  25622.                                                          American academic%@NL@%
  25623. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25624. %@NL@%
  25625. %@NL@%
  25626. %@2@%Don't be humble, you're not that great.%@NL@%
  25627. %@CR:HUMILIMeir      @%%@NL@%
  25628.                                                     Golda Meir (1898-1978)%@NL@%
  25629.                                                     Israeli prime minister%@NL@%
  25630. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25631. %@NL@%
  25632. %@NL@%
  25633. %@2@%At home I am a nice guy; but I don't want the world to know.%@EH@%
  25634. Humble people, I've found, don't get very far.%@NL@%
  25635. %@CR:HUMILIMuhammadAl@%%@NL@%
  25636.                                                     Muhammad Ali (b. 1942)%@NL@%
  25637.                                                             American boxer%@NL@%
  25638. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25639. %@NL@%
  25640. %@NL@%
  25641. %@2@%Those men are most apt to be obsequious and conciliating abroad%@EH@%
  25642. who are under the discipline of shrews at home.%@NL@%
  25643. %@CR:HUMILIIrving    @%%@NL@%
  25644.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  25645.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  25646. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25647. %@NL@%
  25648. %@NL@%
  25649. %@2@%The old humility made a man doubtful about his efforts, which%@EH@%
  25650. might make him work harder. But the new humility makes a man doubtful
  25651. about his aims, which will make him stop working altogether.%@NL@%
  25652. %@CR:HUMILIChesterton@%%@NL@%
  25653.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  25654.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25655. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25656. %@NL@%
  25657. %@NL@%
  25658. %@2@%Hugo, like a priest, always has his head bowed - bowed so%@EH@%
  25659. low that he can see nothing but his own navel.%@NL@%
  25660. %@CR:HUMILIBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  25661.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  25662.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  25663. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25664. %@NL@%
  25665. %@NL@%
  25666. %@2@%If you bow at all bow low.%@NL@%
  25667. %@CR:HUMILICHINESEPRO@%%@NL@%
  25668.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  25669. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25670. %@NL@%
  25671. %@NL@%
  25672. %@2@%Leave it to the coward to make a religion of his cowardice%@EH@%
  25673. by preaching humility.%@NL@%
  25674. %@CR:HUMILIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  25675.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  25676.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  25677. %@AS@%                                                                  Humility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25678. %@NL@%
  25679. %@NL@%
  25680. %@NL@%
  25681. %@1@%%@AS@%Humor%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25682. %@CR:HUMOR           @%%@NL@%
  25683. %@2@%See:%@QR:Humor@%%@NL@%
  25684.      Insults: %@AB@%Lewis%@AE@%%@BO:          151fcf@%%@NL@%
  25685.      %@AB@%Jokers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          15faac@%%@NL@%
  25686.      %@AB@%Sense of Humor%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          24a698@%%@NL@%
  25687.      Translation: %@AB@%Woolf%@AE@%%@BO:          29185a@%%@NL@%
  25688.      Wit: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:          2b7de1@%%@NL@%
  25689. %@NL@%
  25690. %@2@%Humor is emotional chaos remembered in tranquility.%@NL@%
  25691. %@CR:HUMOR Thurber   @%%@NL@%
  25692.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  25693.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  25694. %@AS@%                                                                     Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25695. %@NL@%
  25696. %@NL@%
  25697. %@2@%A difference of taste in jokes is a great strain on the affections.%@NL@%
  25698. %@CR:HUMOR Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  25699.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  25700.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  25701. %@AS@%                                                                     Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25702. %@NL@%
  25703. %@NL@%
  25704. %@NL@%
  25705. %@1@%%@AS@%Hunger%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25706. %@CR:HUNGER          @%%@NL@%
  25707. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hunger@%%@NL@%
  25708.      Morality: %@AB@%Brecht%@AE@%%@BO:          1b00b3@%%@NL@%
  25709.      Rebellion: %@AB@%Howell%@AE@%%@BO:          21d83f@%%@NL@%
  25710. %@NL@%
  25711. %@2@%Hunger is insolent, and will be fed.%@NL@%
  25712. %@CR:HUNGERPope      @%%@NL@%
  25713.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  25714.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  25715. %@AS@%                                                                    Hunger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25716. %@NL@%
  25717. %@NL@%
  25718. %@2@%No one can worship God or love his neighbor on an empty stomach.%@NL@%
  25719. %@CR:HUNGERWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  25720.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  25721.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  25722. %@AS@%                                                                    Hunger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25723. %@NL@%
  25724. %@NL@%
  25725. %@2@%You cannot reason with a hungry belly; it has no ears.%@NL@%
  25726. %@CR:HUNGERGREEKPROVE@%%@NL@%
  25727.                                                              Greek proverb%@NL@%
  25728. %@AS@%                                                                    Hunger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25729. %@NL@%
  25730. %@NL@%
  25731. %@2@%There is no such thing as bad bread when you have a good appetite.%@NL@%
  25732. %@CR:HUNGERMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  25733.                                           Gabriel Garcia Marquez (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  25734.                                                           Colombian writer%@NL@%
  25735. %@AS@%                                                                    Hunger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25736. %@NL@%
  25737. %@NL@%
  25738. %@2@%Hunger is the best sauce in the world.%@NL@%
  25739. %@CR:HUNGERCervantes @%%@NL@%
  25740.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  25741.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  25742. %@AS@%                                                                    Hunger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25743. %@NL@%
  25744. %@NL@%
  25745. %@NL@%
  25746. %@1@%%@AS@%Husbands%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25747. %@CR:HUSBANDS        @%%@NL@%
  25748. %@2@%See:%@QR:Husbands@%%@NL@%
  25749.      Adultery: %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:            80af@%%@NL@%
  25750.      Humility: %@AB@%Irving%@AE@%%@BO:          13bc73@%%@NL@%
  25751.      %@AB@%Marriage%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          191f14@%%@NL@%
  25752.      Villains: %@AB@%Gay%@AE@%%@BO:          2a27b0@%%@NL@%
  25753.      %@AB@%Wives%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b824a@%%@NL@%
  25754. %@NL@%
  25755. %@2@%I began as a passion and ended as a habit, like all husbands.%@NL@%
  25756. %@CR:HUSBANShaw      @%%@NL@%
  25757.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  25758.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  25759. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25760. %@NL@%
  25761. %@NL@%
  25762. %@2@%A husband is what is left of the lover after the nerve has%@EH@%
  25763. been extracted.%@NL@%
  25764. %@CR:HUSBANRowland1  @%%@NL@%
  25765.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  25766.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  25767. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25768. %@NL@%
  25769. %@NL@%
  25770. %@2@%I know many married men, I even know a few happily married%@EH@%
  25771. men, but don't know one who wouldn't fall down the first open coal-hole
  25772. running after the first pretty girl who gave him a wink.%@NL@%
  25773. %@CR:HUSBANNathan    @%%@NL@%
  25774.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  25775.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  25776. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25777. %@NL@%
  25778. %@NL@%
  25779. %@2@%He is dreadfully married. He's the most married man I ever%@EH@%
  25780. saw in my life.%@NL@%
  25781. %@CR:HUSBANWard1     @%%@NL@%
  25782.                                                   Artemus Ward (1834-1867)%@NL@%
  25783.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  25784. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25785. %@NL@%
  25786. %@NL@%
  25787. %@2@%Being a husband is a whole-time job. That is why so many husbands%@EH@%
  25788. fail. They cannot give their entire attention to it.%@NL@%
  25789. %@CR:HUSBANBennett   @%%@NL@%
  25790.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  25791.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  25792. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25793. %@NL@%
  25794. %@NL@%
  25795. %@2@%The majority of husbands remind me of an orangutan trying to%@EH@%
  25796. play the violin.%@NL@%
  25797. %@CR:HUSBANBalzac    @%%@NL@%
  25798.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  25799.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  25800. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25801. %@NL@%
  25802. %@NL@%
  25803. %@2@%If there were no husbands, who would look after our mistresses?%@NL@%
  25804. %@CR:HUSBANMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  25805.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  25806.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  25807. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25808. %@NL@%
  25809. %@NL@%
  25810. %@2@%A little in drink, but at all times your faithful husband.%@NL@%
  25811. %@CR:HUSBANSteele    @%%@NL@%
  25812.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  25813.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  25814.                                                midnight letter to his wife%@NL@%
  25815. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25816. %@NL@%
  25817. %@NL@%
  25818. %@2@%Can you support the expense of a husband, hussy, in gaming,%@EH@%
  25819. drinking and whoring? Have you money enough to carry on the daily
  25820. quarrels of man and wife about who shall squander most?%@NL@%
  25821. %@CR:HUSBANGay       @%%@NL@%
  25822.                                                Peachum, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25823.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  25824.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  25825. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25826. %@NL@%
  25827. %@NL@%
  25828. %@2@%Husbands, love your wives, and be not bitter against them.%@NL@%
  25829. %@CR:HUSBANSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  25830.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  25831.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  25832. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25833. %@NL@%
  25834. %@NL@%
  25835. %@2@%A good husband makes a good wife.%@NL@%
  25836. %@CR:HUSBANBurton2   @%%@NL@%
  25837.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  25838.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  25839. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25840. %@NL@%
  25841. %@NL@%
  25842. %@2@%Husbands never become good. They merely become proficient.%@NL@%
  25843. %@CR:HUSBANMencken   @%%@NL@%
  25844.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  25845.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  25846. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25847. %@NL@%
  25848. %@NL@%
  25849. %@2@%I revere the memory of Mr F. as an estimable man and most indulgent%@EH@%
  25850. husband, only necessary to mention Asparagus and it appeared or
  25851. to hint at any little delicate thing to drink and it came like
  25852. magic in a pint bottle; it was not ecstasy but it was comfort.%@NL@%
  25853. %@CR:HUSBANDickens   @%%@NL@%
  25854.                                              Flora Finching, %@AI@%Little Dorrit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25855.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  25856.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  25857. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25858. %@NL@%
  25859. %@NL@%
  25860. %@2@%Nothing flatters a man as much as the happiness of his wife;%@EH@%
  25861. he is always proud of himself as the source of it.%@NL@%
  25862. %@CR:HUSBANJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  25863.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  25864.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  25865. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25866. %@NL@%
  25867. %@NL@%
  25868. %@2@%There you are you see, quite simply, if you cannot have your%@EH@%
  25869. dear husband for a comfort and a delight, for a breadwinner and
  25870. a crosspatch, for a sofa, a chair or a hotwater bottle, one can
  25871. use him as a Cross to be borne.%@NL@%
  25872. %@CR:HUSBANSmith7    @%%@NL@%
  25873.                                                   Stevie Smith (1902-1971)%@NL@%
  25874.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  25875. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25876. %@NL@%
  25877. %@NL@%
  25878. %@2@% . . .  a moody, broody Oriental. He was twenty years older than%@EH@%
  25879. me but it might as well have been a hundred. He was really three
  25880. hundred years behind me.%@NL@%
  25881. %@CR:HUSBANGabor     @%%@NL@%
  25882.                                                    Zsa Zsa Gabor (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  25883.                                                     Hungarian film actress%@NL@%
  25884.                                         of her first husband, Burham Belge%@NL@%
  25885. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25886. %@NL@%
  25887. %@NL@%
  25888. %@2@%Every man who is high up like to think he has done it all himself,%@EH@%
  25889. and the wife smiles and lets it go at that.%@NL@%
  25890. %@CR:HUSBANBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  25891.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  25892.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  25893. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25894. %@NL@%
  25895. %@NL@%
  25896. %@2@%He knows little who will tell his wife all he knows.%@NL@%
  25897. %@CR:HUSBANFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  25898.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  25899.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  25900. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25901. %@NL@%
  25902. %@NL@%
  25903. %@2@%An archaeologist is the best husband any woman can have: the%@EH@%
  25904. older she gets, the more interested he is in her.%@NL@%
  25905. %@CR:HUSBANChristie  @%%@NL@%
  25906.                                                Agatha Christie (1891-1976)%@NL@%
  25907.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  25908. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25909. %@NL@%
  25910. %@NL@%
  25911. %@2@%It is ridiculous to think you can spend your entire life with%@EH@%
  25912. just one person. Three is about the right number. Yes, I imagine
  25913. three husbands would do it.%@NL@%
  25914. %@CR:HUSBANLuce      @%%@NL@%
  25915.                                              Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987)%@NL@%
  25916.                                                  American diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  25917. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25918. %@NL@%
  25919. %@NL@%
  25920. %@2@%Husbands are chiefly good lovers when they are betraying their%@EH@%
  25921. wives.%@NL@%
  25922. %@CR:HUSBANMonroe    @%%@NL@%
  25923.                                                 Marilyn Monroe (1926-1962)%@NL@%
  25924.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  25925. %@AS@%                                                                  Husbands%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25926. %@NL@%
  25927. %@NL@%
  25928. %@NL@%
  25929. %@1@%%@AS@%Hygiene%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25930. %@CR:HYGIENE         @%%@NL@%
  25931. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hygiene@%%@NL@%
  25932.      Smells: %@AB@%Miller%@AE@%%@BO:          259b57@%%@NL@%
  25933. %@NL@%
  25934. %@2@%Bath twice a day to be really clean, once a day to be passably%@EH@%
  25935. clean, once a week to avoid being a public nuisance.%@NL@%
  25936. %@CR:HYGIENBurgess1  @%%@NL@%
  25937.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  25938.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  25939. %@AS@%                                                                   Hygiene%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25940. %@NL@%
  25941. %@NL@%
  25942. %@2@%I've never had a great many baths and  . . .  it does not make%@EH@%
  25943. a great difference to health  . . .  As for appearance, most of that
  25944. is underneath and nobody sees it.%@NL@%
  25945. %@CR:HYGIENGaitskell @%%@NL@%
  25946.                                                 Hugh Gaitskell (1906-1963)%@NL@%
  25947.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  25948.                                           proposing an economy drive, 1947%@NL@%
  25949. %@AS@%                                                                   Hygiene%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25950. %@NL@%
  25951. %@NL@%
  25952. %@2@%Henry IV's feet and armpits enjoyed an international reputation.%@NL@%
  25953. %@CR:HYGIENHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  25954.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  25955.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  25956. %@AS@%                                                                   Hygiene%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25957. %@NL@%
  25958. %@NL@%
  25959. %@NL@%
  25960. %@1@%%@AS@%Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  25961. %@CR:HYPOCRISY       @%%@NL@%
  25962. %@2@%See:%@QR:Hypocrisy@%%@NL@%
  25963.      Patronage: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          1d3016@%%@NL@%
  25964. %@NL@%
  25965. %@2@%The smyler with the knife under the cloke.%@NL@%
  25966. %@CR:HYPOCRChaucer   @%%@NL@%
  25967.                                               Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400)%@NL@%
  25968.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  25969. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25970. %@NL@%
  25971. %@NL@%
  25972. %@2@%Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks invisible.%@NL@%
  25973. %@CR:HYPOCRMilton    @%%@NL@%
  25974.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  25975.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  25976. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25977. %@NL@%
  25978. %@NL@%
  25979.      %@2@%An open foe may prove a curse,%@NL@%
  25980.      But a pretended friend is worse.%@NL@%
  25981. %@CR:HYPOCRGay       @%%@NL@%
  25982.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  25983.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  25984. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25985. %@NL@%
  25986. %@NL@%
  25987. %@2@%A fav'rite has no friend.%@NL@%
  25988. %@CR:HYPOCRGray      @%%@NL@%
  25989.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  25990.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  25991. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  25992. %@NL@%
  25993. %@NL@%
  25994. %@2@%The two maxims of any great man at court are always to keep%@EH@%
  25995. his countenance and never to keep his word.%@NL@%
  25996. %@CR:HYPOCRSwift     @%%@NL@%
  25997.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  25998.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  25999. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26000. %@NL@%
  26001. %@NL@%
  26002. %@2@%With affection beaming in one eye and calculation out of the%@EH@%
  26003. other.%@NL@%
  26004. %@CR:HYPOCRDickens   @%%@NL@%
  26005.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  26006.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  26007. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26008. %@NL@%
  26009. %@NL@%
  26010. %@2@%A hypocrite combines the smooth appearance of virtue with the%@EH@%
  26011. solid satisfaction of vice.%@NL@%
  26012. %@CR:HYPOCRJoad      @%%@NL@%
  26013.                                                  C. E. M. Joad (1891-1953)%@NL@%
  26014.                                                   British author, academic%@NL@%
  26015. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26016. %@NL@%
  26017. %@NL@%
  26018. %@2@%Hypocrisy is a tribute that vice pays to virtue.%@NL@%
  26019. %@CR:HYPOCRLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  26020.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  26021.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  26022. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26023. %@NL@%
  26024. %@NL@%
  26025. %@2@%No man is a hypocrite in his pleasures.%@NL@%
  26026. %@CR:HYPOCRJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  26027.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  26028.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  26029. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26030. %@NL@%
  26031. %@NL@%
  26032. %@2@%Hypocrisy is anything whatever may deceive the cleverest and%@EH@%
  26033. most penetrating man, but the least wide-awake of children recognizes
  26034. it, and is revolted by it, however ingeniously it may be disguised.%@NL@%
  26035. %@CR:HYPOCRTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  26036.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  26037.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  26038. %@AS@%                                                                 Hypocrisy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26039. %@NL@%
  26040. %@NL@%
  26041. %@NL@%
  26042. %@1@%%@AS@%Idealism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26043. %@CR:IDEALISM        @%%@NL@%
  26044. %@2@%See:%@QR:Idealism@%%@NL@%
  26045.      America: %@AB@%Wilkie%@AE@%%@BO:           17e89@%; %@AB@%Wilson%@AE@%%@BO:           1804e@%%@NL@%
  26046.      Americans: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           1b7eb@%%@NL@%
  26047.      Ireland: %@AB@%Pearse%@AE@%%@BO:          15a6e3@%%@NL@%
  26048.      Motives: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          1b2972@%%@NL@%
  26049. %@NL@%
  26050. %@2@%When they come downstairs from their ivory towers, idealists%@EH@%
  26051. are apt to walk straight into the gutter.%@NL@%
  26052. %@CR:IDEALISmith6    @%%@NL@%
  26053.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  26054.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  26055. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26056. %@NL@%
  26057. %@NL@%
  26058. %@2@%We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the%@EH@%
  26059. stars.%@NL@%
  26060. %@CR:IDEALIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  26061.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  26062.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  26063. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26064. %@NL@%
  26065. %@NL@%
  26066. %@2@%A man gazing at the stars is proverbially at the mercy of the%@EH@%
  26067. puddles in the road.%@NL@%
  26068. %@CR:IDEALISmith2    @%%@NL@%
  26069.                                                Alexander Smith (1830-1867)%@NL@%
  26070.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  26071. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26072. %@NL@%
  26073. %@NL@%
  26074. %@2@%The idealist is incorrigible: if he is thrown out of his heaven%@EH@%
  26075. he makes an ideal of his hell.%@NL@%
  26076. %@CR:IDEALINietzsche @%%@NL@%
  26077.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  26078.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  26079. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26080. %@NL@%
  26081. %@NL@%
  26082. %@2@%He was one of those men who think that the world can be saved%@EH@%
  26083. by writing a pamphlet.%@NL@%
  26084. %@CR:IDEALIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  26085.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  26086.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  26087. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26088. %@NL@%
  26089. %@NL@%
  26090. %@2@%It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favour of%@EH@%
  26091. vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion.%@NL@%
  26092. %@CR:IDEALIInge      @%%@NL@%
  26093.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  26094.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  26095. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26096. %@NL@%
  26097. %@NL@%
  26098. %@2@%One should never put on one's best trousers when going out%@EH@%
  26099. to battle for freedom and truth.%@NL@%
  26100. %@CR:IDEALIIbsen     @%%@NL@%
  26101.                                                   Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)%@NL@%
  26102.                                                        Norwegian dramatist%@NL@%
  26103. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26104. %@NL@%
  26105. %@NL@%
  26106. %@2@%Saddle your dreams afore you ride 'em.%@NL@%
  26107. %@CR:IDEALIWebb3     @%%@NL@%
  26108.                                                      Mary Webb (1881-1927)%@NL@%
  26109.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  26110. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26111. %@NL@%
  26112. %@NL@%
  26113. %@2@%An idealist is a person who helps other people to be prosperous.%@NL@%
  26114. %@CR:IDEALIFord2     @%%@NL@%
  26115.                                                     Henry Ford (1863-1947)%@NL@%
  26116.                                                     American industrialist%@NL@%
  26117. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26118. %@NL@%
  26119. %@NL@%
  26120. %@2@%An idealist is a man who looks at a rose, and thinks, because%@EH@%
  26121. it smells sweet, it will make better soup than a cabbage.%@NL@%
  26122. %@CR:IDEALIMencken   @%%@NL@%
  26123.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  26124.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  26125. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26126. %@NL@%
  26127. %@NL@%
  26128. %@2@%Idealism increases in direct proportion to one's distance from%@EH@%
  26129. the problem.%@NL@%
  26130. %@CR:IDEALIGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  26131.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  26132.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  26133. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26134. %@NL@%
  26135. %@NL@%
  26136. %@2@%Idealism is the despot of thought, just as politics is the%@EH@%
  26137. despot of will.%@NL@%
  26138. %@CR:IDEALIBakunin   @%%@NL@%
  26139.                                                Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)%@NL@%
  26140.                                                 Russian political theorist%@NL@%
  26141. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26142. %@NL@%
  26143. %@NL@%
  26144. %@2@%The idealist walks on tiptoe, the materialist on his heels.%@NL@%
  26145. %@CR:IDEALIChazal    @%%@NL@%
  26146.                                              Malcolm de Chazal (1902-1981)%@NL@%
  26147.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  26148. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26149. %@NL@%
  26150. %@NL@%
  26151.      %@2@%We for a certainty are not the first%@NL@%
  26152.      Have sat in taverns while the tempest hurled%@NL@%
  26153.      Their hopeful plans to emptiness, and cursed%@NL@%
  26154.      Whatever brute and blackguard made the world.%@NL@%
  26155. %@CR:IDEALIHousman1  @%%@NL@%
  26156.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  26157.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  26158. %@AS@%                                                                  Idealism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26159. %@NL@%
  26160. %@NL@%
  26161. %@NL@%
  26162. %@1@%%@AS@%Ideas%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26163. %@CR:IDEAS           @%%@NL@%
  26164. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ideas@%%@NL@%
  26165.      Ideology: %@AB@%Lec%@AE@%%@BO:          142cf5@%%@NL@%
  26166. %@NL@%
  26167. %@2@%Such as take lodgings in a head that's to be let unfurnished.%@NL@%
  26168. %@CR:IDEAS Butler3   @%%@NL@%
  26169.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  26170.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26171. %@AS@%                                                                     Ideas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26172. %@NL@%
  26173. %@NL@%
  26174. %@2@%Daring ideas are like chessmen moved forward; they may be beaten,%@EH@%
  26175. but they may start a winning game.%@NL@%
  26176. %@CR:IDEAS Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  26177.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  26178.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  26179. %@AS@%                                                                     Ideas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26180. %@NL@%
  26181. %@NL@%
  26182. %@2@%If anyone has a new idea in this country, there are twice as%@EH@%
  26183. many people who advocate putting a man with a red flag in front
  26184. of it.%@NL@%
  26185. %@CR:IDEAS PrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  26186.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  26187. %@AS@%                                                                     Ideas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26188. %@NL@%
  26189. %@NL@%
  26190. %@2@%Uneducated clever women, who have seen much of the world, are%@EH@%
  26191. in middle life so much the most cultured part of the community.
  26192. They have been saved from this horrible burden of inert ideas.%@NL@%
  26193. %@CR:IDEAS Whitehead @%%@NL@%
  26194.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  26195.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  26196. %@AS@%                                                                     Ideas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26197. %@NL@%
  26198. %@NL@%
  26199. %@2@%An Idea isn't responsible for the people who believe in it.%@NL@%
  26200. %@CR:IDEAS Marquis   @%%@NL@%
  26201.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  26202.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  26203. %@AS@%                                                                     Ideas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26204. %@NL@%
  26205. %@NL@%
  26206. %@NL@%
  26207. %@1@%%@AS@%Ideology%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26208. %@CR:IDEOLOGY        @%%@NL@%
  26209. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ideology@%%@NL@%
  26210.      Economics: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:           be854@%%@NL@%
  26211. %@NL@%
  26212. %@2@%In a war of ideas it is people who get killed.%@NL@%
  26213. %@CR:IDEOLOLec       @%%@NL@%
  26214.                                                Stanislaus J. Lec (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  26215.                                                                Polish poet%@NL@%
  26216. %@AS@%                                                                  Ideology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26217. %@NL@%
  26218. %@NL@%
  26219. %@2@%Always recognize that human individuals are ends, and do not%@EH@%
  26220. use them as means to your end.%@NL@%
  26221. %@CR:IDEOLOKant      @%%@NL@%
  26222.                                                  Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)%@NL@%
  26223.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  26224. %@AS@%                                                                  Ideology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26225. %@NL@%
  26226. %@NL@%
  26227. %@2@%Our blight is ideologies - they are the long-expected Antichrist!%@NL@%
  26228. %@CR:IDEOLOJung      @%%@NL@%
  26229.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  26230.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  26231. %@AS@%                                                                  Ideology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26232. %@NL@%
  26233. %@NL@%
  26234. %@NL@%
  26235. %@1@%%@AS@%Idleness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26236. %@CR:IDLENESS        @%%@NL@%
  26237. %@2@%See:%@QR:Idleness@%%@NL@%
  26238.      The Army: %@AB@%Tolstoy%@AE@%%@BO:           2a6d5@%%@NL@%
  26239.      Exercise: %@AB@%Hutchins%@AE@%%@BO:           d7641@%%@NL@%
  26240.      Golf: %@AB@%Wordsworth%@AE@%%@BO:          111594@%%@NL@%
  26241.      Haste: %@AB@%Phaedrus%@AE@%%@BO:          122b0f@%%@NL@%
  26242.      Inertia: %@AB@%Scott%@AE@%%@BO:          14c788@%%@NL@%
  26243.      Poets: %@AB@%Cresswell%@AE@%%@BO:          1e3ec1@%%@NL@%
  26244.      Reason: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          21d270@%%@NL@%
  26245.      Smoking: %@AB@%Colette%@AE@%%@BO:          25a5a5@%%@NL@%
  26246.      Unemployment: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          29a921@%%@NL@%
  26247. %@NL@%
  26248. %@2@%The insupportable labour of doing nothing.%@NL@%
  26249. %@CR:IDLENESteele    @%%@NL@%
  26250.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  26251.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  26252. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26253. %@NL@%
  26254. %@NL@%
  26255. %@2@%Idleness is an appendix to nobility.%@NL@%
  26256. %@CR:IDLENEBurton2   @%%@NL@%
  26257.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  26258.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  26259. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26260. %@NL@%
  26261. %@NL@%
  26262. %@2@%Idleness is only a coarse name for my infinite capacity for%@EH@%
  26263. living in the present.%@NL@%
  26264. %@CR:IDLENEConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  26265.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  26266.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  26267. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26268. %@NL@%
  26269. %@NL@%
  26270.      %@2@%'Tis the voice of the sluggard; I heard him complain,%@NL@%
  26271.      "You have wak'd me too soon, I must slumber again."%@NL@%
  26272. %@CR:IDLENEWatts3    @%%@NL@%
  26273.                                                    Isaac Watts (1674-1748)%@NL@%
  26274.                                                        English hymn writer%@NL@%
  26275. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26276. %@NL@%
  26277. %@NL@%
  26278. %@2@%I look upon indolence as a sort of suicide; for the man is%@EH@%
  26279. effectually destroyed, though the appetites of the brute may survive.%@NL@%
  26280. %@CR:IDLENEChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  26281.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  26282.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  26283. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26284. %@NL@%
  26285. %@NL@%
  26286. %@2@%Laziness. Unwarranted repose of manner in a person of low degree.%@NL@%
  26287. %@CR:IDLENEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  26288.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  26289.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  26290. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26291. %@NL@%
  26292. %@NL@%
  26293. %@2@%Perhaps man is the only being that can properly be called idle.%@NL@%
  26294. %@CR:IDLENEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  26295.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  26296.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  26297. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26298. %@NL@%
  26299. %@NL@%
  26300. %@2@%You must have been warned against letting the golden hours%@EH@%
  26301. slip by. Yes, but some of them are golden only because we let them
  26302. slip.%@NL@%
  26303. %@CR:IDLENEBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  26304.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  26305.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  26306. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26307. %@NL@%
  26308. %@NL@%
  26309.      %@2@%What is this life if, full of care,%@NL@%
  26310.      We have no time to stand and stare?%@NL@%
  26311. %@CR:IDLENEDavies3   @%%@NL@%
  26312.                                                   W. H. Davies (1871-1940)%@NL@%
  26313.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  26314. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26315. %@NL@%
  26316. %@NL@%
  26317. %@2@%It is better to have loafed and lost than never to have loafed%@EH@%
  26318. at all.%@NL@%
  26319. %@CR:IDLENEThurber   @%%@NL@%
  26320.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  26321.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  26322. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26323. %@NL@%
  26324. %@NL@%
  26325. %@2@%A loafer always has the correct time.%@NL@%
  26326. %@CR:IDLENEHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  26327.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  26328.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  26329. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26330. %@NL@%
  26331. %@NL@%
  26332. %@2@%Life is too short to do anything for oneself that one can pay%@EH@%
  26333. others to do for one.%@NL@%
  26334. %@CR:IDLENEMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  26335.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  26336.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  26337. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26338. %@NL@%
  26339. %@NL@%
  26340. %@2@%To do great work a man must be very idle as well as very industrious.%@NL@%
  26341. %@CR:IDLENEButler4   @%%@NL@%
  26342.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  26343.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  26344. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26345. %@NL@%
  26346. %@NL@%
  26347. %@2@%It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has%@EH@%
  26348. plenty of work to do.%@NL@%
  26349. %@CR:IDLENEJerome    @%%@NL@%
  26350.                                               Jerome K. Jerome (1859-1927)%@NL@%
  26351.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  26352. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26353. %@NL@%
  26354. %@NL@%
  26355.      %@2@%Life is mostly froth and bubble.%@NL@%
  26356.      Two things stand like stone:%@NL@%
  26357.      Dodging duty at the double,%@NL@%
  26358.      Leaving work alone.%@NL@%
  26359. %@CR:IDLENEJerome    @%%@NL@%
  26360.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  26361. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26362. %@NL@%
  26363. %@NL@%
  26364. %@2@%Convent. A place of retirement for women who wish for leisure%@EH@%
  26365. to meditate upon the sin of idleness.%@NL@%
  26366. %@CR:IDLENEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  26367.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  26368.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  26369. %@AS@%                                                                  Idleness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26370. %@NL@%
  26371. %@NL@%
  26372. %@NL@%
  26373. %@1@%%@AS@%Ignorance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26374. %@CR:IGNORANCE       @%%@NL@%
  26375. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ignorance@%%@NL@%
  26376.      Knowledge: %@AB@%Inge%@AE@%%@BO:          167e59@%; %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:          1689d4@%%@NL@%
  26377.      Religion: %@AB@%Marlowe%@AE@%%@BO:          221942@%%@NL@%
  26378.      Thinking: %@AB@%Gray%@AE@%%@BO:          28a8b5@%%@NL@%
  26379.      Youth: %@AB@%Montagu%@AE@%%@BO:          2d1c1f@%%@NL@%
  26380. %@NL@%
  26381. %@2@%Ignorance is the mother of devotion.%@NL@%
  26382. %@CR:IGNORACole      @%%@NL@%
  26383.                                                Dean Henry Cole (1500-1580)%@NL@%
  26384.                                                            English prelate%@NL@%
  26385. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26386. %@NL@%
  26387. %@NL@%
  26388.      %@2@%Where ignorance is bliss,%@NL@%
  26389.      'Tis folly to be wise.%@NL@%
  26390. %@CR:IGNORAGray      @%%@NL@%
  26391.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  26392.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26393. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26394. %@NL@%
  26395. %@NL@%
  26396. %@2@%Ignorance is not innocence, but sin.%@NL@%
  26397. %@CR:IGNORABrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  26398.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  26399.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26400. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26401. %@NL@%
  26402. %@NL@%
  26403. %@2@%Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance%@EH@%
  26404. and conscientious stupidity.%@NL@%
  26405. %@CR:IGNORAKing3     @%%@NL@%
  26406.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  26407.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  26408. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26409. %@NL@%
  26410. %@NL@%
  26411. %@2@%Better be ignorant of a matter than half know it.%@NL@%
  26412. %@CR:IGNORAPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  26413.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  26414.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  26415. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26416. %@NL@%
  26417. %@NL@%
  26418. %@2@%What you don't know would make a great book.%@NL@%
  26419. %@CR:IGNORASmith8    @%%@NL@%
  26420.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  26421.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  26422. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26423. %@NL@%
  26424. %@NL@%
  26425. %@2@%Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.%@NL@%
  26426. %@CR:IGNORARogers3   @%%@NL@%
  26427.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  26428.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  26429. %@AS@%                                                                 Ignorance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26430. %@NL@%
  26431. %@NL@%
  26432. %@NL@%
  26433. %@1@%%@AS@%Illness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26434. %@CR:ILLNESS         @%%@NL@%
  26435. %@2@%%@QR:Illness@%If prolonged it cannot be severe, and if severe, it cannot%@EH@%
  26436. be prolonged.%@NL@%
  26437. %@CR:ILLNESSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  26438.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  26439.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  26440. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26441. %@NL@%
  26442. %@NL@%
  26443. %@2@%Long illness is the real vampirism: think of living a year%@EH@%
  26444. or two after one is dead, by sucking the life-blood out of a frail
  26445. young creature at one's bedside!%@NL@%
  26446. %@CR:ILLNESHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  26447.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  26448.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  26449. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26450. %@NL@%
  26451. %@NL@%
  26452. %@2@%We are so fond of one another, because our ailments are the%@EH@%
  26453. same.%@NL@%
  26454. %@CR:ILLNESSwift     @%%@NL@%
  26455.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  26456.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  26457. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26458. %@NL@%
  26459. %@NL@%
  26460. %@2@%All interest in disease and death is only another expression%@EH@%
  26461. of interest in life.%@NL@%
  26462. %@CR:ILLNESMann      @%%@NL@%
  26463.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  26464.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  26465. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26466. %@NL@%
  26467. %@NL@%
  26468. %@2@%Illness is the doctor to whom we pay most heed; to kindness,%@EH@%
  26469. to knowledge, we make promise only; pain we obey.%@NL@%
  26470. %@CR:ILLNESProust    @%%@NL@%
  26471.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  26472.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  26473. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26474. %@NL@%
  26475. %@NL@%
  26476. %@2@%I have Bright's disease and he has mine.%@NL@%
  26477. %@CR:ILLNESPerelman  @%%@NL@%
  26478.                                                 S. J. Perelman (1904-1979)%@NL@%
  26479.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  26480. %@AS@%                                                                   Illness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26481. %@NL@%
  26482. %@NL@%
  26483. %@NL@%
  26484. %@1@%%@AS@%Illusions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26485. %@CR:ILLUSIONS       @%%@NL@%
  26486. %@2@%%@QR:Illusions@%An era can be said to end when its basic illusions are exhausted.%@NL@%
  26487. %@CR:ILLUSIMiller1   @%%@NL@%
  26488.                                                    Arthur Miller (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  26489.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  26490. %@AS@%                                                                 Illusions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26491. %@NL@%
  26492. %@NL@%
  26493. %@2@%It is respectable to have no illusions - and safe - and%@EH@%
  26494. profitable, and dull.%@NL@%
  26495. %@CR:ILLUSIConrad    @%%@NL@%
  26496.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  26497.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  26498. %@AS@%                                                                 Illusions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26499. %@NL@%
  26500. %@NL@%
  26501. %@2@%There are three things which every man thinks he can do - namely,%@EH@%
  26502. drive a gig, edit a newspaper, and farm a small property.%@NL@%
  26503. %@CR:ILLUSISmith8    @%%@NL@%
  26504.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  26505.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  26506. %@AS@%                                                                 Illusions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26507. %@NL@%
  26508. %@NL@%
  26509. %@2@%We must select the illusion which appeals to our temperament,%@EH@%
  26510. and embrace it with passion if we want to be happy.%@NL@%
  26511. %@CR:ILLUSIConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  26512.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  26513.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  26514. %@AS@%                                                                 Illusions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26515. %@NL@%
  26516. %@NL@%
  26517. %@NL@%
  26518. %@1@%%@AS@%Illusions: of Grandeur%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26519. %@CR:OFGRANDEUR      @%%@NL@%
  26520. %@2@%%@QR:Illusions: of Grandeur@%I recoil, overcome with the glory of my rosy hue and the knowledge%@EH@%
  26521. that I, a mere cock, have made the sun rise.%@NL@%
  26522. %@CR:OFGRANRostand1  @%%@NL@%
  26523.                                                 Edmond Rostand (1868-1918)%@NL@%
  26524.                                                    French poet, playwright%@NL@%
  26525. %@AS@%                                                    Illusions: of Grandeur%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26526. %@NL@%
  26527. %@NL@%
  26528. %@2@%Some people think that Davis has a God complex, but this is%@EH@%
  26529. absurd. On the seventh day, %@AI@%he%@AE@% works.%@NL@%
  26530. %@CR:OFGRANSchapp    @%%@NL@%
  26531.                                                      Dick Schapp (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  26532.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  26533.                                                   of of Sammy Davis Junior%@NL@%
  26534. %@AS@%                                                    Illusions: of Grandeur%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26535. %@NL@%
  26536. %@NL@%
  26537. %@2@%He never wrote a letter or a message wherein he did not speak%@EH@%
  26538. of God as if the Creator was waiting to see him in the lobby.%@NL@%
  26539. %@CR:OFGRANHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  26540.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  26541.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  26542.                                                       of Kaiser Wilhelm II%@NL@%
  26543. %@AS@%                                                    Illusions: of Grandeur%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26544. %@NL@%
  26545. %@NL@%
  26546. %@NL@%
  26547. %@1@%%@AS@%Imagination%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26548. %@CR:IMAGINATION     @%%@NL@%
  26549. %@2@%See:%@QR:Imagination@%%@NL@%
  26550.      Facts: %@AB@%Marquis de Vauvenargues%@AE@%%@BO:           dcb54@%%@NL@%
  26551.      Poets: %@AB@%Macaulay%@AE@%%@BO:          1e6a63@%%@NL@%
  26552. %@NL@%
  26553.      %@2@%Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard%@NL@%
  26554.      Are sweeter.%@NL@%
  26555. %@CR:IMAGINKeats     @%%@NL@%
  26556.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  26557.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26558. %@AS@%                                                               Imagination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26559. %@NL@%
  26560. %@NL@%
  26561. %@2@%Imagination is the eye of the soul.%@NL@%
  26562. %@CR:IMAGINJoubert   @%%@NL@%
  26563.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  26564.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  26565. %@AS@%                                                               Imagination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26566. %@NL@%
  26567. %@NL@%
  26568. %@2@%One's real life is so often the life that one does not lead.%@NL@%
  26569. %@CR:IMAGINWilde     @%%@NL@%
  26570.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  26571.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  26572. %@AS@%                                                               Imagination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26573. %@NL@%
  26574. %@NL@%
  26575. %@2@%[Man] does not see the real world. The real world is hidden%@EH@%
  26576. from him by the wall of imagination.%@NL@%
  26577. %@CR:IMAGINGurdjieff @%%@NL@%
  26578.                                               George Gurdjieff (1874-1949)%@NL@%
  26579.                                                     Russian mystic, author%@NL@%
  26580. %@AS@%                                                               Imagination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26581. %@NL@%
  26582. %@NL@%
  26583. %@2@%You can't depend on your judgment when your imagination is%@EH@%
  26584. out of focus.%@NL@%
  26585. %@CR:IMAGINKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  26586.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  26587.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  26588. %@AS@%                                                               Imagination%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26589. %@NL@%
  26590. %@NL@%
  26591. %@NL@%
  26592. %@1@%%@AS@%Imitation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26593. %@CR:IMITATION       @%%@NL@%
  26594. %@2@%%@QR:Imitation@%A man never knows what a fool he is until he hears himself%@EH@%
  26595. imitated by one.%@NL@%
  26596. %@CR:IMITATBeerbohmTr@%%@NL@%
  26597.                                      Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1853-1917)%@NL@%
  26598.                                                      English actor-manager%@NL@%
  26599. %@AS@%                                                                 Imitation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26600. %@NL@%
  26601. %@NL@%
  26602. %@2@%The only good copies are those which make us see the absurdity%@EH@%
  26603. of bad originals.%@NL@%
  26604. %@CR:IMITATLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  26605.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  26606.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  26607. %@AS@%                                                                 Imitation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26608. %@NL@%
  26609. %@NL@%
  26610. %@2@%When people are free to do as they please, they usually imitate%@EH@%
  26611. each other.%@NL@%
  26612. %@CR:IMITATHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  26613.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  26614.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  26615. %@AS@%                                                                 Imitation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26616. %@NL@%
  26617. %@NL@%
  26618. %@2@%Almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of%@EH@%
  26619. those whom we cannot resemble.%@NL@%
  26620. %@CR:IMITATJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  26621.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  26622.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  26623. %@AS@%                                                                 Imitation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26624. %@NL@%
  26625. %@NL@%
  26626. %@2@%To do exactly the opposite is also a form of imitation.%@NL@%
  26627. %@CR:IMITATLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  26628.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  26629.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  26630. %@AS@%                                                                 Imitation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26631. %@NL@%
  26632. %@NL@%
  26633. %@NL@%
  26634. %@1@%%@AS@%Immortality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26635. %@CR:IMMORTALITY     @%%@NL@%
  26636. %@2@%See:%@QR:Immortality@%%@NL@%
  26637.      The Church: %@AB@%Robinson%@AE@%%@BO:           68409@%%@NL@%
  26638.      Death: %@AB@%Saint Paul%@AE@%%@BO:           98b3f@%%@NL@%
  26639.      Sundays: %@AB@%Ertz%@AE@%%@BO:          276ef2@%%@NL@%
  26640. %@NL@%
  26641. %@2@%He had decided to live for ever or die in the attempt.%@NL@%
  26642. %@CR:IMMORTHeller    @%%@NL@%
  26643.                                                    Joseph Heller (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  26644.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  26645. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26646. %@NL@%
  26647. %@NL@%
  26648. %@2@%The average man, who does not know what to do with his life,%@EH@%
  26649. wants another one which shall last forever.%@NL@%
  26650. %@CR:IMMORTFrance    @%%@NL@%
  26651.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  26652.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  26653. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26654. %@NL@%
  26655. %@NL@%
  26656. %@2@%What man is capable of the insane self-conceit of believing%@EH@%
  26657. that an eternity of himself would be tolerable even to himself?%@NL@%
  26658. %@CR:IMMORTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  26659.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  26660.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  26661. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26662. %@NL@%
  26663. %@NL@%
  26664. %@2@%The idea of immortality  . . .  will continue  . . .  as long as%@EH@%
  26665. love kisses the lips of death. It is the rainbow - Hope, shining
  26666. upon the tears of grief.%@NL@%
  26667. %@CR:IMMORTIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  26668.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  26669.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  26670. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26671. %@NL@%
  26672. %@NL@%
  26673. %@2@%Our very life depends on our knowing whether the soul is mortal%@EH@%
  26674. or immortal.%@NL@%
  26675. %@CR:IMMORTPascal    @%%@NL@%
  26676.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  26677.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  26678. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26679. %@NL@%
  26680. %@NL@%
  26681. %@2@%I don't want to achieve immortality through my work  . . .  I%@EH@%
  26682. want to achieve it through not dying.%@NL@%
  26683. %@CR:IMMORTAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  26684.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  26685.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  26686. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26687. %@NL@%
  26688. %@NL@%
  26689. %@2@%To himself everyone is an immortal; he may know that he going%@EH@%
  26690. to die, but he can never know that he is dead.%@NL@%
  26691. %@CR:IMMORTButler4   @%%@NL@%
  26692.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  26693.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  26694. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26695. %@NL@%
  26696. %@NL@%
  26697. %@2@%If you wish to live forever you must be wicked enough to be%@EH@%
  26698. irretrievably damned; in hell alone do people retain their sinful
  26699. nature: that is to say, their individuality.%@NL@%
  26700. %@CR:IMMORTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  26701.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  26702.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  26703. %@AS@%                                                               Immortality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26704. %@NL@%
  26705. %@NL@%
  26706. %@NL@%
  26707. %@1@%%@AS@%Impotence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26708. %@CR:IMPOTENCE       @%%@NL@%
  26709. %@2@%See:%@QR:Impotence@%%@NL@%
  26710.      Seduction: %@AB@%Grant%@AE@%%@BO:          2431f7@%%@NL@%
  26711. %@NL@%
  26712.      %@2@%Thou treacherous, base deserter of my flame,%@NL@%
  26713.      False to my passion, fatal to my fame,%@NL@%
  26714.      Through what mistaken magic dost thou prove%@NL@%
  26715.      So true to lewdness, so untrue to love?%@NL@%
  26716. %@CR:IMPOTEWilmot    @%%@NL@%
  26717.                                 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680)%@NL@%
  26718.                                                     English courtier, poet%@NL@%
  26719. %@AS@%                                                                 Impotence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26720. %@NL@%
  26721. %@NL@%
  26722. %@NL@%
  26723. %@1@%%@AS@%Inconsistency%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26724. %@CR:INCONSISTENCY   @%%@NL@%
  26725. %@2@%See:%@QR:Inconsistency@%%@NL@%
  26726.      Opinion: %@AB@%Alther%@AE@%%@BO:          1c53a0@%%@NL@%
  26727. %@NL@%
  26728.      %@2@%Do I contradict myself?%@NL@%
  26729.      Very well then I contradict myself,%@NL@%
  26730.      (I am large, I contain multitudes).%@NL@%
  26731. %@CR:INCONSWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  26732.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  26733.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  26734. %@AS@%                                                             Inconsistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26735. %@NL@%
  26736. %@NL@%
  26737. %@2@%Like the British Constitution; she owes her success in practice%@EH@%
  26738. to her inconsistencies in principle.%@NL@%
  26739. %@CR:INCONSHardy     @%%@NL@%
  26740.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  26741.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  26742. %@AS@%                                                             Inconsistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26743. %@NL@%
  26744. %@NL@%
  26745. %@2@%People who honestly mean to be true really contradict themselves%@EH@%
  26746. much more rarely than those who try to be "consistent."%@NL@%
  26747. %@CR:INCONSHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  26748.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  26749.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  26750. %@AS@%                                                             Inconsistency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26751. %@NL@%
  26752. %@NL@%
  26753. %@NL@%
  26754. %@1@%%@AS@%Indecision%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26755. %@CR:INDECISION      @%%@NL@%
  26756. %@2@%%@QR:Indecision@%How long halt ye between two opinions?%@NL@%
  26757. %@CR:INDECIBibleKings@%%@NL@%
  26758.                                                               Bible, Kings%@NL@%
  26759. %@AS@%                                                                Indecision%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26760. %@NL@%
  26761. %@NL@%
  26762.      %@2@%Neither have they hearts to stay,%@NL@%
  26763.      Nor wit enough to run away.%@NL@%
  26764. %@CR:INDECIButler3   @%%@NL@%
  26765.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  26766.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26767. %@AS@%                                                                Indecision%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26768. %@NL@%
  26769. %@NL@%
  26770. %@2@%We know what happens to people who stay in the middle of the%@EH@%
  26771. road. They get run over.%@NL@%
  26772. %@CR:INDECIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  26773.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  26774.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  26775. %@AS@%                                                                Indecision%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26776. %@NL@%
  26777. %@NL@%
  26778. %@2@%There is no more miserable human being than one in whom nothing%@EH@%
  26779. is habitual but indecision.%@NL@%
  26780. %@CR:INDECIJames4    @%%@NL@%
  26781.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  26782.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  26783. %@AS@%                                                                Indecision%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26784. %@NL@%
  26785. %@NL@%
  26786. %@2@%He who hesitates is sometimes saved.%@NL@%
  26787. %@CR:INDECIThurber   @%%@NL@%
  26788.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  26789.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  26790. %@AS@%                                                                Indecision%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26791. %@NL@%
  26792. %@NL@%
  26793. %@NL@%
  26794. %@1@%%@AS@%Independence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26795. %@CR:INDEPENDENCE    @%%@NL@%
  26796. %@2@%See:%@QR:Independence@%%@NL@%
  26797.      Poverty: %@AB@%Cobbett%@AE@%%@BO:          1f6728@%%@NL@%
  26798. %@NL@%
  26799. %@2@%Independence I have long considered the grand blessing of life,%@EH@%
  26800. the basis of every virtue - and independence I will ever secure
  26801. by contracting my wants, though I were to live on a barren heath.%@NL@%
  26802. %@CR:INDEPEWollstonec@%%@NL@%
  26803.                                            Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)%@NL@%
  26804.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  26805. %@AS@%                                                              Independence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26806. %@NL@%
  26807. %@NL@%
  26808. %@2@%It is very easy for rich people to preach the virtues of self-reliance%@EH@%
  26809. to the poor. It is also very foolish, because, as a matter of fact,
  26810. the wealthy, so far from being self-reliant, are dependent on
  26811. the constant attention of scores, and sometimes even hundreds,
  26812. of persons who are employed in waiting on them and ministering
  26813. to their wants.%@NL@%
  26814. %@CR:INDEPEChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  26815.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  26816.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  26817. %@AS@%                                                              Independence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26818. %@NL@%
  26819. %@NL@%
  26820. %@2@%The man who goes alone can start today; but he who travels%@EH@%
  26821. with another must wait till that other is ready.%@NL@%
  26822. %@CR:INDEPEThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  26823.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  26824.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  26825. %@AS@%                                                              Independence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26826. %@NL@%
  26827. %@NL@%
  26828. %@2@%It's the man who dares to take, who is independent, not he%@EH@%
  26829. who gives.%@NL@%
  26830. %@CR:INDEPELawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  26831.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  26832.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  26833. %@AS@%                                                              Independence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26834. %@NL@%
  26835. %@NL@%
  26836. %@NL@%
  26837. %@1@%%@AS@%Indifference%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26838. %@CR:INDIFFERENCE    @%%@NL@%
  26839. %@2@%See:%@QR:Indifference@%%@NL@%
  26840.      %@AB@%Apathy%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           2286a@%%@NL@%
  26841. %@NL@%
  26842. %@2@%I regard you with an indifference closely bordering on aversion.%@NL@%
  26843. %@CR:INDIFFStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  26844.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  26845.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  26846. %@AS@%                                                              Indifference%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26847. %@NL@%
  26848. %@NL@%
  26849. %@2@%The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them,%@EH@%
  26850. but to be indifferent to them; that's the essence of humanity.%@NL@%
  26851. %@CR:INDIFFShaw      @%%@NL@%
  26852.                                             Anderson, %@AI@%The Devil's Disciple%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26853.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  26854.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  26855. %@AS@%                                                              Indifference%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26856. %@NL@%
  26857. %@NL@%
  26858. %@2@%Nothing is more conducive to peace of mind than not having%@EH@%
  26859. any opinion at all.%@NL@%
  26860. %@CR:INDIFFLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  26861.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  26862.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  26863. %@AS@%                                                              Indifference%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26864. %@NL@%
  26865. %@NL@%
  26866. %@2@%Lukewarmness I account a sin as great in love as in religion.%@NL@%
  26867. %@CR:INDIFFCowley    @%%@NL@%
  26868.                                                 Abraham Cowley (1618-1667)%@NL@%
  26869.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  26870. %@AS@%                                                              Indifference%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26871. %@NL@%
  26872. %@NL@%
  26873. %@NL@%
  26874. %@1@%%@AS@%Individuality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26875. %@CR:INDIVIDUALITY   @%%@NL@%
  26876. %@2@%See:%@QR:Individuality@%%@NL@%
  26877.      Immortality: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1483e8@%%@NL@%
  26878. %@NL@%
  26879. %@2@%Comrades! We must abolish the cult of the individual decisively,%@EH@%
  26880. once and for all.%@NL@%
  26881. %@CR:INDIVIKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  26882.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  26883.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  26884. %@AS@%                                                             Individuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26885. %@NL@%
  26886. %@NL@%
  26887. %@2@%%@AI@%Why runners make lousy communists.%@AE@% In a word, %@AI@%individuality.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  26888. It's the one characteristic all runners, as different as they are,
  26889. seem to share  . . .  Stick with it. Push yourself. Keep running.
  26890. And you'll never lose that wonderful sense of individuality you
  26891. now enjoy. Right, comrade?%@NL@%
  26892. %@CR:INDIVIADVERTISEM@%%@NL@%
  26893.   advertisement for running shoes at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles%@NL@%
  26894. %@AS@%                                                             Individuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26895. %@NL@%
  26896. %@NL@%
  26897. %@2@%No member of a crew is praised for the rugged individuality%@EH@%
  26898. of his rowing.%@NL@%
  26899. %@CR:INDIVIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  26900.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  26901.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  26902. %@AS@%                                                             Individuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26903. %@NL@%
  26904. %@NL@%
  26905. %@2@%When God decides to destroy a man in the struggle of life He%@EH@%
  26906. first cultivates his individuality.%@NL@%
  26907. %@CR:INDIVIIbsen     @%%@NL@%
  26908.                                                   Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)%@NL@%
  26909.                                                        Norwegian dramatist%@NL@%
  26910. %@AS@%                                                             Individuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26911. %@NL@%
  26912. %@NL@%
  26913. %@2@%Resistance to the organized mass can be effected only by the%@EH@%
  26914. man who is as well organized in his individuality as the mass itself.%@NL@%
  26915. %@CR:INDIVIJung      @%%@NL@%
  26916.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  26917.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  26918. %@AS@%                                                             Individuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26919. %@NL@%
  26920. %@NL@%
  26921. %@NL@%
  26922. %@1@%%@AS@%Inequality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26923. %@CR:INEQUALITY      @%%@NL@%
  26924. %@2@%See:%@QR:Inequality@%%@NL@%
  26925.      %@AB@%Class%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           6fd27@%%@NL@%
  26926.      Education: %@AB@%Schelling%@AE@%%@BO:           c22eb@%%@NL@%
  26927.      Self-confidence: %@AB@%Woolf%@AE@%%@BO:          24478d@%%@NL@%
  26928. %@NL@%
  26929.      %@2@%When Adam delved and Eve span,%@NL@%
  26930.      Who was then the gentleman?%@NL@%
  26931. %@CR:INEQUABall      @%%@NL@%
  26932.                                                 John Ball (d. hanged 1381)%@NL@%
  26933.                                                   English priest, agitator%@NL@%
  26934. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26935. %@NL@%
  26936. %@NL@%
  26937. %@2@%I never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into%@EH@%
  26938. the world, ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready
  26939. saddled and bridled to be ridden.%@NL@%
  26940. %@CR:INEQUARumbold   @%%@NL@%
  26941.                                                Richard Rumbold (1622-1685)%@NL@%
  26942.                                               English soldier, conspirator%@NL@%
  26943. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26944. %@NL@%
  26945. %@NL@%
  26946.      %@2@%The rich man in his castle,%@NL@%
  26947.      The poor man at his gate,%@NL@%
  26948.      God made them, high or lowly,%@NL@%
  26949.      And order'd their estate.%@NL@%
  26950. %@CR:INEQUAAlexander @%%@NL@%
  26951.                                             Cecil F. Alexander (1818-1895)%@NL@%
  26952.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  26953. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26954. %@NL@%
  26955. %@NL@%
  26956. %@2@%If human equality is to be forever averted - if the High,%@EH@%
  26957. as we have called them, are to keep their places permanently - then
  26958. the prevailing mental condition must be controlled insanity.%@NL@%
  26959. %@CR:INEQUAOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  26960.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  26961.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  26962. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26963. %@NL@%
  26964. %@NL@%
  26965. %@2@%The true pleasure of life is to live with your inferiors.%@NL@%
  26966. %@CR:INEQUAThackeray @%%@NL@%
  26967.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  26968.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  26969. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26970. %@NL@%
  26971. %@NL@%
  26972. %@2@%There is always inequality in life. Some men are killed in%@EH@%
  26973. a war and some men are wounded and some men never leave the country.
  26974. Life is unfair.%@NL@%
  26975. %@CR:INEQUAKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  26976.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  26977.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  26978. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26979. %@NL@%
  26980. %@NL@%
  26981. %@2@%There are only two families in the world, as a grandmother%@EH@%
  26982. of mine used to say, the haves and the have-nots.%@NL@%
  26983. %@CR:INEQUACervantes @%%@NL@%
  26984.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  26985.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  26986. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26987. %@NL@%
  26988. %@NL@%
  26989. %@2@%We need inequality in order to eliminate poverty.%@NL@%
  26990. %@CR:INEQUAJoseph    @%%@NL@%
  26991.                                                 Sir Keith Joseph (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  26992.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  26993. %@AS@%                                                                Inequality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  26994. %@NL@%
  26995. %@NL@%
  26996. %@NL@%
  26997. %@1@%%@AS@%Inertia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  26998. %@CR:INERTIA         @%%@NL@%
  26999. %@2@%%@QR:Inertia@%Fixed like a plant on his peculiar spot,%@NL@%
  27000.      To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot.%@NL@%
  27001. %@CR:INERTIPope      @%%@NL@%
  27002.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  27003.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  27004. %@AS@%                                                                   Inertia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27005. %@NL@%
  27006. %@NL@%
  27007. %@2@%When a man hasn't a good reason for doing a thing, he has a%@EH@%
  27008. good reason for letting it alone.%@NL@%
  27009. %@CR:INERTIScott4    @%%@NL@%
  27010.                                               Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)%@NL@%
  27011.                                                    Scottish novelist, poet%@NL@%
  27012. %@AS@%                                                                   Inertia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27013. %@NL@%
  27014. %@NL@%
  27015. %@2@%Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it's awful.%@NL@%
  27016. %@CR:INERTIBeckett   @%%@NL@%
  27017.                                                 Samuel Beckett (1906-1989)%@NL@%
  27018.                                                  Irish dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  27019. %@AS@%                                                                   Inertia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27020. %@NL@%
  27021. %@NL@%
  27022. %@NL@%
  27023. %@1@%%@AS@%Infallibility%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27024. %@CR:INFALLIBILITY   @%%@NL@%
  27025. %@2@%See:%@QR:Infallibility@%%@NL@%
  27026.      The Church: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           68634@%%@NL@%
  27027.      Church of England: %@AB@%Steele%@AE@%%@BO:           69141@%%@NL@%
  27028.      Complacency: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:           785d2@%%@NL@%
  27029. %@NL@%
  27030. %@2@%I may have my faults, but being wrong ain't one of them.%@NL@%
  27031. %@CR:INFALLHoffa     @%%@NL@%
  27032.                                                    Jimmy Hoffa (1913-1983)%@NL@%
  27033.                                                    American trade unionist%@NL@%
  27034. %@AS@%                                                             Infallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27035. %@NL@%
  27036. %@NL@%
  27037. %@2@%Even the youngest among us is not infallible.%@NL@%
  27038. %@CR:INFALLJowett    @%%@NL@%
  27039.                                                Benjamin Jowett (1817-1893)%@NL@%
  27040.                                                  English scholar, essayist%@NL@%
  27041. %@AS@%                                                             Infallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27042. %@NL@%
  27043. %@NL@%
  27044. %@2@%The famous Dogma of Papal Infallibility is by far the most%@EH@%
  27045. modest pretension of the kind in existence. Compared with our infallible
  27046. democracies, our infallible medical councils, our infallible astronomers,
  27047. our infallible judges, and our infallible parliaments the Pope
  27048. is on his knees in the dust confessing his ignorance before the
  27049. throne of God, asking only that as to certain historical matters
  27050. on which he has clearly more sources of information open to him
  27051. than anyone else his decision shall be taken as final.%@NL@%
  27052. %@CR:INFALLShaw      @%%@NL@%
  27053.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  27054.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  27055. %@AS@%                                                             Infallibility%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27056. %@NL@%
  27057. %@NL@%
  27058. %@NL@%
  27059. %@1@%%@AS@%Inflation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27060. %@CR:INFLATION       @%%@NL@%
  27061. %@2@%See:%@QR:Inflation@%%@NL@%
  27062.      Recession: %@AB@%Thatcher%@AE@%%@BO:          21e238@%%@NL@%
  27063. %@NL@%
  27064. %@2@%The best way to destroy the capitalist system is to debauch%@EH@%
  27065. the currency. By a continuing process of inflation governments
  27066. can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the
  27067. wealth of their citizens.%@NL@%
  27068. %@CR:INFLATKeynes    @%%@NL@%
  27069.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  27070.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  27071. %@AS@%                                                                 Inflation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27072. %@NL@%
  27073. %@NL@%
  27074. %@2@%One of the principal troubles about inflation is that the public%@EH@%
  27075. likes it.%@NL@%
  27076. %@CR:INFLATWoolton   @%%@NL@%
  27077.                                                   Lord Woolton (1883-1964)%@NL@%
  27078.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  27079. %@AS@%                                                                 Inflation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27080. %@NL@%
  27081. %@NL@%
  27082. %@2@%I haven't heard of anybody who wants to stop living on account%@EH@%
  27083. of the cost.%@NL@%
  27084. %@CR:INFLATHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  27085.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  27086.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  27087. %@AS@%                                                                 Inflation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27088. %@NL@%
  27089. %@NL@%
  27090. %@NL@%
  27091. %@1@%%@AS@%Ingratiation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27092. %@CR:INGRATIATION    @%%@NL@%
  27093. %@2@%See:%@QR:Ingratiation@%%@NL@%
  27094.      Failure: %@AB@%Swope%@AE@%%@BO:           dd91c@%%@NL@%
  27095.      Flattery: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:           f174d@%%@NL@%
  27096.      Insults: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          151dec@%%@NL@%
  27097. %@NL@%
  27098. %@2@%He makes people pleased with him by making them first pleased%@EH@%
  27099. with themselves.%@NL@%
  27100. %@CR:INGRATChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  27101.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  27102.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  27103. %@AS@%                                                              Ingratiation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27104. %@NL@%
  27105. %@NL@%
  27106. %@2@%Take here the grand secret - if not of pleasing all, yet%@EH@%
  27107. of displeasing none - court mediocrity, avoid originality, and
  27108. sacrifice to fashion.%@NL@%
  27109. %@CR:INGRATLavater   @%%@NL@%
  27110.                                          Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801)%@NL@%
  27111.                                                         Swiss divine, poet%@NL@%
  27112. %@AS@%                                                              Ingratiation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27113. %@NL@%
  27114. %@NL@%
  27115. %@2@%You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far%@EH@%
  27116. backwards.%@NL@%
  27117. %@CR:INGRATThurber   @%%@NL@%
  27118.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  27119.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  27120. %@AS@%                                                              Ingratiation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27121. %@NL@%
  27122. %@NL@%
  27123. %@NL@%
  27124. %@1@%%@AS@%Inheritance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27125. %@CR:INHERITANCE     @%%@NL@%
  27126. %@2@%%@QR:Inheritance@%My sword I give to him that shall succeed me in my pilgrimage,%@EH@%
  27127. and my courage and skill to him that can get it.%@NL@%
  27128. %@CR:INHERIBunyan    @%%@NL@%
  27129.                                                    John Bunyan (1628-1688)%@NL@%
  27130.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27131. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27132. %@NL@%
  27133. %@NL@%
  27134. %@2@%It's going to be fun to watch and see how long the meek can%@EH@%
  27135. keep the earth after they inherit it.%@NL@%
  27136. %@CR:INHERIHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  27137.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  27138.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  27139. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27140. %@NL@%
  27141. %@NL@%
  27142. %@2@%He's a fool that makes his doctor his heir.%@NL@%
  27143. %@CR:INHERIFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  27144.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  27145.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  27146. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27147. %@NL@%
  27148. %@NL@%
  27149. %@2@%The weeping of an heir is laughter in disguise.%@NL@%
  27150. %@CR:INHERIMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  27151.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  27152.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  27153. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27154. %@NL@%
  27155. %@NL@%
  27156. %@2@%Never say you know a man until you have divided an inheritance%@EH@%
  27157. with him.%@NL@%
  27158. %@CR:INHERILavater   @%%@NL@%
  27159.                                          Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801)%@NL@%
  27160.                                                         Swiss divine, poet%@NL@%
  27161. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27162. %@NL@%
  27163. %@NL@%
  27164. %@2@%All heiresses are beautiful.%@NL@%
  27165. %@CR:INHERIDryden    @%%@NL@%
  27166.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  27167.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  27168. %@AS@%                                                               Inheritance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27169. %@NL@%
  27170. %@NL@%
  27171. %@NL@%
  27172. %@1@%%@AS@%Innocence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27173. %@CR:INNOCENCE       @%%@NL@%
  27174. %@2@%%@QR:Innocence@%Every harlot was a virgin once.%@NL@%
  27175. %@CR:INNOCEBlake     @%%@NL@%
  27176.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  27177.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  27178. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27179. %@NL@%
  27180. %@NL@%
  27181. %@2@%I used to be Snow White - but I drifted.%@NL@%
  27182. %@CR:INNOCEWest1     @%%@NL@%
  27183.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  27184.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  27185. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27186. %@NL@%
  27187. %@NL@%
  27188. %@2@%Innocence ends when one is stripped of the delusion that one%@EH@%
  27189. likes oneself.%@NL@%
  27190. %@CR:INNOCEDidion    @%%@NL@%
  27191.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  27192.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  27193. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27194. %@NL@%
  27195. %@NL@%
  27196. %@2@%Innocence is like a dumb leper who has lost his bell, wandering%@EH@%
  27197. the world, meaning no harm.%@NL@%
  27198. %@CR:INNOCEGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  27199.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  27200.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  27201. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27202. %@NL@%
  27203. %@NL@%
  27204. %@2@%Only the old are innocent. That is what the Victorians understood,%@EH@%
  27205. and the Christians. Original sin is the property of the young.
  27206. The old grow beyond corruption very quickly.%@NL@%
  27207. %@CR:INNOCEBradbury  @%%@NL@%
  27208.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  27209.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  27210. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27211. %@NL@%
  27212. %@NL@%
  27213. %@2@%Men do not suspect faults which they do not commit.%@NL@%
  27214. %@CR:INNOCEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  27215.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  27216.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  27217. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27218. %@NL@%
  27219. %@NL@%
  27220. %@2@%He was a simple soul who had not been introduced to his own%@EH@%
  27221. subconscious.%@NL@%
  27222. %@CR:INNOCEDeeping   @%%@NL@%
  27223.                                                Warwick Deeping (1877-1950)%@NL@%
  27224.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  27225. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27226. %@NL@%
  27227. %@NL@%
  27228. %@2@%Look for me in the nurseries of heaven.%@NL@%
  27229. %@CR:INNOCEThompson1 @%%@NL@%
  27230.                                               Francis Thompson (1859-1907)%@NL@%
  27231.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  27232. %@AS@%                                                                 Innocence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27233. %@NL@%
  27234. %@NL@%
  27235. %@NL@%
  27236. %@1@%%@AS@%Innovation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27237. %@CR:INNOVATION      @%%@NL@%
  27238. %@2@%See:%@QR:Innovation@%%@NL@%
  27239.      Originality: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          1c8bea@%%@NL@%
  27240. %@NL@%
  27241. %@2@%He who anticipates his century is generally persecuted when%@EH@%
  27242. living, and always pilfered when dead.%@NL@%
  27243. %@CR:INNOVADisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  27244.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  27245.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  27246. %@AS@%                                                                Innovation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27247. %@NL@%
  27248. %@NL@%
  27249. %@2@%A "new thinker," when studied closely, is merely a man who%@EH@%
  27250. does not know what other people have thought.%@NL@%
  27251. %@CR:INNOVAColby     @%%@NL@%
  27252.                                                    F. M. Colby (1865-1925)%@NL@%
  27253.                                                  American editor, essayist%@NL@%
  27254. %@AS@%                                                                Innovation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27255. %@NL@%
  27256. %@NL@%
  27257. %@2@%New and stirring ideas are belittled, because if they are not%@EH@%
  27258. belittled the humiliating question arises, "Why then are you not
  27259. taking part in them?"%@NL@%
  27260. %@CR:INNOVAWells     @%%@NL@%
  27261.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  27262.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  27263. %@AS@%                                                                Innovation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27264. %@NL@%
  27265. %@NL@%
  27266. %@2@%The new always carries with it the sense of violation, of sacrilege.%@EH@%
  27267. What is dead is sacred; what is new, that is, %@AI@%different,%@AE@% is evil,
  27268. dangerous, or subversive.%@NL@%
  27269. %@CR:INNOVAMiller2   @%%@NL@%
  27270.                                                   Henry Miller (1891-1980)%@NL@%
  27271.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  27272. %@AS@%                                                                Innovation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27273. %@NL@%
  27274. %@NL@%
  27275. %@NL@%
  27276. %@1@%%@AS@%Insignificance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27277. %@CR:INSIGNIFICANCE  @%%@NL@%
  27278. %@2@%See:%@QR:Insignificance@%%@NL@%
  27279.      Life: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          177cfe@%%@NL@%
  27280. %@NL@%
  27281.      %@2@%We are merely the stars' tennis-balls, struck and bandied%@NL@%
  27282.      Which way please them.%@NL@%
  27283. %@CR:INSIGNWebster2  @%%@NL@%
  27284.                                                   John Webster (1580-1625)%@NL@%
  27285.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  27286. %@AS@%                                                            Insignificance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27287. %@NL@%
  27288. %@NL@%
  27289.      %@2@%No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be:%@NL@%
  27290.      Am an attendant Lord, one that will do%@NL@%
  27291.      To swell a progress, start a scene or two, advise the prince.%@NL@%
  27292. %@CR:INSIGNEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  27293.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  27294.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  27295. %@AS@%                                                            Insignificance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27296. %@NL@%
  27297. %@NL@%
  27298.      %@2@%It needs more skill than I can tell%@NL@%
  27299.      To play the second fiddle well.%@NL@%
  27300. %@CR:INSIGNSpurgeon  @%%@NL@%
  27301.                                                 C. H. Spurgeon (1834-1892)%@NL@%
  27302.                                                           English preacher%@NL@%
  27303. %@AS@%                                                            Insignificance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27304. %@NL@%
  27305. %@NL@%
  27306. %@2@%My own idea is that these things are as piffle before the wind.%@NL@%
  27307. %@CR:INSIGNAshford   @%%@NL@%
  27308.                                                  Daisy Ashford (1881-1972)%@NL@%
  27309.                   British writer of %@AB@%The Young Visiters,%@AE@% aged 9%@NL@%
  27310. %@AS@%                                                            Insignificance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27311. %@NL@%
  27312. %@NL@%
  27313. %@2@%There is nothing insignificant.%@NL@%
  27314. %@CR:INSIGNColeridge @%%@NL@%
  27315.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  27316.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  27317. %@AS@%                                                            Insignificance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27318. %@NL@%
  27319. %@NL@%
  27320. %@NL@%
  27321. %@1@%%@AS@%Inspiration%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27322. %@CR:INSPIRATION     @%%@NL@%
  27323. %@2@%See:%@QR:Inspiration@%%@NL@%
  27324.      Passion: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          1cea4d@%%@NL@%
  27325. %@NL@%
  27326. %@2@%Stung by the splendour of a sudden thought.%@NL@%
  27327. %@CR:INSPIRBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  27328.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  27329.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  27330. %@AS@%                                                               Inspiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27331. %@NL@%
  27332. %@NL@%
  27333. %@2@%The inspirations of today are the shams of tomorrow - the%@EH@%
  27334. purpose has departed.%@NL@%
  27335. %@CR:INSPIRHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  27336.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  27337.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  27338. %@AS@%                                                               Inspiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27339. %@NL@%
  27340. %@NL@%
  27341.      %@2@%You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come;%@NL@%
  27342.      Knock as you please, there's nobody at home.%@NL@%
  27343. %@CR:INSPIRPope      @%%@NL@%
  27344.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  27345.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  27346. %@AS@%                                                               Inspiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27347. %@NL@%
  27348. %@NL@%
  27349. %@2@%My sole inspiration is a telephone call from a director.%@NL@%
  27350. %@CR:INSPIRPorter    @%%@NL@%
  27351.                                                    Cole Porter (1893-1964)%@NL@%
  27352.                                                American composer, lyricist%@NL@%
  27353. %@AS@%                                                               Inspiration%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27354. %@NL@%
  27355. %@NL@%
  27356. %@NL@%
  27357. %@1@%%@AS@%Instinct%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27358. %@CR:INSTINCT        @%%@NL@%
  27359. %@2@%See:%@QR:Instinct@%%@NL@%
  27360.      Philosophy: %@AB@%Bradley%@AE@%%@BO:          1d927a@%%@NL@%
  27361. %@NL@%
  27362. %@2@%Be a good animal, true to your animal instincts.%@NL@%
  27363. %@CR:INSTINLawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  27364.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  27365.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27366. %@AS@%                                                                  Instinct%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27367. %@NL@%
  27368. %@NL@%
  27369. %@2@%The natural man has only two primal passions - to get and%@EH@%
  27370. to beget.%@NL@%
  27371. %@CR:INSTINOsler     @%%@NL@%
  27372.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  27373.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  27374. %@AS@%                                                                  Instinct%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27375. %@NL@%
  27376. %@NL@%
  27377. %@2@%%@AI@%Instinct.%@AE@% When the house burns one forgets even lunch. Yes,but%@EH@%
  27378. one eats it later in the ashes.%@NL@%
  27379. %@CR:INSTINNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  27380.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  27381.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  27382. %@AS@%                                                                  Instinct%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27383. %@NL@%
  27384. %@NL@%
  27385. %@2@%Mistrust first impulses, they are always good.%@NL@%
  27386. %@CR:INSTINTalleyrand@%%@NL@%
  27387.                                      Charles, Count Talleyrand (1754-1838)%@NL@%
  27388.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  27389. %@AS@%                                                                  Instinct%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27390. %@NL@%
  27391. %@NL@%
  27392. %@NL@%
  27393. %@1@%%@AS@%Institutions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27394. %@CR:INSTITUTIONS    @%%@NL@%
  27395. %@2@%%@QR:Institutions@%Wherever a man goes, men will pursue him and paw him with their%@EH@%
  27396. dirty institutions, and, if they can, constrain him to belong to
  27397. their desperate oddfellow society.%@NL@%
  27398. %@CR:INSTITThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  27399.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  27400.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  27401. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27402. %@NL@%
  27403. %@NL@%
  27404. %@2@%The whole history of civilization is strewn with creeds and%@EH@%
  27405. institutions which were invaluable at first and deadly afterwards.%@NL@%
  27406. %@CR:INSTITBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  27407.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  27408.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  27409. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27410. %@NL@%
  27411. %@NL@%
  27412. %@2@%An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man.%@NL@%
  27413. %@CR:INSTITEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  27414.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  27415.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  27416. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27417. %@NL@%
  27418. %@NL@%
  27419. %@2@%The more rational an institution is the less it suffers by%@EH@%
  27420. making concessions to others.%@NL@%
  27421. %@CR:INSTITSantayana @%%@NL@%
  27422.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  27423.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  27424. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27425. %@NL@%
  27426. %@NL@%
  27427. %@2@%All establishments die of dignity. They are too proud to think%@EH@%
  27428. themselves ill, and to take a little physic.%@NL@%
  27429. %@CR:INSTITSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  27430.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  27431.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  27432. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27433. %@NL@%
  27434. %@NL@%
  27435. %@2@%Every institution not only carries within it the seeds of its%@EH@%
  27436. own dissolution, but prepares the way for its most hated rival.%@NL@%
  27437. %@CR:INSTITInge      @%%@NL@%
  27438.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  27439.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  27440. %@AS@%                                                              Institutions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27441. %@NL@%
  27442. %@NL@%
  27443. %@NL@%
  27444. %@1@%%@AS@%Insults%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27445. %@CR:INSULTS         @%%@NL@%
  27446. %@2@%See:%@QR:Insults@%%@NL@%
  27447.      %@AB@%Abuse%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            13cd@%%@NL@%
  27448.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Addison%@AE@%%@BO:           10f1f@%%@NL@%
  27449. %@NL@%
  27450. %@2@%An injury is much sooner forgotten than an insult.%@NL@%
  27451. %@CR:INSULTChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  27452.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  27453.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  27454. %@AS@%                                                                   Insults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27455. %@NL@%
  27456. %@NL@%
  27457. %@2@%If I have said something to hurt a man once, I shall not get%@EH@%
  27458. the better of this by saying many things to please him.%@NL@%
  27459. %@CR:INSULTJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  27460.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  27461.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  27462. %@AS@%                                                                   Insults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27463. %@NL@%
  27464. %@NL@%
  27465. %@2@%There are two insults which no human will endure: the assertion%@EH@%
  27466. that he hasn't a sense of humor, and the doubly impertinent assertion
  27467. that he has never known trouble.%@NL@%
  27468. %@CR:INSULTLewis3    @%%@NL@%
  27469.                                                 Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951)%@NL@%
  27470.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  27471. %@AS@%                                                                   Insults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27472. %@NL@%
  27473. %@NL@%
  27474. %@2@%No one can be as calculatedly rude as the British, which amazes%@EH@%
  27475. Americans, who do not understand studied insult and can only offer
  27476. abuse as a substitute.%@NL@%
  27477. %@CR:INSULTGallico   @%%@NL@%
  27478.                                                   Paul Gallico (1897-1976)%@NL@%
  27479.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  27480. %@AS@%                                                                   Insults%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27481. %@NL@%
  27482. %@NL@%
  27483. %@NL@%
  27484. %@1@%%@AS@%Insurance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27485. %@CR:INSURANCE       @%%@NL@%
  27486. %@2@%See:%@QR:Insurance@%%@NL@%
  27487.      Disasters: %@AB@%Gilbert%@AE@%%@BO:           ad591@%%@NL@%
  27488. %@NL@%
  27489. %@2@%What can't be cured must be insured.%@NL@%
  27490. %@CR:INSURAHerford   @%%@NL@%
  27491.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  27492.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  27493. %@AS@%                                                                 Insurance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27494. %@NL@%
  27495. %@NL@%
  27496. %@2@%Insurance. An ingenious modern game of chance in which the%@EH@%
  27497. player is permitted to enjoy the comfortable conviction that he
  27498. is beating the man who keeps the table.%@NL@%
  27499. %@CR:INSURABierce    @%%@NL@%
  27500.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  27501.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  27502. %@AS@%                                                                 Insurance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27503. %@NL@%
  27504. %@NL@%
  27505. %@NL@%
  27506. %@1@%%@AS@%Integrity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27507. %@CR:INTEGRITY       @%%@NL@%
  27508. %@2@%%@QR:Integrity@%A man should be upright, not be kept upright.%@NL@%
  27509. %@CR:INTEGRMarcusAure@%%@NL@%
  27510.                                                  Marcus Aurelius (121-180)%@NL@%
  27511.                                                 Roman emperor, philosopher%@NL@%
  27512. %@AS@%                                                                 Integrity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27513. %@NL@%
  27514. %@NL@%
  27515. %@2@%Few men have virtue to withstand the highest bidder.%@NL@%
  27516. %@CR:INTEGRWashington@%%@NL@%
  27517.                                              George Washington (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  27518.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  27519. %@AS@%                                                                 Integrity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27520. %@NL@%
  27521. %@NL@%
  27522. %@2@%Integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge%@EH@%
  27523. without integrity is dangerous and dreadful.%@NL@%
  27524. %@CR:INTEGRJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  27525.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  27526.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  27527. %@AS@%                                                                 Integrity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27528. %@NL@%
  27529. %@NL@%
  27530. %@NL@%
  27531. %@1@%%@AS@%Intellectuals%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27532. %@CR:INTELLECTUALS   @%%@NL@%
  27533. %@2@%See:%@QR:Intellectuals@%%@NL@%
  27534.      Obesity: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          1c28a5@%%@NL@%
  27535. %@NL@%
  27536. %@2@%The noble temptation to see too much in everything.%@NL@%
  27537. %@CR:INTELLChesterton@%%@NL@%
  27538.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  27539.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27540. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27541. %@NL@%
  27542. %@NL@%
  27543. %@2@%We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has,%@EH@%
  27544. of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.%@NL@%
  27545. %@CR:INTELLEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  27546.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  27547.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  27548. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27549. %@NL@%
  27550. %@NL@%
  27551.      %@2@%And still they gaz'd, and still the wonder grew,%@NL@%
  27552.      That one small head could carry all he knew.%@NL@%
  27553. %@CR:INTELLGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  27554.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  27555.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  27556. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27557. %@NL@%
  27558. %@NL@%
  27559. %@2@%Nothing mattered except states of mind, chiefly our own.%@NL@%
  27560. %@CR:INTELLKeynes    @%%@NL@%
  27561.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  27562.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  27563. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27564. %@NL@%
  27565. %@NL@%
  27566. %@2@%An intellectual is someone whose mind watches itself. I am%@EH@%
  27567. happy to be both halves, the watcher and the watched.%@NL@%
  27568. %@CR:INTELLCamus1    @%%@NL@%
  27569.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  27570.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  27571. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27572. %@NL@%
  27573. %@NL@%
  27574. %@2@%Swollen in head, weak in legs, sharp in tongue but empty in%@EH@%
  27575. belly.%@NL@%
  27576. %@CR:INTELLMaoZedong @%%@NL@%
  27577.                                                     Mao Zedong (1893-1976)%@NL@%
  27578.                                  founder of the People's Republic of China%@NL@%
  27579.                                                           on intellectuals%@NL@%
  27580. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27581. %@NL@%
  27582. %@NL@%
  27583.      %@2@%To the man-in-the-street, who, I'm sorry to say,%@NL@%
  27584.      Is a keen observer of life,%@NL@%
  27585.      The word "Intellectual" suggests straight away%@NL@%
  27586.      A man who's untrue to his wife.%@NL@%
  27587. %@CR:INTELLAuden     @%%@NL@%
  27588.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  27589.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  27590. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27591. %@NL@%
  27592. %@NL@%
  27593. %@2@%An intellectual is a man who doesn't know how to park a bike.%@NL@%
  27594. %@CR:INTELLAgnew     @%%@NL@%
  27595.                                                      Spiro Agnew (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  27596.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  27597. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27598. %@NL@%
  27599. %@NL@%
  27600. %@2@%A highbrow is a person educated beyond his intelligence.%@NL@%
  27601. %@CR:INTELLMatthews  @%%@NL@%
  27602.                                            J. Brander Matthews (1852-1929)%@NL@%
  27603.                                                  American essayist, critic%@NL@%
  27604. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27605. %@NL@%
  27606. %@NL@%
  27607. %@2@%Intellectuals can tell themselves anything, sell themselves%@EH@%
  27608. any bill of goods, which is why they are so often patsies for the
  27609. ruling classes in nineteenth-century France and England, or 
  27610. twentieth-century
  27611. Russia and America.%@NL@%
  27612. %@CR:INTELLHellman   @%%@NL@%
  27613.                                                Lillian Hellman (1907-1984)%@NL@%
  27614.                                                American playwright, author%@NL@%
  27615. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27616. %@NL@%
  27617. %@NL@%
  27618. %@2@%A new word ending in "ism" that no one else knew was for%@EH@%
  27619. him a gift of the gods.%@NL@%
  27620. %@CR:INTELLBaroja    @%%@NL@%
  27621.                                                     Pio Baroja (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  27622.                                                 Spanish novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  27623. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27624. %@NL@%
  27625. %@NL@%
  27626.      %@2@%The good are so harsh to the clever,%@NL@%
  27627.      The clever so rude to the good!%@NL@%
  27628. %@CR:INTELLWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  27629.                                           Elizabeth Wordsworth (1840-1932)%@NL@%
  27630.                                                           English educator%@NL@%
  27631. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27632. %@NL@%
  27633. %@NL@%
  27634. %@2@%Intellectuals are the most intolerant of all people.%@NL@%
  27635. %@CR:INTELLDurcan    @%%@NL@%
  27636.                                                      Paul Durcan (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  27637.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  27638. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27639. %@NL@%
  27640. %@NL@%
  27641. %@2@%For all your answers are great and excellent; and which a man%@EH@%
  27642. can hardly understand.%@NL@%
  27643. %@CR:INTELLApocrypha1@%%@NL@%
  27644.                                                                  Apocrypha%@NL@%
  27645. %@AS@%                                                             Intellectuals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27646. %@NL@%
  27647. %@NL@%
  27648. %@NL@%
  27649. %@1@%%@AS@%Intelligence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27650. %@CR:INTELLIGENCE    @%%@NL@%
  27651. %@2@%See:%@QR:Intelligence@%%@NL@%
  27652.      Humanity: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          13a090@%%@NL@%
  27653.      Opinion: %@AB@%Alther%@AE@%%@BO:          1c53a0@%%@NL@%
  27654.      Self-deception: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          245647@%%@NL@%
  27655. %@NL@%
  27656. %@2@%There is nobody so irritating as somebody with less intelligence%@EH@%
  27657. and more sense than we have.%@NL@%
  27658. %@CR:INTELLHerold    @%%@NL@%
  27659.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  27660.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  27661. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27662. %@NL@%
  27663. %@NL@%
  27664. %@2@%The successful man will see just so much more than his neighbours%@EH@%
  27665. as they will be able to see, too, when it is shown them, but not
  27666. enough to puzzle them.%@NL@%
  27667. %@CR:INTELLButler4   @%%@NL@%
  27668.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  27669.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27670. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27671. %@NL@%
  27672. %@NL@%
  27673. %@2@%The height of cleverness is being able to conceal it.%@NL@%
  27674. %@CR:INTELLLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  27675.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  27676.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  27677. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27678. %@NL@%
  27679. %@NL@%
  27680. %@2@%The third-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking with%@EH@%
  27681. the majority. The second-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking
  27682. with the minority. The first-rate mind is only happy when it is
  27683. thinking.%@NL@%
  27684. %@CR:INTELLMilne     @%%@NL@%
  27685.                                                    A. A. Milne (1882-1956)%@NL@%
  27686.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  27687. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27688. %@NL@%
  27689. %@NL@%
  27690. %@2@%There are three types of intelligent person: the first so intelligent%@EH@%
  27691. that being called very intelligent must seem natural and obvious;
  27692. the second sufficiently intelligent to see that he is being flattered,
  27693. not described; the third so little intelligent that he will believe
  27694. anything.%@NL@%
  27695. %@CR:INTELLFowles    @%%@NL@%
  27696.                                                      John Fowles (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  27697.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  27698. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27699. %@NL@%
  27700. %@NL@%
  27701. %@2@%This intelligence-testing business reminds me of the way they%@EH@%
  27702. used to weigh hogs in Texas. They would get a long plank, put it
  27703. over a cross-bar, and somehow tie the hog on one end of the plank.
  27704. They'd search all around till they found a stone that would balance
  27705. the weight of the hog and they'd put that on the other end of
  27706. the plank. Then they'd guess the weight of the stone.%@NL@%
  27707. %@CR:INTELLDewey     @%%@NL@%
  27708.                                                     John Dewey (1859-1952)%@NL@%
  27709.                                    American teacher, philosopher, reformer%@NL@%
  27710. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27711. %@NL@%
  27712. %@NL@%
  27713. %@2@%Here is a startling alternative which to the English, alone%@EH@%
  27714. among great nations, has not been startling but a matter of course.
  27715. Here is a casual assumption that a choice must be made between
  27716. goodness and intelligence; that stupidity is first cousin to moral
  27717. conduct, and cleverness the first step into mischief; that
  27718. reason and God are not on good terms with each other.%@NL@%
  27719. %@CR:INTELLErskine2  @%%@NL@%
  27720.                                                   John Erskine (1879-1951)%@NL@%
  27721.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  27722. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27723. %@NL@%
  27724. %@NL@%
  27725. %@2@%There may be an optimum level of intelligence and perhaps we%@EH@%
  27726. have already exceeded it. Our brains may be too big - dooming
  27727. us as Triceratops was doomed by his armour.%@NL@%
  27728. %@CR:INTELLClarke1   @%%@NL@%
  27729.                                                 Arthur C. Clarke (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  27730.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  27731. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27732. %@NL@%
  27733. %@NL@%
  27734. %@2@%As far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospels%@EH@%
  27735. in praise of intelligence.%@NL@%
  27736. %@CR:INTELLRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  27737.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  27738.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  27739. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27740. %@NL@%
  27741. %@NL@%
  27742. %@2@%I have finally come to the conclusion that a good reliable%@EH@%
  27743. set of bowels is worth more to a man than any quantity of brains.%@NL@%
  27744. %@CR:INTELLBillings  @%%@NL@%
  27745.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  27746.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  27747. %@AS@%                                                              Intelligence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27748. %@NL@%
  27749. %@NL@%
  27750. %@NL@%
  27751. %@1@%%@AS@%Intentions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27752. %@CR:INTENTIONS      @%%@NL@%
  27753. %@2@%See:%@QR:Intentions@%%@NL@%
  27754.      Dancing: %@AB@%Morley%@AE@%%@BO:           96871@%%@NL@%
  27755.      Good Deeds: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          112aa8@%%@NL@%
  27756.      Motives: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1b27a0@%%@NL@%
  27757. %@NL@%
  27758. %@2@%"Let me get my arms about you," says the bear. "I have not%@EH@%
  27759. the smallest intention of squeezing you."%@NL@%
  27760. %@CR:INTENTSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  27761.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  27762.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  27763. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27764. %@NL@%
  27765. %@NL@%
  27766. %@2@%No one would remember the Good Samaritan if he'd only had good%@EH@%
  27767. intentions - he had money too.%@NL@%
  27768. %@CR:INTENTThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  27769.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  27770.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  27771. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27772. %@NL@%
  27773. %@NL@%
  27774. %@2@%The world is ruled by deeds, not by good intentions, and one%@EH@%
  27775. efficient sinner is worth ten futile saints and martyrs.%@NL@%
  27776. %@CR:INTENTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  27777.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  27778.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  27779. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27780. %@NL@%
  27781. %@NL@%
  27782. %@2@%"He means well" is useless unless he does well.%@NL@%
  27783. %@CR:INTENTPlautus   @%%@NL@%
  27784.                                                       Plautus (254-184 BC)%@NL@%
  27785.                                                           Roman playwright%@NL@%
  27786. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27787. %@NL@%
  27788. %@NL@%
  27789. %@2@%With malice towards none; with charity for all; with firmness%@EH@%
  27790. in the right, as God gives us to see the right - let us strive
  27791. on to finish the work we are in.%@NL@%
  27792. %@CR:INTENTLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  27793.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  27794.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  27795. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27796. %@NL@%
  27797. %@NL@%
  27798. %@2@%Moral of the Work. In war: resolution. In defeat: defiance.%@EH@%
  27799. In victory: magnanimity. In peace: goodwill.%@NL@%
  27800. %@CR:INTENTChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  27801.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  27802.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  27803. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27804. %@NL@%
  27805. %@NL@%
  27806. %@2@%Hell is paved with good intentions, not bad ones. All men mean%@EH@%
  27807. well.%@NL@%
  27808. %@CR:INTENTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  27809.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  27810.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  27811. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27812. %@NL@%
  27813. %@NL@%
  27814. %@2@%Most mistaken people mean well, and all mistaken people mean%@EH@%
  27815. something.%@NL@%
  27816. %@CR:INTENTChesterton@%%@NL@%
  27817.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  27818.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27819. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27820. %@NL@%
  27821. %@NL@%
  27822. %@2@%His designs were strictly honourable, as the phrase is, that%@EH@%
  27823. is to rob a lady of her fortune by way of marriage.%@NL@%
  27824. %@CR:INTENTFielding  @%%@NL@%
  27825.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  27826.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  27827. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27828. %@NL@%
  27829. %@NL@%
  27830. %@2@%Man has his will, - but woman has her way.%@NL@%
  27831. %@CR:INTENTHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  27832.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  27833.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  27834. %@AS@%                                                                Intentions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27835. %@NL@%
  27836. %@NL@%
  27837. %@NL@%
  27838. %@1@%%@AS@%Internationalism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27839. %@CR:INTERNATIONALISM@%%@NL@%
  27840. %@2@%%@QR:Internationalism@%My country is the world, and my religion is to do good.%@NL@%
  27841. %@CR:INTERNPaine     @%%@NL@%
  27842.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  27843.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  27844. %@AS@%                                                          Internationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27845. %@NL@%
  27846. %@NL@%
  27847.      %@2@%A steady patriot of the World alone,%@NL@%
  27848.      The friend of every country but his own.%@NL@%
  27849. %@CR:INTERNCanning   @%%@NL@%
  27850.                                                 George Canning (1770-1827)%@NL@%
  27851.                                          English statesman, prime minister%@NL@%
  27852. %@AS@%                                                          Internationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27853. %@NL@%
  27854. %@NL@%
  27855. %@2@%Interest does not tie nations together; it sometimes separates%@EH@%
  27856. them. But sympathy and understanding does unite them.%@NL@%
  27857. %@CR:INTERNWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  27858.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  27859.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  27860. %@AS@%                                                          Internationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27861. %@NL@%
  27862. %@NL@%
  27863. %@2@%We deny your internationalism, because it is a luxury which%@EH@%
  27864. only the upper classes can afford; the working people are hopelessly
  27865. bound to their native shores.%@NL@%
  27866. %@CR:INTERNMussolini @%%@NL@%
  27867.                                               Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)%@NL@%
  27868.                                                  Fascist dictator of Italy%@NL@%
  27869.                                                addressed to the Socialists%@NL@%
  27870. %@AS@%                                                          Internationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27871. %@NL@%
  27872. %@NL@%
  27873. %@NL@%
  27874. %@1@%%@AS@%Intervention%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27875. %@CR:INTERVENTION    @%%@NL@%
  27876. %@2@%See:%@QR:Intervention@%%@NL@%
  27877.      Prayer: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:          1fb010@%%@NL@%
  27878. %@NL@%
  27879. %@2@%The full potentialities of human fury cannot be reached until%@EH@%
  27880. a friend of both parties tactfully intervenes.%@NL@%
  27881. %@CR:INTERVChesterton@%%@NL@%
  27882.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  27883.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  27884. %@AS@%                                                              Intervention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27885. %@NL@%
  27886. %@NL@%
  27887.      %@2@%Those who in quarrels interpose,%@NL@%
  27888.      Must often wipe a bloody nose.%@NL@%
  27889. %@CR:INTERVGay       @%%@NL@%
  27890.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  27891.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  27892. %@AS@%                                                              Intervention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27893. %@NL@%
  27894. %@NL@%
  27895. %@2@%"If everybody minded their own business," the Duchess said%@EH@%
  27896. in a hoarse growl, "the world would go round a deal faster than
  27897. it does."%@NL@%
  27898. %@CR:INTERVCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  27899.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  27900.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  27901. %@AS@%                                                              Intervention%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27902. %@NL@%
  27903. %@NL@%
  27904. %@NL@%
  27905. %@1@%%@AS@%Interviews%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27906. %@CR:INTERVIEWS      @%%@NL@%
  27907. %@2@%See:%@QR:Interviews@%%@NL@%
  27908.      Politicians: %@AB@%McDonald%@AE@%%@BO:          1eee61@%%@NL@%
  27909.      The Press: %@AB@%Signoret%@AE@%%@BO:          202343@%%@NL@%
  27910. %@NL@%
  27911.      %@2@%I cried, "Come tell me how you live!"%@NL@%
  27912.      And thumped him on the head.%@NL@%
  27913. %@CR:INTERVCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  27914.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  27915.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  27916. %@AS@%                                                                Interviews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27917. %@NL@%
  27918. %@NL@%
  27919. %@2@%It is not every question that deserves an answer.%@NL@%
  27920. %@CR:INTERVPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  27921.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  27922.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  27923. %@AS@%                                                                Interviews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27924. %@NL@%
  27925. %@NL@%
  27926. %@2@%I'm notorious for giving a bad interview. I'm an actor and%@EH@%
  27927. I can't help but feel I'm boring when I'm on as myself.%@NL@%
  27928. %@CR:INTERVHudson    @%%@NL@%
  27929.                                                    Rock Hudson (1925-1985)%@NL@%
  27930.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  27931. %@AS@%                                                                Interviews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27932. %@NL@%
  27933. %@NL@%
  27934. %@2@%If I possessed the power of conveying unlimited sexual attraction%@EH@%
  27935. through the potency of my voice, I would not be reduced to accepting
  27936. a miserable pittance from the BBC for interviewing a faded female
  27937. in a damp basement.%@NL@%
  27938. %@CR:INTERVHarding   @%%@NL@%
  27939.                                                Gilbert Harding (1907-1960)%@NL@%
  27940.                                                        British broadcaster%@NL@%
  27941.               on being asked to sound more sexy when interviewing Mae West%@NL@%
  27942. %@AS@%                                                                Interviews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27943. %@NL@%
  27944. %@NL@%
  27945. %@2@%It is hardly ever any use to go and interview people. If they%@EH@%
  27946. are at all nice to meet they will not want to meet you.%@NL@%
  27947. %@CR:INTERVWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  27948.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  27949.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  27950. %@AS@%                                                                Interviews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27951. %@NL@%
  27952. %@NL@%
  27953. %@NL@%
  27954. %@1@%%@AS@%Intimacy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27955. %@CR:INTIMACY        @%%@NL@%
  27956. %@2@%%@QR:Intimacy@%You don't hold any mystery for me, darling, do you mind? There%@EH@%
  27957. isn't a particle of you that I don't know, remember, and want.%@NL@%
  27958. %@CR:INTIMACoward    @%%@NL@%
  27959.                                                       Elyot, %@AI@%Private Lives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27960.                                                    Noel Coward (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  27961.                                        English playwright, actor, composer%@NL@%
  27962. %@AS@%                                                                  Intimacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27963. %@NL@%
  27964. %@NL@%
  27965. %@2@%Intimacies between women often go backwards, beginning in revelation%@EH@%
  27966. and ending up in small talk without loss of esteem.%@NL@%
  27967. %@CR:INTIMABowen2    @%%@NL@%
  27968.                                                Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  27969.                                                       Anglo-Irish novelist%@NL@%
  27970. %@AS@%                                                                  Intimacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27971. %@NL@%
  27972. %@NL@%
  27973. %@2@%If ever a man and his wife, or a man and his mistress, who%@EH@%
  27974. pass nights as well as days together, absolutely lay aside all
  27975. good breeding, their intimacy will soon degenerate into a coarse
  27976. familiarity.%@NL@%
  27977. %@CR:INTIMAChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  27978.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  27979.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  27980. %@AS@%                                                                  Intimacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27981. %@NL@%
  27982. %@NL@%
  27983. %@2@%To really know someone is to have loved and hated him in turn.%@NL@%
  27984. %@CR:INTIMAJouhandeau@%%@NL@%
  27985.                                              Marcel Jouhandeau (1888-1979)%@NL@%
  27986.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  27987. %@AS@%                                                                  Intimacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27988. %@NL@%
  27989. %@NL@%
  27990. %@NL@%
  27991. %@1@%%@AS@%Introspection%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  27992. %@CR:INTROSPECTION   @%%@NL@%
  27993. %@2@%%@QR:Introspection@%The terrible fluidity of self-revelation.%@NL@%
  27994. %@CR:INTROSJames2    @%%@NL@%
  27995.                                                    Henry James (1843-1916)%@NL@%
  27996.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  27997. %@AS@%                                                             Introspection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  27998. %@NL@%
  27999. %@NL@%
  28000. %@2@%When a man is wrapped up in himself he makes a pretty small%@EH@%
  28001. package.%@NL@%
  28002. %@CR:INTROSRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  28003.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  28004.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  28005. %@AS@%                                                             Introspection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28006. %@NL@%
  28007. %@NL@%
  28008. %@NL@%
  28009. %@1@%%@AS@%Investment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28010. %@CR:INVESTMENT      @%%@NL@%
  28011. %@2@%%@QR:Investment@%'Tis money that begets money.%@NL@%
  28012. %@CR:INVESTFuller3   @%%@NL@%
  28013.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  28014.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  28015. %@AS@%                                                                Investment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28016. %@NL@%
  28017. %@NL@%
  28018. %@2@%We cannot eat the fruit while the tree is in blossom.%@NL@%
  28019. %@CR:INVESTDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  28020.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  28021.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  28022. %@AS@%                                                                Investment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28023. %@NL@%
  28024. %@NL@%
  28025. %@2@%There is no finer investment for any community than putting%@EH@%
  28026. milk into babies.%@NL@%
  28027. %@CR:INVESTChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  28028.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  28029.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  28030. %@AS@%                                                                Investment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28031. %@NL@%
  28032. %@NL@%
  28033. %@2@%There are two times in a man's life when he should not speculate:%@EH@%
  28034. when he can't afford it, and when he can.%@NL@%
  28035. %@CR:INVESTTwain     @%%@NL@%
  28036.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  28037.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  28038. %@AS@%                                                                Investment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28039. %@NL@%
  28040. %@NL@%
  28041. %@NL@%
  28042. %@1@%%@AS@%Involvement%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28043. %@CR:INVOLVEMENT     @%%@NL@%
  28044. %@2@%See:%@QR:Involvement@%%@NL@%
  28045.      Protest: %@AB@%Debs%@AE@%%@BO:          20bd66@%%@NL@%
  28046. %@NL@%
  28047. %@2@%None of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself.%@NL@%
  28048. %@CR:INVOLVSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  28049.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  28050.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  28051. %@AS@%                                                               Involvement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28052. %@NL@%
  28053. %@NL@%
  28054. %@2@%No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a part%@EH@%
  28055. of the main . . .  Any man's death diminishes me because I am involved
  28056. in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell
  28057. tolls; it tolls for thee.%@NL@%
  28058. %@CR:INVOLVDonne     @%%@NL@%
  28059.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  28060.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  28061. %@AS@%                                                               Involvement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28062. %@NL@%
  28063. %@NL@%
  28064. %@2@%I postpone death by living, by suffering, by error, by risking,%@EH@%
  28065. by giving, by losing.%@NL@%
  28066. %@CR:INVOLVNin       @%%@NL@%
  28067.                                                      Anais Nin (1903-1977)%@NL@%
  28068.                                                   American diarist, author%@NL@%
  28069. %@AS@%                                                               Involvement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28070. %@NL@%
  28071. %@NL@%
  28072. %@2@%To say yes, you have to sweat and roll up your sleeves and%@EH@%
  28073. plunge both hands into life up to the elbows. It is easy to say
  28074. no, even if saying no means death.%@NL@%
  28075. %@CR:INVOLVAnouilh   @%%@NL@%
  28076.                                                   Jean Anouilh (1910-1987)%@NL@%
  28077.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  28078. %@AS@%                                                               Involvement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28079. %@NL@%
  28080. %@NL@%
  28081. %@NL@%
  28082. %@1@%%@AS@%Ireland%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28083. %@CR:IRELAND         @%%@NL@%
  28084. %@2@%%@QR:Ireland@%Ireland is the old sow that eats her farrow.%@NL@%
  28085. %@CR:IRELANJoyce     @%%@NL@%
  28086.                                                    James Joyce (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  28087.                                                             Irish novelist%@NL@%
  28088. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28089. %@NL@%
  28090. %@NL@%
  28091. %@2@%Fightin' like divils for conciliation, an' hatin' each other%@EH@%
  28092. for the love of God.%@NL@%
  28093. %@CR:IRELANLever1    @%%@NL@%
  28094.                                            Charles James Lever (1809-1872)%@NL@%
  28095.                                                             Irish novelist%@NL@%
  28096. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28097. %@NL@%
  28098. %@NL@%
  28099. %@2@%Put an Irishman on the spit, and you can always get another%@EH@%
  28100. Irishman to turn him.%@NL@%
  28101. %@CR:IRELANShaw      @%%@NL@%
  28102.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  28103.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  28104. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28105. %@NL@%
  28106. %@NL@%
  28107. %@2@%The Irish are a fair people; they never speak well of one another.%@NL@%
  28108. %@CR:IRELANJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  28109.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  28110.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  28111. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28112. %@NL@%
  28113. %@NL@%
  28114. %@2@%The moment the very name of Ireland is mentioned, the English%@EH@%
  28115. seem to  . . .  act with the barbarity of tyrants and the fatuity
  28116. of idiots.%@NL@%
  28117. %@CR:IRELANSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  28118.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  28119.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  28120. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28121. %@NL@%
  28122. %@NL@%
  28123. %@2@%Like all Irishmen I suffer from agrophobia - fear of agriculture.%@EH@%
  28124. In England farming is a hobby or an affectation. In Ireland it's
  28125. a tragic existence.%@NL@%
  28126. %@CR:IRELANBehan     @%%@NL@%
  28127.                                                  Brendan Behan (1923-1964)%@NL@%
  28128.                                                           Irish playwright%@NL@%
  28129. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28130. %@NL@%
  28131. %@NL@%
  28132. %@2@%In Ireland there is so little sense of compromise that a girl%@EH@%
  28133. has to choose between perpetual adoration and perpetual pregnancy.%@NL@%
  28134. %@CR:IRELANMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  28135.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  28136.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  28137. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28138. %@NL@%
  28139. %@NL@%
  28140. %@2@%There is an Irish way of paying compliments as though they%@EH@%
  28141. were irresistible truths which makes what would otherwise be an
  28142. impertinence delightful.%@NL@%
  28143. %@CR:IRELANHinkson   @%%@NL@%
  28144.                                        Katharine Tynan Hinkson (1861-1931)%@NL@%
  28145.                                                       Irish poet, novelist%@NL@%
  28146. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28147. %@NL@%
  28148. %@NL@%
  28149. %@2@%The Gael is not like other men; the spade, and the loom, and%@EH@%
  28150. the sword are not for him. But a destiny more glorious than that
  28151. of Rome, more glorious than that of Britain, awaits him: to become
  28152. the saviour of idealism in modern intellectual and social life.%@NL@%
  28153. %@CR:IRELANPearse    @%%@NL@%
  28154.                                                 Patrick Pearse (1879-1916)%@NL@%
  28155.                                                Irish nationalist, educator%@NL@%
  28156. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28157. %@NL@%
  28158. %@NL@%
  28159. %@2@%My one claim to originality among Irishmen is that I have never%@EH@%
  28160. made a speech.%@NL@%
  28161. %@CR:IRELANMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  28162.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  28163.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  28164. %@AS@%                                                                   Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28165. %@NL@%
  28166. %@NL@%
  28167. %@NL@%
  28168. %@1@%%@AS@%Ireland: Northern Ireland%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28169. %@CR:NORTHERNIRELAND @%%@NL@%
  28170. %@2@%%@QR:Ireland: Northern Ireland@%Anyone who isn't confused here doesn't really understand what%@EH@%
  28171. is going on.%@NL@%
  28172. %@CR:NORTHEMANINBELFA@%%@NL@%
  28173.                                                             man in Belfast%@NL@%
  28174. %@AS@%                                                 Ireland: Northern Ireland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28175. %@NL@%
  28176. %@NL@%
  28177. %@NL@%
  28178. %@1@%%@AS@%Irony%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28179. %@CR:IRONY           @%%@NL@%
  28180. %@2@%%@QR:Irony@%Jesus wept; Voltaire smiled. From that divine tear and from%@EH@%
  28181. that human smile is derived the grace of present civilization.%@NL@%
  28182. %@CR:IRONY Hugo      @%%@NL@%
  28183.                                                    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)%@NL@%
  28184.                                           French poet, dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  28185. %@AS@%                                                                     Irony%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28186. %@NL@%
  28187. %@NL@%
  28188. %@2@%The free mind must have one policeman. Irony.%@NL@%
  28189. %@CR:IRONY Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  28190.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  28191.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  28192. %@AS@%                                                                     Irony%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28193. %@NL@%
  28194. %@NL@%
  28195. %@NL@%
  28196. %@1@%%@AS@%Isolation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28197. %@CR:ISOLATION       @%%@NL@%
  28198. %@2@%See:%@QR:Isolation@%%@NL@%
  28199.      Vice: %@AB@%Proust%@AE@%%@BO:          2a0927@%%@NL@%
  28200. %@NL@%
  28201. %@2@%We're all of us sentenced to solitary confinement inside our%@EH@%
  28202. own skins, for life.%@NL@%
  28203. %@CR:ISOLATWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  28204.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  28205.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  28206. %@AS@%                                                                 Isolation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28207. %@NL@%
  28208. %@NL@%
  28209. %@2@%The last and greatest art is to limit and isolate oneself.%@NL@%
  28210. %@CR:ISOLATGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  28211.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  28212.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  28213. %@AS@%                                                                 Isolation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28214. %@NL@%
  28215. %@NL@%
  28216. %@NL@%
  28217. %@1@%%@AS@%Israel%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28218. %@CR:ISRAEL          @%%@NL@%
  28219. %@2@%%@QR:Israel@%In Israel, in order to be a realist you must believe in miracles.%@NL@%
  28220. %@CR:ISRAELBenGurion @%%@NL@%
  28221.                                              David  Ben Gurion (1886-1973)%@NL@%
  28222.                                                          Israeli statesman%@NL@%
  28223. %@AS@%                                                                    Israel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28224. %@NL@%
  28225. %@NL@%
  28226. %@2@%Israel itself was nothing more than one of the consequences%@EH@%
  28227. of imperialism.%@NL@%
  28228. %@CR:ISRAELNasser    @%%@NL@%
  28229.                                             Gamal Abdul Nasser (1918-1970)%@NL@%
  28230.                                                         Egyptian president%@NL@%
  28231. %@AS@%                                                                    Israel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28232. %@NL@%
  28233. %@NL@%
  28234. %@2@%The greatest security for Israel is to create new Egypts.%@NL@%
  28235. %@CR:ISRAELReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  28236.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  28237.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  28238. %@AS@%                                                                    Israel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28239. %@NL@%
  28240. %@NL@%
  28241. %@2@%My generation, dear Ron, swore on the Altar of God that whoever%@EH@%
  28242. proclaims the intent of destroying the Jewish state or the Jewish
  28243. people, or both, seals his fate.%@NL@%
  28244. %@CR:ISRAELBegin     @%%@NL@%
  28245.                                                   Menachem Begin (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  28246.                                         Israeli politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  28247.                                                  letter to "Ronald" Reagan%@NL@%
  28248. %@AS@%                                                                    Israel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28249. %@NL@%
  28250. %@NL@%
  28251. %@2@%We Jews have a secret weapon in our struggle with the Arabs - we%@EH@%
  28252. have no place to go.%@NL@%
  28253. %@CR:ISRAELMeir      @%%@NL@%
  28254.                                                     Golda Meir (1898-1978)%@NL@%
  28255.                                                     Israeli prime minister%@NL@%
  28256. %@AS@%                                                                    Israel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28257. %@NL@%
  28258. %@NL@%
  28259. %@NL@%
  28260. %@1@%%@AS@%Italy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28261. %@CR:ITALY           @%%@NL@%
  28262. %@2@%%@QR:Italy@%Midnight, and love, and youth, and Italy!%@NL@%
  28263. %@CR:ITALY BulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  28264.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  28265.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  28266. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28267. %@NL@%
  28268. %@NL@%
  28269. %@2@%A man who has not been in Italy, is always conscious of an%@EH@%
  28270. inferiority.%@NL@%
  28271. %@CR:ITALY Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  28272.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  28273.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  28274. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28275. %@NL@%
  28276. %@NL@%
  28277. %@2@%Everyone soon or late comes round by Rome.%@NL@%
  28278. %@CR:ITALY Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  28279.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  28280.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28281. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28282. %@NL@%
  28283. %@NL@%
  28284. %@2@%Venice is like eating an entire box of chocolate liqueurs in%@EH@%
  28285. one go.%@NL@%
  28286. %@CR:ITALY Capote    @%%@NL@%
  28287.                                                  Truman Capote (1924-1984)%@NL@%
  28288.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  28289. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28290. %@NL@%
  28291. %@NL@%
  28292.      %@2@%Italia! oh Italia! thou who hast%@NL@%
  28293.      The fatal gift of beauty.%@NL@%
  28294. %@CR:ITALY Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  28295.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  28296.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28297. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28298. %@NL@%
  28299. %@NL@%
  28300. %@2@%Italy is a poor country full of rich people.%@NL@%
  28301. %@CR:ITALY Gardner3  @%%@NL@%
  28302.                                                  Richard Gardner (b. 1927)%@NL@%
  28303.                            American diplomat, former US ambassador in Rome%@NL@%
  28304. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28305. %@NL@%
  28306. %@NL@%
  28307. %@2@%Italy is a geographical expression.%@NL@%
  28308. %@CR:ITALY Metternich@%%@NL@%
  28309.                                              Prince Metternich (1773-1859)%@NL@%
  28310.                                                         Austrian statesman%@NL@%
  28311. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28312. %@NL@%
  28313. %@NL@%
  28314. %@2@%Thou Paradise of exiles, Italy!%@NL@%
  28315. %@CR:ITALY Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  28316.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  28317.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28318. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28319. %@NL@%
  28320. %@NL@%
  28321. %@2@%Travelling is the ruin of all happiness! There's no looking%@EH@%
  28322. at a building here after seeing Italy.%@NL@%
  28323. %@CR:ITALY Burney    @%%@NL@%
  28324.                                                   Fanny Burney (1752-1840)%@NL@%
  28325.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  28326. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28327. %@NL@%
  28328. %@NL@%
  28329.      %@2@%I love the language, that soft bastard Latin,%@NL@%
  28330.      Which melts like kisses from a female mouth,%@NL@%
  28331.      And sounds as if it should be writ on satin%@NL@%
  28332.      With syllables which breathe of the sweet South.%@NL@%
  28333. %@CR:ITALY Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  28334.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  28335.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28336. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28337. %@NL@%
  28338. %@NL@%
  28339. %@2@%Lump the whole thing! say that the Creator made Italy from%@EH@%
  28340. designs by Michael Angelo!%@NL@%
  28341. %@CR:ITALY Twain     @%%@NL@%
  28342.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  28343.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  28344. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28345. %@NL@%
  28346. %@NL@%
  28347.      %@2@%Open my heart and you will see,%@NL@%
  28348.      Graved inside of it, "Italy."%@NL@%
  28349. %@CR:ITALY Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  28350.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  28351.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28352. %@AS@%                                                                     Italy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28353. %@NL@%
  28354. %@NL@%
  28355. %@NL@%
  28356. %@1@%%@AS@%Jazz%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28357. %@CR:JAZZ            @%%@NL@%
  28358. %@2@%See:%@QR:Jazz@%%@NL@%
  28359.      Song: %@AB@%Holiday%@AE@%%@BO:          262671@%%@NL@%
  28360. %@NL@%
  28361. %@2@%Jazz is the big brother of the blues. If a guy's playing blues%@EH@%
  28362. like we play, he's in high school. When he starts playing jazz
  28363. it's like going on to college, to a school of higher learning.%@NL@%
  28364. %@CR:JAZZ  King1     @%%@NL@%
  28365.                                                       B. B. King (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  28366.                                                   American blues guitarist%@NL@%
  28367. %@AS@%                                                                      Jazz%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28368. %@NL@%
  28369. %@NL@%
  28370. %@2@%Jazz is the only music in which the same note can be played%@EH@%
  28371. night after night but differently each time.%@NL@%
  28372. %@CR:JAZZ  Coleman   @%%@NL@%
  28373.                                                  Ornette Coleman (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  28374.                                                     American jazz musician%@NL@%
  28375. %@AS@%                                                                      Jazz%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28376. %@NL@%
  28377. %@NL@%
  28378. %@2@%Playing "bop" is like playing Scrabble with all the vowels%@EH@%
  28379. missing.%@NL@%
  28380. %@CR:JAZZ  Ellington @%%@NL@%
  28381.                                                 Duke Ellington (1899-1974)%@NL@%
  28382.                                                     American jazz musician%@NL@%
  28383. %@AS@%                                                                      Jazz%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28384. %@NL@%
  28385. %@NL@%
  28386. %@2@%I'll play it first and tell you what it is later.%@NL@%
  28387. %@CR:JAZZ  Davis3    @%%@NL@%
  28388.                                                      Miles Davis (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  28389.                                                     American jazz musician%@NL@%
  28390. %@AS@%                                                                      Jazz%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28391. %@NL@%
  28392. %@NL@%
  28393. %@NL@%
  28394. %@1@%%@AS@%Jealousy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28395. %@CR:JEALOUSY        @%%@NL@%
  28396. %@2@%See:%@QR:Jealousy@%%@NL@%
  28397.      Moral Indignation: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          1af383@%%@NL@%
  28398. %@NL@%
  28399. %@2@%Love is as strong as death; jealousy is cruel as the grave.%@NL@%
  28400. %@CR:JEALOUBibleSongo@%%@NL@%
  28401.                                                     Bible, Song of Solomon%@NL@%
  28402. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28403. %@NL@%
  28404. %@NL@%
  28405.      %@2@%I had rather be a toad,%@NL@%
  28406.      And live upon the vapour of a dungeon,%@NL@%
  28407.      Than keep a corner of the thing I love%@NL@%
  28408.      For others' uses.%@NL@%
  28409. %@CR:JEALOUShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28410.                                                           Othello, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28411.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28412.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28413. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28414. %@NL@%
  28415. %@NL@%
  28416. %@2@%Jealousy, that dragon which slays love under the pretence of%@EH@%
  28417. keeping it alive.%@NL@%
  28418. %@CR:JEALOUEllis     @%%@NL@%
  28419.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  28420.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  28421. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28422. %@NL@%
  28423. %@NL@%
  28424. %@2@%What does a strict guard avail, as a lewd wife cannot be watched%@EH@%
  28425. and a chaste one does not have to be?%@NL@%
  28426. %@CR:JEALOUJohnofSali@%%@NL@%
  28427.                                              John of Salisbury (1115-1180)%@NL@%
  28428.                                               English scholar, philosopher%@NL@%
  28429. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28430. %@NL@%
  28431. %@NL@%
  28432. %@2@%To jealousy, nothing is more frightful than laughter.%@NL@%
  28433. %@CR:JEALOUSagan     @%%@NL@%
  28434.                                                  Francoise Sagan (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  28435.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  28436. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28437. %@NL@%
  28438. %@NL@%
  28439.      %@2@%I had been happy, if the general camp,%@NL@%
  28440.      Pioneers and all, had tasted her sweet body,%@NL@%
  28441.      So I had nothing known.%@NL@%
  28442. %@CR:JEALOUShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28443.                                                           Othello, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28444.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28445.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28446. %@AS@%                                                                  Jealousy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28447. %@NL@%
  28448. %@NL@%
  28449. %@NL@%
  28450. %@1@%%@AS@%The Jews%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28451. %@CR:THEJEWS         @%%@NL@%
  28452. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Jews@%%@NL@%
  28453.      %@AB@%Israel%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          15b292@%%@NL@%
  28454. %@NL@%
  28455. %@2@%The world is divided into two groups of nations - those%@EH@%
  28456. which want to expel the Jews and those which do not want to receive
  28457. them.%@NL@%
  28458. %@CR:THEJEWWeizmann  @%%@NL@%
  28459.                                                 Chaim Weizmann (1874-1952)%@NL@%
  28460.                                                           Jewish statesman%@NL@%
  28461. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28462. %@NL@%
  28463. %@NL@%
  28464. %@2@%The Jews are among the aristocracy of every land; if a literature%@EH@%
  28465. is called rich in the possession of a few classic tragedies, what
  28466. shall we say to a national tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred
  28467. years, in which the poets and actors were also the heroes.%@NL@%
  28468. %@CR:THEJEWEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  28469.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  28470.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  28471. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28472. %@NL@%
  28473. %@NL@%
  28474. %@2@%%@AI@%I%@AE@% determine who is a Jew.%@NL@%
  28475. %@CR:THEJEWGoering   @%%@NL@%
  28476.                                                Hermann Goering (1893-1946)%@NL@%
  28477.                                                         German Nazi leader%@NL@%
  28478. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28479. %@NL@%
  28480. %@NL@%
  28481. %@2@%I don't like 'Ebrews. They work harder; they're more sober;%@EH@%
  28482. they're honest, and they're everywhere.%@NL@%
  28483. %@CR:THEJEWGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  28484.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  28485.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  28486. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28487. %@NL@%
  28488. %@NL@%
  28489. %@2@%The Jews generally give value. They make you pay; but they%@EH@%
  28490. deliver the goods. In my experience the men who want something
  28491. for nothing are invariably Christians.%@NL@%
  28492. %@CR:THEJEWShaw      @%%@NL@%
  28493.                                                   The Nobleman, %@AI@%Saint Joan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28494.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  28495.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  28496. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28497. %@NL@%
  28498. %@NL@%
  28499. %@2@%The Jews are a frightened people. Nineteen centuries of Christian%@EH@%
  28500. love have broken their nerves.%@NL@%
  28501. %@CR:THEJEWZangwill  @%%@NL@%
  28502.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  28503.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  28504. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28505. %@NL@%
  28506. %@NL@%
  28507. %@2@%From the beginning, the Christian was the theorizing Jew; consequently%@EH@%
  28508. the Jew is the practical Christian.%@NL@%
  28509. %@CR:THEJEWMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  28510.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  28511.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  28512. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28513. %@NL@%
  28514. %@NL@%
  28515. %@2@%The pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, an almost fanatical%@EH@%
  28516. love of justice and the desire for personal independence - these
  28517. are the features of the Jewish tradition which make me thank my
  28518. stars that I belong to it.%@NL@%
  28519. %@CR:THEJEWEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  28520.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  28521.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  28522. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28523. %@NL@%
  28524. %@NL@%
  28525. %@2@%With Judaism we have a relationship which we do not have with%@EH@%
  28526. any other religion. You are our dearly beloved brothers and, in
  28527. a certain way, it could be said that you are our elder brothers.%@NL@%
  28528. %@CR:THEJEWPopeJohnPa@%%@NL@%
  28529.                                                Pope John Paul II (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  28530. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28531. %@NL@%
  28532. %@NL@%
  28533. %@2@%A Jewish man with parents alive is a fifteen-year-old boy,%@EH@%
  28534. and will remain a fifteens-year-old boy until they die.%@NL@%
  28535. %@CR:THEJEWRoth      @%%@NL@%
  28536.                                                      Philip Roth (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  28537.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  28538. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28539. %@NL@%
  28540. %@NL@%
  28541. %@2@%Pessimism is a luxury that a Jew can never allow himself.%@NL@%
  28542. %@CR:THEJEWMeir      @%%@NL@%
  28543.                                                     Golda Meir (1898-1978)%@NL@%
  28544.                                                     Israeli prime minister%@NL@%
  28545. %@AS@%                                                                  The Jews%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28546. %@NL@%
  28547. %@NL@%
  28548. %@NL@%
  28549. %@1@%%@AS@%Dr. Johnson%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28550. %@CR:DR.JOHNSON      @%%@NL@%
  28551. %@2@%See:%@QR:Dr. Johnson@%%@NL@%
  28552.      Sociability: %@AB@%Boswell%@AE@%%@BO:          25c94e@%%@NL@%
  28553.      Writers: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          2c6fde@%%@NL@%
  28554. %@NL@%
  28555. %@2@%I hate mankind, for I think myself one of the best of them,%@EH@%
  28556. and I know how bad I am.%@NL@%
  28557. %@CR:DR.JOHJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  28558.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  28559.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  28560. %@AS@%                                                               Dr. Johnson%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28561. %@NL@%
  28562. %@NL@%
  28563. %@2@%Johnson's conversation was by much too strong for a person%@EH@%
  28564. accustomed to obsequiousness and flattery; it was mustard in a
  28565. young child's mouth.%@NL@%
  28566. %@CR:DR.JOHThrale    @%%@NL@%
  28567.                                     Hester Piozzi, Mrs. Thrale (1741-1821)%@NL@%
  28568.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  28569. %@AS@%                                                               Dr. Johnson%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28570. %@NL@%
  28571. %@NL@%
  28572. %@2@%Now that the old lion is dead every ass thinks he may kick%@EH@%
  28573. at him.%@NL@%
  28574. %@CR:DR.JOHParr      @%%@NL@%
  28575.                                                    Samuel Parr (1747-1925)%@NL@%
  28576.                                                      English schoolteacher%@NL@%
  28577. %@AS@%                                                               Dr. Johnson%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28578. %@NL@%
  28579. %@NL@%
  28580. %@2@%Dr Johnson can be thankful that God invented Boswell before%@EH@%
  28581. science invented the pocket tape recorder.%@NL@%
  28582. %@CR:DR.JOHGUARDIAN  @%%@NL@%
  28583.                                             Reviewer in %@AI@%The Guardian,%@AE@% 1986%@NL@%
  28584. %@AS@%                                                               Dr. Johnson%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28585. %@NL@%
  28586. %@NL@%
  28587. %@NL@%
  28588. %@1@%%@AS@%Jokers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28589. %@CR:JOKERS          @%%@NL@%
  28590. %@2@%See:%@QR:Jokers@%%@NL@%
  28591.      Comedy: %@AB@%Grey%@AE@%%@BO:           738f9@%%@NL@%
  28592.      The Rich: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          22e750@%%@NL@%
  28593. %@NL@%
  28594. %@2@%Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio: a fellow of infinite%@EH@%
  28595. jest, of most excellent fancy.%@NL@%
  28596. %@CR:JOKERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28597.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28598.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28599.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28600. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28601. %@NL@%
  28602. %@NL@%
  28603. %@2@%I remain just one thing, and one thing only - and that is%@EH@%
  28604. a clown. It places me on a far higher plane than any politician.%@NL@%
  28605. %@CR:JOKERSChaplin   @%%@NL@%
  28606.                                                Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977)%@NL@%
  28607.                                              English comic actor, director%@NL@%
  28608. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28609. %@NL@%
  28610. %@NL@%
  28611.      %@2@%All human race would fain be wits,%@NL@%
  28612.      And millions miss for one that hits.%@NL@%
  28613. %@CR:JOKERSPope      @%%@NL@%
  28614.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  28615.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28616. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28617. %@NL@%
  28618. %@NL@%
  28619. %@2@%I don't know jokes; I just watch the government and report%@EH@%
  28620. the facts.%@NL@%
  28621. %@CR:JOKERSRogers3   @%%@NL@%
  28622.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  28623.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  28624. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28625. %@NL@%
  28626. %@NL@%
  28627. %@2@%The difficulty with humorists is that they will mix what they%@EH@%
  28628. believe with what they don't; whichever seems likelier to win an
  28629. effect.%@NL@%
  28630. %@CR:JOKERSUpdike    @%%@NL@%
  28631.                                                      John Updike (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  28632.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  28633. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28634. %@NL@%
  28635. %@NL@%
  28636. %@2@%The teller of a mirthful tale has latitude allowed him. We%@EH@%
  28637. are content with less than absolute truth.%@NL@%
  28638. %@CR:JOKERSLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  28639.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  28640.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  28641. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28642. %@NL@%
  28643. %@NL@%
  28644. %@2@%Motley's the only wear.%@NL@%
  28645. %@CR:JOKERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28646.                                                    Jacques, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28647.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28648.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28649. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28650. %@NL@%
  28651. %@NL@%
  28652. %@2@%Who makes a pun will pick a pocket.%@NL@%
  28653. %@CR:JOKERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28654.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  28655. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28656. %@NL@%
  28657. %@NL@%
  28658. %@2@%The marvellous thing about a joke with a double meaning is%@EH@%
  28659. that it can only mean one thing.%@NL@%
  28660. %@CR:JOKERSBarker2   @%%@NL@%
  28661.                                                    Ronnie Barker (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  28662.                                                           British comedian%@NL@%
  28663. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28664. %@NL@%
  28665. %@NL@%
  28666. %@2@%Sir, to be facetious it is not necessary to be indecent.%@NL@%
  28667. %@CR:JOKERSRogers1   @%%@NL@%
  28668.                                                J. E. T. Rogers (1823-1890)%@NL@%
  28669.                                                British political economist%@NL@%
  28670. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28671. %@NL@%
  28672. %@NL@%
  28673. %@2@%For every ten jokes thou hast got an hundred enemies.%@NL@%
  28674. %@CR:JOKERSSterne    @%%@NL@%
  28675.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  28676.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  28677. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28678. %@NL@%
  28679. %@NL@%
  28680. %@2@%He jests at scars that never felt a wound.%@NL@%
  28681. %@CR:JOKERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28682.                                                    Romeo, %@AI@%Romeo and Juliet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28683.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28684.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28685. %@AS@%                                                                    Jokers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28686. %@NL@%
  28687. %@NL@%
  28688. %@NL@%
  28689. %@1@%%@AS@%Journalism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28690. %@CR:JOURNALISM      @%%@NL@%
  28691. %@2@%See:%@QR:Journalism@%%@NL@%
  28692.      %@AB@%Newspapers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bba04@%%@NL@%
  28693.      %@AB@%The Press%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          200a93@%%@NL@%
  28694.      %@AB@%War Correspondents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2abeff@%%@NL@%
  28695. %@NL@%
  28696. %@2@%It was long ago in my life as a simple reporter that I decided%@EH@%
  28697. that facts must never get in the way of truth.%@NL@%
  28698. %@CR:JOURNACameron1  @%%@NL@%
  28699.                                                  James Cameron (1911-1985)%@NL@%
  28700.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  28701. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28702. %@NL@%
  28703. %@NL@%
  28704. %@2@%Doctors bury their mistakes. Lawyers hang them. But journalists%@EH@%
  28705. put theirs on the front page.%@NL@%
  28706. %@CR:JOURNACameron1  @%%@NL@%
  28707.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  28708. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28709. %@NL@%
  28710. %@NL@%
  28711. %@2@%There is much to be said in favour of modern journalism. By%@EH@%
  28712. giving us the opinions of the uneducated it keeps us in touch with
  28713. the ignorance of the community. By carefully chronicling the current
  28714. events of contemporary life it shows us of what very little importance
  28715. such events really are. By invariably discussing the unnecessary
  28716. it makes us understand what things are requisite for culture, and
  28717. what are not.%@NL@%
  28718. %@CR:JOURNAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  28719.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  28720.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  28721. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28722. %@NL@%
  28723. %@NL@%
  28724. %@2@%The man must have a rare recipe for melancholy, who can be%@EH@%
  28725. dull in Fleet Street.%@NL@%
  28726. %@CR:JOURNALamb1     @%%@NL@%
  28727.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  28728.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  28729. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28730. %@NL@%
  28731. %@NL@%
  28732. %@2@%A certain squalid knot of alleys where the town's bad blood%@EH@%
  28733. once slept corruptly.%@NL@%
  28734. %@CR:JOURNABrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  28735.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  28736.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28737.                                                            of Fleet Street%@NL@%
  28738. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28739. %@NL@%
  28740. %@NL@%
  28741. %@2@%What a squalid and irresponsible little profession it is at%@EH@%
  28742. the moment. Nothing prepares you for how bad Fleet Street really
  28743. is until it craps on you from a great height.%@NL@%
  28744. %@CR:JOURNALivingston@%%@NL@%
  28745.                                                  Ken Livingstone (b. 1945)%@NL@%
  28746.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  28747. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28748. %@NL@%
  28749. %@NL@%
  28750.      %@2@%You cannot hope to bribe or twist%@NL@%
  28751.      (Thank God) the British journalist.%@NL@%
  28752.      But seeing what the man will do%@NL@%
  28753.      Unbribed, there's no occasion to.%@NL@%
  28754. %@CR:JOURNAWolfe1    @%%@NL@%
  28755.                                                  Humbert Wolfe (1885-1940)%@NL@%
  28756.                                                       British poet, author%@NL@%
  28757. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28758. %@NL@%
  28759. %@NL@%
  28760. %@2@%Give someone half a page in a newspaper and they think they%@EH@%
  28761. own the world.%@NL@%
  28762. %@CR:JOURNABernard2  @%%@NL@%
  28763.                                                            Jeffrey Bernard%@NL@%
  28764.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  28765. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28766. %@NL@%
  28767. %@NL@%
  28768. %@2@%I guess I'll have to gain 60lb, start smoking a cigar and wear%@EH@%
  28769. clothes that don't match.%@NL@%
  28770. %@CR:JOURNAIorg      @%%@NL@%
  28771.                                                                 Garth Iorg%@NL@%
  28772.                                          Toronto Blue Jays baseball player%@NL@%
  28773. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28774. %@NL@%
  28775. %@NL@%
  28776. %@2@%There is but one way for a newspaperman to look at a politician,%@EH@%
  28777. and that is down.%@NL@%
  28778. %@CR:JOURNASimonds   @%%@NL@%
  28779.                                               Frank H. Simonds (1878-1936)%@NL@%
  28780.                                                American journalist, author%@NL@%
  28781. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28782. %@NL@%
  28783. %@NL@%
  28784. %@2@%Most rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing%@EH@%
  28785. people who can't talk for people who can't read.%@NL@%
  28786. %@CR:JOURNAZappa     @%%@NL@%
  28787.                                                      Frank Zappa (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  28788.                                                     American rock musician%@NL@%
  28789. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28790. %@NL@%
  28791. %@NL@%
  28792. %@2@%Journalism is still an underdeveloped profession and, accordingly,%@EH@%
  28793. newspapermen are quite often regarded as were surgeons and musicians
  28794. a century ago, as having the rank, roughly speaking, of barbers
  28795. and riding masters.%@NL@%
  28796. %@CR:JOURNALippmann  @%%@NL@%
  28797.                                                Walter Lippmann (1889-1974)%@NL@%
  28798.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  28799. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28800. %@NL@%
  28801. %@NL@%
  28802. %@2@%Journalism will kill you, but it will keep you alive while%@EH@%
  28803. you're at it.%@NL@%
  28804. %@CR:JOURNAGreeley   @%%@NL@%
  28805.                                                 Horace Greeley (1811-1872)%@NL@%
  28806.                                      American newspaper editor, politician%@NL@%
  28807. %@AS@%                                                                Journalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28808. %@NL@%
  28809. %@NL@%
  28810. %@NL@%
  28811. %@1@%%@AS@%Judges%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28812. %@CR:JUDGES          @%%@NL@%
  28813. %@2@%See:%@QR:Judges@%%@NL@%
  28814.      Divorce: %@AB@%Wodehouse%@AE@%%@BO:           b0496@%%@NL@%
  28815.      Trials: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          294dd5@%%@NL@%
  28816. %@NL@%
  28817. %@2@%A judge is not supposed to know anything about the facts of%@EH@%
  28818. life until they have been presented in evidence and explained to
  28819. him at least three times.%@NL@%
  28820. %@CR:JUDGESParker2   @%%@NL@%
  28821.                                      Lord Chief Justice Parker (1900-1972)%@NL@%
  28822.                                                              British judge%@NL@%
  28823. %@AS@%                                                                    Judges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28824. %@NL@%
  28825. %@NL@%
  28826. %@2@%A justice and his clerk is now little more than a blind man%@EH@%
  28827. and his dog.%@NL@%
  28828. %@CR:JUDGESShenstone @%%@NL@%
  28829.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  28830.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  28831. %@AS@%                                                                    Judges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28832. %@NL@%
  28833. %@NL@%
  28834. %@2@%And summed up so well that it came to far more than the witnesses%@EH@%
  28835. had ever said.%@NL@%
  28836. %@CR:JUDGESCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  28837.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  28838.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  28839. %@AS@%                                                                    Judges%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28840. %@NL@%
  28841. %@NL@%
  28842. %@NL@%
  28843. %@1@%%@AS@%Judgment Day%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28844. %@CR:JUDGMENTDAY     @%%@NL@%
  28845. %@2@%%@QR:Judgment Day@%And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and%@EH@%
  28846. the books were opened.%@NL@%
  28847. %@CR:JUDGMEJohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  28848.                                        John the Divine (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  28849.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  28850. %@AS@%                                                              Judgment Day%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28851. %@NL@%
  28852. %@NL@%
  28853. %@2@%Thou art weighed in the balances, and found wanting.%@NL@%
  28854. %@CR:JUDGMEBibleDanie@%%@NL@%
  28855.                                                              Bible, Daniel%@NL@%
  28856. %@AS@%                                                              Judgment Day%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28857. %@NL@%
  28858. %@NL@%
  28859. %@NL@%
  28860. %@1@%%@AS@%Judgments%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28861. %@CR:JUDGMENTS       @%%@NL@%
  28862. %@2@%%@QR:Judgments@%I have lived in this world just long enough to look carefully%@EH@%
  28863. the second time into things that I am the most certain of the first
  28864. time.%@NL@%
  28865. %@CR:JUDGMEBillings  @%%@NL@%
  28866.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  28867.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  28868. %@AS@%                                                                 Judgments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28869. %@NL@%
  28870. %@NL@%
  28871. %@2@%To make judgments on things that are great and high, a soul%@EH@%
  28872. of the same stature is needed, otherwise we ascribe to them the
  28873. vices which belong to us.%@NL@%
  28874. %@CR:JUDGMEMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  28875.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  28876.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  28877. %@AS@%                                                                 Judgments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28878. %@NL@%
  28879. %@NL@%
  28880. %@2@%It is well, when one is judging a friend, to remember that%@EH@%
  28881. he is judging you with the same godlike and superior impartiality.%@NL@%
  28882. %@CR:JUDGMEBennett   @%%@NL@%
  28883.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  28884.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  28885. %@AS@%                                                                 Judgments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28886. %@NL@%
  28887. %@NL@%
  28888. %@2@%We are all inclined to judge ourselves by our ideals; others%@EH@%
  28889. by their acts.%@NL@%
  28890. %@CR:JUDGMENicolson  @%%@NL@%
  28891.                                                Harold Nicolson (1886-1968)%@NL@%
  28892.                                                   British diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  28893. %@AS@%                                                                 Judgments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28894. %@NL@%
  28895. %@NL@%
  28896.      %@2@%Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,%@NL@%
  28897.      Nor set down aught in malice.%@NL@%
  28898. %@CR:JUDGMEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28899.                                                           Othello, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28900.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28901.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28902. %@AS@%                                                                 Judgments%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28903. %@NL@%
  28904. %@NL@%
  28905. %@NL@%
  28906. %@1@%%@AS@%Juries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28907. %@CR:JURIES          @%%@NL@%
  28908. %@2@%See:%@QR:Juries@%%@NL@%
  28909.      Trials: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          294dd5@%%@NL@%
  28910. %@NL@%
  28911. %@2@%Our civilization has decided  . . .  that determining the guilt%@EH@%
  28912. or innocence of men is a thing too important to be trusted to trained
  28913. men . . .  When it wants a library catalogued, or the solar system
  28914. discovered, or any trifle of that kind, it uses up its specialists.
  28915. But when it wishes anything done which is really serious, it collects
  28916. twelve of the ordinary men standing round. The same thing was done,
  28917. if I remember right, by the Founder of Christianity.%@NL@%
  28918. %@CR:JURIESChesterton@%%@NL@%
  28919.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  28920.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  28921. %@AS@%                                                                    Juries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28922. %@NL@%
  28923. %@NL@%
  28924. %@2@%A jury consists of twelve persons chosen to decide who has%@EH@%
  28925. the better lawyer.%@NL@%
  28926. %@CR:JURIESFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  28927.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  28928.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  28929. %@AS@%                                                                    Juries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28930. %@NL@%
  28931. %@NL@%
  28932. %@2@%The public do not know enough to be experts, yet know enough%@EH@%
  28933. to decide between them.%@NL@%
  28934. %@CR:JURIESButler4   @%%@NL@%
  28935.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  28936.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  28937. %@AS@%                                                                    Juries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28938. %@NL@%
  28939. %@NL@%
  28940.      %@2@%The jury, passing on the prisoner's life,%@NL@%
  28941.      May have in the sworn twelve a thief or two%@NL@%
  28942.      Guiltier than him they try.%@NL@%
  28943. %@CR:JURIESShakespear@%%@NL@%
  28944.                                                Angleo, %@AI@%Measure for Measure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28945.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  28946.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  28947. %@AS@%                                                                    Juries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28948. %@NL@%
  28949. %@NL@%
  28950. %@2@%"Write that down," the King said to the jury, and the jury%@EH@%
  28951. eagerly wrote down all three dates on their slates, and then added
  28952. them up, and reduced the answer to shillings and pence.%@NL@%
  28953. %@CR:JURIESCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  28954.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  28955.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  28956. %@AS@%                                                                    Juries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28957. %@NL@%
  28958. %@NL@%
  28959. %@NL@%
  28960. %@1@%%@AS@%Justice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  28961. %@CR:JUSTICE         @%%@NL@%
  28962. %@2@%See:%@QR:Justice@%%@NL@%
  28963.      The Law: %@AB@%McIlvanney%@AE@%%@BO:          16bdad@%%@NL@%
  28964.      The Press: %@AB@%Bennett%@AE@%%@BO:          200cf9@%%@NL@%
  28965. %@NL@%
  28966. %@2@%Let justice be done, though the world perish.%@NL@%
  28967. %@CR:JUSTICHolyRomanE@%%@NL@%
  28968.                                 Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I (1503-1564)%@NL@%
  28969. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28970. %@NL@%
  28971. %@NL@%
  28972. %@2@%Justice is my being allowed to do whatever I like. Injustice%@EH@%
  28973. is whatever prevents my doing so.%@NL@%
  28974. %@CR:JUSTICButler4   @%%@NL@%
  28975.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  28976.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  28977. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28978. %@NL@%
  28979. %@NL@%
  28980. %@2@%Injustice is relatively easy to bear: what stings is justice.%@NL@%
  28981. %@CR:JUSTICMencken   @%%@NL@%
  28982.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  28983.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  28984. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28985. %@NL@%
  28986. %@NL@%
  28987. %@2@%Justice is too good for some people and not good enough for%@EH@%
  28988. the rest.%@NL@%
  28989. %@CR:JUSTICDouglas   @%%@NL@%
  28990.                                                 Norman Douglas (1868-1952)%@NL@%
  28991.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  28992. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  28993. %@NL@%
  28994. %@NL@%
  28995. %@2@%The love of justice is, in most men, nothing more than the%@EH@%
  28996. fear of suffering injustice.%@NL@%
  28997. %@CR:JUSTICLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  28998.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  28999.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  29000. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29001. %@NL@%
  29002. %@NL@%
  29003. %@2@%It is better that ten guilty persons escape than one innocent%@EH@%
  29004. suffer.%@NL@%
  29005. %@CR:JUSTICBlackstone@%%@NL@%
  29006.                                         Sir William Blackstone (1723-1780)%@NL@%
  29007.                                                             English jurist%@NL@%
  29008. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29009. %@NL@%
  29010. %@NL@%
  29011. %@2@%A rape! a rape!  . . .  Yes, you have ravish'd justice; forced%@EH@%
  29012. her to do your pleasure.%@NL@%
  29013. %@CR:JUSTICWebster2  @%%@NL@%
  29014.                                                   John Webster (1580-1625)%@NL@%
  29015.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  29016. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29017. %@NL@%
  29018. %@NL@%
  29019. %@2@%A good parson once said that where mystery begins religion%@EH@%
  29020. ends. Cannot I say, as truly at least, of human laws, that where
  29021. mystery begins justice ends?%@NL@%
  29022. %@CR:JUSTICBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  29023.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  29024.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  29025. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29026. %@NL@%
  29027. %@NL@%
  29028. %@2@%Justice consists in doing no injury to men; decency in giving%@EH@%
  29029. them no offense.%@NL@%
  29030. %@CR:JUSTICCicero    @%%@NL@%
  29031.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  29032.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  29033. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29034. %@NL@%
  29035. %@NL@%
  29036. %@2@%Justice must tame, whom mercy cannot win.%@NL@%
  29037. %@CR:JUSTICSavile    @%%@NL@%
  29038.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  29039.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  29040. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29041. %@NL@%
  29042. %@NL@%
  29043. %@2@%When justice has spoken, humanity must have its turn.%@NL@%
  29044. %@CR:JUSTICVergniaud @%%@NL@%
  29045.                                               Pierre Vergniaud (1753-1793)%@NL@%
  29046.                                                French revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  29047. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29048. %@NL@%
  29049. %@NL@%
  29050. %@2@%A God all mercy is a God unjust.%@NL@%
  29051. %@CR:JUSTICYoung3    @%%@NL@%
  29052.                                                   Edward Young (1683-1765)%@NL@%
  29053.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  29054. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29055. %@NL@%
  29056. %@NL@%
  29057. %@2@%Justice is a concept. Muscle is the reality.%@NL@%
  29058. %@CR:JUSTICBlandford @%%@NL@%
  29059.                                                            Linda Blandford%@NL@%
  29060.                                        British correspondent, %@AI@%The Guardian%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29061. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29062. %@NL@%
  29063. %@NL@%
  29064. %@2@%Only a socially just country has the right to exist.%@NL@%
  29065. %@CR:JUSTICPopeJohnPa@%%@NL@%
  29066.                                                Pope John Paul II (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  29067. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29068. %@NL@%
  29069. %@NL@%
  29070. %@2@%Life %@AI@%is%@AE@% unfair.%@NL@%
  29071. %@CR:JUSTICFriedman  @%%@NL@%
  29072.                                                  Milton Friedman (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  29073.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  29074. %@AS@%                                                                   Justice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29075. %@NL@%
  29076. %@NL@%
  29077. %@NL@%
  29078. %@1@%%@AS@%Killing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29079. %@CR:KILLING         @%%@NL@%
  29080. %@2@%See:%@QR:Killing@%%@NL@%
  29081.      %@AB@%Assassination%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           34c73@%%@NL@%
  29082.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Clark%@AE@%%@BO:           4393b@%%@NL@%
  29083.      %@AB@%Murder%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1b30e0@%%@NL@%
  29084. %@NL@%
  29085. %@2@%Kill one man and you are a murderer. Kill millions and you%@EH@%
  29086. are a conqueror. Kill all and you are God.%@NL@%
  29087. %@CR:KILLINRostand2  @%%@NL@%
  29088.                                                   Jean Rostand (1894-1977)%@NL@%
  29089.                                                   French biologist, writer%@NL@%
  29090. %@AS@%                                                                   Killing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29091. %@NL@%
  29092. %@NL@%
  29093. %@2@%All creatures kill - there seems to be no exception. But%@EH@%
  29094. of the whole list man is the only one that kills for fun; he is
  29095. the only one that kills in malice, the only one that kills for
  29096. revenge.%@NL@%
  29097. %@CR:KILLINTwain     @%%@NL@%
  29098.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  29099.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29100. %@AS@%                                                                   Killing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29101. %@NL@%
  29102. %@NL@%
  29103. %@2@%To live without killing is a thought which could electrify%@EH@%
  29104. the world, if men were only capable of staying awake long enough
  29105. to let the thought soak in.%@NL@%
  29106. %@CR:KILLINMiller2   @%%@NL@%
  29107.                                                   Henry Miller (1891-1980)%@NL@%
  29108.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29109. %@AS@%                                                                   Killing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29110. %@NL@%
  29111. %@NL@%
  29112. %@NL@%
  29113. %@1@%%@AS@%Killjoys%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29114. %@CR:KILLJOYS        @%%@NL@%
  29115. %@2@%%@QR:Killjoys@%Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be%@EH@%
  29116. no more cakes and ale?%@NL@%
  29117. %@CR:KILLJOShakespear@%%@NL@%
  29118.                                              Sir Toby Belch, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29119.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  29120.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  29121. %@AS@%                                                                  Killjoys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29122. %@NL@%
  29123. %@NL@%
  29124.      %@2@%We'll show you too some elders of the town.%@NL@%
  29125.      Whose only joy is to put joy down.%@NL@%
  29126. %@CR:KILLJOHerbert1  @%%@NL@%
  29127.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  29128.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  29129. %@AS@%                                                                  Killjoys%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29130. %@NL@%
  29131. %@NL@%
  29132. %@NL@%
  29133. %@1@%%@AS@%Kindness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29134. %@CR:KINDNESS        @%%@NL@%
  29135. %@2@%%@QR:Kindness@%He was so benevolent, so merciful a man that, in his mistaken%@EH@%
  29136. passion, he would have held an umbrella over a duck in a shower
  29137. of rain.%@NL@%
  29138. %@CR:KINDNEJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  29139.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  29140.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  29141. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29142. %@NL@%
  29143. %@NL@%
  29144. %@2@%If you're naturally kind you attract a lot of people you don't%@EH@%
  29145. like.%@NL@%
  29146. %@CR:KINDNEFeather   @%%@NL@%
  29147.                                                  William Feather (b. 1889)%@NL@%
  29148.                                                       American businessman%@NL@%
  29149. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29150. %@NL@%
  29151. %@NL@%
  29152. %@2@%When kindness has left people, even for a few moments, we become%@EH@%
  29153. afraid of them as if their reason has left them.%@NL@%
  29154. %@CR:KINDNECather    @%%@NL@%
  29155.                                                   Willa Cather (1876-1947)%@NL@%
  29156.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29157. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29158. %@NL@%
  29159. %@NL@%
  29160. %@2@%Benevolent people are very apt to be one-sided and fussy, and%@EH@%
  29161. not of the sweetest temper if others will not be good and happy
  29162. in their way.%@NL@%
  29163. %@CR:KINDNEHelps     @%%@NL@%
  29164.                                               Sir Arthur Helps (1813-1875)%@NL@%
  29165.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  29166. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29167. %@NL@%
  29168. %@NL@%
  29169. %@2@%True kindness presupposes the faculty of imagining as one's%@EH@%
  29170. own the suffering and joy of others.%@NL@%
  29171. %@CR:KINDNEGide      @%%@NL@%
  29172.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  29173.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  29174. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29175. %@NL@%
  29176. %@NL@%
  29177. %@2@%Do not ask me to be kind; just ask me to act as though I were.%@NL@%
  29178. %@CR:KINDNERenard    @%%@NL@%
  29179.                                                   Jules Renard (1864-1910)%@NL@%
  29180.                                                French novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  29181. %@AS@%                                                                  Kindness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29182. %@NL@%
  29183. %@NL@%
  29184. %@NL@%
  29185. %@1@%%@AS@%Kissing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29186. %@CR:KISSING         @%%@NL@%
  29187. %@2@%%@QR:Kissing@%The sound of a kiss is not so loud as that of a cannon, but%@EH@%
  29188. its echo lasts a great deal longer.%@NL@%
  29189. %@CR:KISSINHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  29190.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  29191.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  29192. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29193. %@NL@%
  29194. %@NL@%
  29195.      %@2@%He took the bride about the neck%@NL@%
  29196.      And kiss'd her lips with such a clamorous smack%@NL@%
  29197.      That at the parting all the church did echo.%@NL@%
  29198. %@CR:KISSINShakespear@%%@NL@%
  29199.                             Gremio (of Petruchio), %@AI@%The Taming of the Shrew%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29200.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  29201.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  29202. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29203. %@NL@%
  29204. %@NL@%
  29205.      %@2@%But his kiss was so sweet,%@NL@%
  29206.      And so closely he pressed,%@NL@%
  29207.      That I languished and pined%@NL@%
  29208.      Till I granted the rest.%@NL@%
  29209. %@CR:KISSINGay       @%%@NL@%
  29210.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  29211.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  29212. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29213. %@NL@%
  29214. %@NL@%
  29215. %@2@%He kissed likewise the maid in the kitchen, and seemed upon%@EH@%
  29216. the whole a most loving, kissing, kind-hearted gentleman.%@NL@%
  29217. %@CR:KISSINCowper    @%%@NL@%
  29218.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  29219.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  29220. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29221. %@NL@%
  29222. %@NL@%
  29223. %@2@%The kiss originated when the first male reptile licked the%@EH@%
  29224. first female reptile, implying in a subtle, complimentary way that
  29225. she was as succulent as the small reptile he had for dinner the
  29226. night before.%@NL@%
  29227. %@CR:KISSINFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  29228.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  29229.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29230. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29231. %@NL@%
  29232. %@NL@%
  29233. %@2@%When women kiss, it always reminds me of prize-fighters shaking%@EH@%
  29234. hands.%@NL@%
  29235. %@CR:KISSINMencken   @%%@NL@%
  29236.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  29237.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  29238. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29239. %@NL@%
  29240. %@NL@%
  29241. %@2@%What lies lurk in kisses.%@NL@%
  29242. %@CR:KISSINHeine     @%%@NL@%
  29243.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  29244.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  29245. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29246. %@NL@%
  29247. %@NL@%
  29248. %@2@%A kiss can be a comma, a question mark or an exclamation point.%@EH@%
  29249. That's basic spelling that every woman ought to know.%@NL@%
  29250. %@CR:KISSINMistinguet@%%@NL@%
  29251.                                                    Mistinguett (1873-1956)%@NL@%
  29252.                                                      French dancer, singer%@NL@%
  29253. %@AS@%                                                                   Kissing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29254. %@NL@%
  29255. %@NL@%
  29256. %@NL@%
  29257. %@1@%%@AS@%Knowledge%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29258. %@CR:KNOWLEDGE       @%%@NL@%
  29259. %@2@%See:%@QR:Knowledge@%%@NL@%
  29260.      Learning: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          171e70@%; %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          171750@%%@NL@%
  29261.      Science: %@AB@%Spencer%@AE@%%@BO:          23c76f@%%@NL@%
  29262. %@NL@%
  29263. %@2@%The fruit of the tree of knowledge always drives man from some%@EH@%
  29264. paradise or other.%@NL@%
  29265. %@CR:KNOWLEInge      @%%@NL@%
  29266.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  29267.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  29268. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29269. %@NL@%
  29270. %@NL@%
  29271.      %@2@%For lust of knowing what should not be known,%@NL@%
  29272.      We take the Golden Road to%@NL@%
  29273.      Samarkand.%@NL@%
  29274. %@CR:KNOWLEFlecker   @%%@NL@%
  29275.                                            James Elroy Flecker (1884-1915)%@NL@%
  29276.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  29277. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29278. %@NL@%
  29279. %@NL@%
  29280. %@2@%Woman first discovered that the fruit of knowledge was good%@EH@%
  29281. to look upon, good to eat, and fairly digestible; and for the example
  29282. of eating, sensible men are all grateful.%@NL@%
  29283. %@CR:KNOWLEHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  29284.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  29285.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29286. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29287. %@NL@%
  29288. %@NL@%
  29289. %@2@%Children with Hyacinth's temperament don't know better as they%@EH@%
  29290. grow older; they merely know more.%@NL@%
  29291. %@CR:KNOWLEMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  29292.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  29293.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  29294. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29295. %@NL@%
  29296. %@NL@%
  29297. %@2@%The important thing is not to know more than all men, but to%@EH@%
  29298. know more at each moment than any particular man.%@NL@%
  29299. %@CR:KNOWLEGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  29300.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  29301.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  29302. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29303. %@NL@%
  29304. %@NL@%
  29305. %@2@%The struggling for knowledge has a pleasure in it like that%@EH@%
  29306. of wrestling with a fine woman.%@NL@%
  29307. %@CR:KNOWLESavile    @%%@NL@%
  29308.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  29309.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  29310. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29311. %@NL@%
  29312. %@NL@%
  29313. %@2@%People of quality know everything without ever having learned%@EH@%
  29314. anything.%@NL@%
  29315. %@CR:KNOWLEMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  29316.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  29317.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  29318. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29319. %@NL@%
  29320. %@NL@%
  29321. %@2@%We must make up our minds to be ignorant of much, if we would%@EH@%
  29322. know anything.%@NL@%
  29323. %@CR:KNOWLENewman1   @%%@NL@%
  29324.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  29325.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  29326. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29327. %@NL@%
  29328. %@NL@%
  29329. %@2@%The longer the island of knowledge, the longer the shoreline%@EH@%
  29330. of wonder.%@NL@%
  29331. %@CR:KNOWLESockman   @%%@NL@%
  29332.                                               Ralph W. Sockman (1889-1970)%@NL@%
  29333.                                                         American clergyman%@NL@%
  29334. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29335. %@NL@%
  29336. %@NL@%
  29337. %@2@%It gets harder the more you know. Because the more you find%@EH@%
  29338. out the uglier everything seems.%@NL@%
  29339. %@CR:KNOWLEZappa     @%%@NL@%
  29340.                                                      Frank Zappa (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  29341.                                                     American rock musician%@NL@%
  29342. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29343. %@NL@%
  29344. %@NL@%
  29345. %@2@%To know all is not to forgive all. It is to despise everybody.%@NL@%
  29346. %@CR:KNOWLECrisp     @%%@NL@%
  29347.                                                    Quentin Crisp (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  29348.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  29349. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29350. %@NL@%
  29351. %@NL@%
  29352. %@2@%Knowledge is power, if you know it about the right person.%@NL@%
  29353. %@CR:KNOWLEMumford1  @%%@NL@%
  29354.                                            Ethel Watts Mumford (1878-1940)%@NL@%
  29355.                                         American novelist, humorous writer%@NL@%
  29356. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29357. %@NL@%
  29358. %@NL@%
  29359. %@2@%If ye had not ploughed with my heifer, ye had not found out%@EH@%
  29360. my riddle.%@NL@%
  29361. %@CR:KNOWLEBibleJudge@%%@NL@%
  29362.                                                              Bible, Judges%@NL@%
  29363. %@AS@%                                                                 Knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29364. %@NL@%
  29365. %@NL@%
  29366. %@NL@%
  29367. %@1@%%@AS@%Ladies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29368. %@CR:LADIES          @%%@NL@%
  29369. %@2@%%@QR:Ladies@%A lady is a woman who makes a man behave like a gentleman.%@NL@%
  29370. %@CR:LADIESLynes     @%%@NL@%
  29371.                                                    Russell Lynes (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  29372.                                                    American editor, critic%@NL@%
  29373. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29374. %@NL@%
  29375. %@NL@%
  29376. %@2@%To behold her is an immediate check to loose behaviour; to%@EH@%
  29377. love her is a liberal education.%@NL@%
  29378. %@CR:LADIESSteele    @%%@NL@%
  29379.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  29380.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  29381. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29382. %@NL@%
  29383. %@NL@%
  29384.      %@2@%Ermined and minked and Persian- lambed,%@NL@%
  29385.      Be-puffed (be-painted, too, alas!)%@NL@%
  29386.      Be-decked, be-diamonded -  be-damned!%@NL@%
  29387.      The Women of the Better%@NL@%
  29388.      Class.%@NL@%
  29389. %@CR:LADIESHerford   @%%@NL@%
  29390.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  29391.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  29392. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29393. %@NL@%
  29394. %@NL@%
  29395. %@2@%It was not a bosom to repose upon, but it was a capital bosom%@EH@%
  29396. to hang jewels upon.%@NL@%
  29397. %@CR:LADIESDickens   @%%@NL@%
  29398.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  29399.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  29400. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29401. %@NL@%
  29402. %@NL@%
  29403. %@2@%A lady is one who never shows her underwear unintentionally.%@NL@%
  29404. %@CR:LADIESDay3      @%%@NL@%
  29405.                                                      Lillian Day (b. 1893)%@NL@%
  29406.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  29407. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29408. %@NL@%
  29409. %@NL@%
  29410. %@2@% . . .  A lady is nothing very specific. One man's lady is another%@EH@%
  29411. man's woman; sometimes, one man's lady is another man's wife. Definitions
  29412. overlap but they almost never coincide.%@NL@%
  29413. %@CR:LADIESLynes     @%%@NL@%
  29414.                                                    Russell Lynes (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  29415.                                                    American editor, critic%@NL@%
  29416. %@AS@%                                                                    Ladies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29417. %@NL@%
  29418. %@NL@%
  29419. %@NL@%
  29420. %@1@%%@AS@%Landlords%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29421. %@CR:LANDLORDS       @%%@NL@%
  29422. %@2@%%@QR:Landlords@%With one hand he put a penny in the urn of poverty, and with%@EH@%
  29423. the other took a shilling out.%@NL@%
  29424. %@CR:LANDLOPollok    @%%@NL@%
  29425.                                             Rev. Robert Pollok (1798-1827)%@NL@%
  29426.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  29427. %@AS@%                                                                 Landlords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29428. %@NL@%
  29429. %@NL@%
  29430.      %@2@%They have given us into the hands of the new unhappy lords,%@NL@%
  29431.      Lords without anger and honour, who dare not carry their swords.%@NL@%
  29432.      They fight by shuffling papers; they have bright dead alien eyes;%@NL@%
  29433.      They look at our labour and laughter as a tired man looks at flies.%@NL@%
  29434. %@CR:LANDLOChesterton@%%@NL@%
  29435.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  29436.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  29437. %@AS@%                                                                 Landlords%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29438. %@NL@%
  29439. %@NL@%
  29440. %@NL@%
  29441. %@1@%%@AS@%Language%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29442. %@CR:LANGUAGE        @%%@NL@%
  29443. %@2@%See:%@QR:Language@%%@NL@%
  29444.      Speech: %@AB@%Jonson%@AE@%%@BO:          265280@%%@NL@%
  29445. %@NL@%
  29446. %@2@%Nothing is more common than for men to think that because they%@EH@%
  29447. are familiar with words they understand the ideas they stand for.%@NL@%
  29448. %@CR:LANGUANewman1   @%%@NL@%
  29449.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  29450.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  29451. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29452. %@NL@%
  29453. %@NL@%
  29454. %@2@%One of the difficulties in the language is that all our words%@EH@%
  29455. from loose using have lost their edge.%@NL@%
  29456. %@CR:LANGUAHemingway @%%@NL@%
  29457.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  29458.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  29459. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29460. %@NL@%
  29461. %@NL@%
  29462. %@2@%If thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought.%@NL@%
  29463. %@CR:LANGUAOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  29464.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  29465.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  29466. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29467. %@NL@%
  29468. %@NL@%
  29469. %@2@%In the end we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible,%@EH@%
  29470. because there will be no words in which to express it.%@NL@%
  29471. %@CR:LANGUAOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  29472.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  29473.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  29474. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29475. %@NL@%
  29476. %@NL@%
  29477. %@2@%Language is a uniquely human characteristic. Each person has%@EH@%
  29478. programmed into his genes a faculty called universal grammar.%@NL@%
  29479. %@CR:LANGUAChomsky   @%%@NL@%
  29480.                                                     Noam Chomsky (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  29481.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  29482. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29483. %@NL@%
  29484. %@NL@%
  29485. %@2@%Broadly speaking, the short words are the best, and the old%@EH@%
  29486. words best of all.%@NL@%
  29487. %@CR:LANGUAChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  29488.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  29489.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  29490. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29491. %@NL@%
  29492. %@NL@%
  29493. %@2@%I speak Spanish to God, Italian to women, French to men and%@EH@%
  29494. German to my horse.%@NL@%
  29495. %@CR:LANGUAHolyRomanE@%%@NL@%
  29496.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  29497.                                   Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (1500-1558)%@NL@%
  29498. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29499. %@NL@%
  29500. %@NL@%
  29501. %@2@%The more one thinks about Latin the easier it is to see why%@EH@%
  29502. the Roman Empire fell.%@NL@%
  29503. %@CR:LANGUADerby2    @%%@NL@%
  29504.                                                       Lord Derby (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  29505.                                                      British administrator%@NL@%
  29506. %@AS@%                                                                  Language%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29507. %@NL@%
  29508. %@NL@%
  29509. %@NL@%
  29510. %@1@%%@AS@%Laughter%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29511. %@CR:LAUGHTER        @%%@NL@%
  29512. %@2@%See:%@QR:Laughter@%%@NL@%
  29513.      Farewells: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           e5f5a@%%@NL@%
  29514.      Fools: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:           f5ea8@%%@NL@%
  29515.      Jealousy: %@AB@%Sagan%@AE@%%@BO:          15dc0a@%%@NL@%
  29516.      Teeth: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:          282bd1@%%@NL@%
  29517.      Wit: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          2b78bc@%%@NL@%
  29518. %@NL@%
  29519. %@2@%If we may believe our logicians, man is distinguished from%@EH@%
  29520. all other creatures by the faculty of laughter.%@NL@%
  29521. %@CR:LAUGHTAddison   @%%@NL@%
  29522.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  29523.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  29524. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29525. %@NL@%
  29526. %@NL@%
  29527. %@2@%In my mind, there is nothing so illiberal and so ill-bred,%@EH@%
  29528. as audible laughter.%@NL@%
  29529. %@CR:LAUGHTChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  29530.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  29531.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  29532. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29533. %@NL@%
  29534. %@NL@%
  29535. %@2@%I hasten to laugh at everything for fear of being obliged to%@EH@%
  29536. weep at it.%@NL@%
  29537. %@CR:LAUGHTBeaumarcha@%%@NL@%
  29538.                                         Pierre de Beaumarchais (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  29539.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  29540. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29541. %@NL@%
  29542. %@NL@%
  29543. %@2@%What provokes you to risibility, Sir? Have I said anything%@EH@%
  29544. that you understand? Then I ask pardon of the rest of the company.%@NL@%
  29545. %@CR:LAUGHTJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  29546.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  29547.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  29548. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29549. %@NL@%
  29550. %@NL@%
  29551. %@2@%Nothing can confound a wise man more than laughter from a dunce.%@NL@%
  29552. %@CR:LAUGHTByron2    @%%@NL@%
  29553.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  29554.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  29555. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29556. %@NL@%
  29557. %@NL@%
  29558. %@2@%I believe they talked of me, for they laughed consumedly.%@NL@%
  29559. %@CR:LAUGHTFarquhar  @%%@NL@%
  29560.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  29561.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  29562. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29563. %@NL@%
  29564. %@NL@%
  29565. %@2@%The vulgar often laugh, but never smile, whereas well-bred%@EH@%
  29566. people often smile, but seldom laugh.%@NL@%
  29567. %@CR:LAUGHTChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  29568.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  29569.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  29570. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29571. %@NL@%
  29572. %@NL@%
  29573. %@2@%A thing derided is a thing dead; a laughing man is stronger%@EH@%
  29574. than a suffering man.%@NL@%
  29575. %@CR:LAUGHTFlaubert  @%%@NL@%
  29576.                                               Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880)%@NL@%
  29577.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  29578. %@AS@%                                                                  Laughter%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29579. %@NL@%
  29580. %@NL@%
  29581. %@NL@%
  29582. %@1@%%@AS@%The Law%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29583. %@CR:THELAW          @%%@NL@%
  29584. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Law@%%@NL@%
  29585.      Business: %@AB@%Young%@AE@%%@BO:           4e4a9@%%@NL@%
  29586. %@NL@%
  29587. %@2@%Who thinks the Law has anything to do with Justice? It's what%@EH@%
  29588. we have because we can't have Justice.%@NL@%
  29589. %@CR:THELAWMcIlvanney@%%@NL@%
  29590.                                               William McIlvanney (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  29591.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  29592. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29593. %@NL@%
  29594. %@NL@%
  29595. %@2@%One of the greatest delusions in the world is the hope that%@EH@%
  29596. the evils of this world can be cured by legislation.%@NL@%
  29597. %@CR:THELAWReed      @%%@NL@%
  29598.                                                 Thomas B. Reed (1839-1902)%@NL@%
  29599.                                                American lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  29600. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29601. %@NL@%
  29602. %@NL@%
  29603. %@2@%An unpaid legislature and an unpaid magistracy are institutions%@EH@%
  29604. essentially aristocratic - contrivances for keeping legislature
  29605. and judicature exclusively in the hands of those who can afford
  29606. to serve without pay.%@NL@%
  29607. %@CR:THELAWMill      @%%@NL@%
  29608.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  29609.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  29610. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29611. %@NL@%
  29612. %@NL@%
  29613. %@2@%The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike%@EH@%
  29614. to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets or steal bread.%@NL@%
  29615. %@CR:THELAWFrance    @%%@NL@%
  29616.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  29617.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  29618. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29619. %@NL@%
  29620. %@NL@%
  29621. %@2@%Law grinds the poor, and rich men rule the law.%@NL@%
  29622. %@CR:THELAWGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  29623.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  29624.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  29625. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29626. %@NL@%
  29627. %@NL@%
  29628. %@2@%Without law no little souls fresh from God would be branded%@EH@%
  29629. illegitimate as soon as they reach earth.%@NL@%
  29630. %@CR:THELAWHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  29631.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  29632.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  29633. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29634. %@NL@%
  29635. %@NL@%
  29636. %@2@%The law is sort of hocus-pocus science, that smiles in yer%@EH@%
  29637. face while it picks yer pocket.%@NL@%
  29638. %@CR:THELAWMacklin   @%%@NL@%
  29639.                                                Charles Macklin (1697-1797)%@NL@%
  29640.                                                     Irish actor, dramatist%@NL@%
  29641. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29642. %@NL@%
  29643. %@NL@%
  29644. %@2@%Laws, like houses, lean on one another.%@NL@%
  29645. %@CR:THELAWBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  29646.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  29647.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  29648. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29649. %@NL@%
  29650. %@NL@%
  29651. %@2@%If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect%@EH@%
  29652. for the law.%@NL@%
  29653. %@CR:THELAWChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  29654.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  29655.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  29656. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29657. %@NL@%
  29658. %@NL@%
  29659. %@2@%I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws%@EH@%
  29660. so effective as their stringent execution.%@NL@%
  29661. %@CR:THELAWGrant2    @%%@NL@%
  29662.                                               Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885)%@NL@%
  29663.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  29664. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29665. %@NL@%
  29666. %@NL@%
  29667. %@2@%I've been told that since the beginning of civilization, millions%@EH@%
  29668. and millions of laws have not improved on the Ten Commandments
  29669. one bit.%@NL@%
  29670. %@CR:THELAWReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  29671.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  29672.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  29673. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29674. %@NL@%
  29675. %@NL@%
  29676. %@2@%Laws are dumb in times of war.%@NL@%
  29677. %@CR:THELAWCicero    @%%@NL@%
  29678.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  29679.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  29680. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29681. %@NL@%
  29682. %@NL@%
  29683. %@2@%The law often allows what honour forbids.%@NL@%
  29684. %@CR:THELAWSaurin    @%%@NL@%
  29685.                                                 William Saurin (1757-1839)%@NL@%
  29686.                                                           Irish politician%@NL@%
  29687. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29688. %@NL@%
  29689. %@NL@%
  29690. %@2@%Courts of law, and all the paraphernalia and folly of law  . . . %@EH@%
  29691. cannot be found in a rational state of society.%@NL@%
  29692. %@CR:THELAWOwen1     @%%@NL@%
  29693.                                                    Robert Owen (1771-1858)%@NL@%
  29694.                                                      Welsh social reformer%@NL@%
  29695. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29696. %@NL@%
  29697. %@NL@%
  29698. %@2@%The good of the people is the greatest law.%@NL@%
  29699. %@CR:THELAWCicero    @%%@NL@%
  29700.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  29701.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  29702. %@AS@%                                                                   The Law%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29703. %@NL@%
  29704. %@NL@%
  29705. %@NL@%
  29706. %@1@%%@AS@%Lawyers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29707. %@CR:LAWYERS         @%%@NL@%
  29708. %@2@%%@QR:Lawyers@%The only road to the highest stations in this country is that%@EH@%
  29709. of the law.%@NL@%
  29710. %@CR:LAWYERJones2    @%%@NL@%
  29711.                                              Sir William Jones (1746-1794)%@NL@%
  29712.                                                English orientalist, jurist%@NL@%
  29713. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29714. %@NL@%
  29715. %@NL@%
  29716. %@2@%Lawyers know life practically. A bookish man should always%@EH@%
  29717. have them to converse with.%@NL@%
  29718. %@CR:LAWYERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  29719.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  29720.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  29721. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29722. %@NL@%
  29723. %@NL@%
  29724. %@2@%A lawyer without history or literature is a mechanic, a mere%@EH@%
  29725. working mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he may
  29726. venture to call himself an architect.%@NL@%
  29727. %@CR:LAWYERScott4    @%%@NL@%
  29728.                                               Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)%@NL@%
  29729.                                                    Scottish novelist, poet%@NL@%
  29730. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29731. %@NL@%
  29732. %@NL@%
  29733. %@2@%Whenever you wish to do anything against the law, Cicely, always%@EH@%
  29734. consult a good solicitor first.%@NL@%
  29735. %@CR:LAWYERShaw      @%%@NL@%
  29736.                                Sir Howard, %@AI@%Captain Brassbound's Conversion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29737.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  29738.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  29739. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29740. %@NL@%
  29741. %@NL@%
  29742. %@2@%I once heard you say that it took you twenty years to recover%@EH@%
  29743. from your legal training - from the habit of mind that is bent
  29744. on making out a case rather than on seeing the large facts of
  29745. a situation in their proportion.%@NL@%
  29746. %@CR:LAWYERPage      @%%@NL@%
  29747.                                                     W. H. Page (1855-1918)%@NL@%
  29748.                                               American diplomat, publisher%@NL@%
  29749.                                                          to Woodrow Wilson%@NL@%
  29750. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29751. %@NL@%
  29752. %@NL@%
  29753. %@2@%A solicitor is a man who calls in a person he doesn't know%@EH@%
  29754. to sign a contract he hasn't seen to buy property he doesn't want
  29755. with money he hasn't got.%@NL@%
  29756. %@CR:LAWYERBateson   @%%@NL@%
  29757.                                           Sir Dingwall Bateson (1898-1967)%@NL@%
  29758.                                    president of the Law Society, 1952-1953%@NL@%
  29759. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29760. %@NL@%
  29761. %@NL@%
  29762. %@2@%A society of men bred up from their youth in the art of proving%@EH@%
  29763. by words multiplied for the purpose that white is black and black
  29764. is white according as they are paid.%@NL@%
  29765. %@CR:LAWYERSwift     @%%@NL@%
  29766.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  29767.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  29768. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29769. %@NL@%
  29770. %@NL@%
  29771. %@2@%There is the prostitute, one who lets out her body for hire.%@EH@%
  29772. A dreadful thing, but are we ourselves so innocent? Do not lawyers,
  29773. for instance, let out their brains for hire?%@NL@%
  29774. %@CR:LAWYERBrabazon  @%%@NL@%
  29775.                                                  Lord Brabazon (1884-1964)%@NL@%
  29776.                                      British motorist, aviator, politician%@NL@%
  29777. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29778. %@NL@%
  29779. %@NL@%
  29780. %@2@%Woe unto you, lawyers! For ye have taken away the key of knowledge:%@EH@%
  29781. ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye
  29782. hindered.%@NL@%
  29783. %@CR:LAWYERJesus     @%%@NL@%
  29784.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  29785.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  29786. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29787. %@NL@%
  29788. %@NL@%
  29789. %@2@%Bluster, sputter, question, cavil; but be sure your argument%@EH@%
  29790. is intricate enough to confound the court.%@NL@%
  29791. %@CR:LAWYERWycherley @%%@NL@%
  29792.                                              William Wycherley (1640-1716)%@NL@%
  29793.                                                         English dramatist
  29794. %@NL@%
  29795. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29796. %@NL@%
  29797. %@NL@%
  29798. %@2@%Lawyers' are like lovers' quarrels.%@NL@%
  29799. %@CR:LAWYERCampbell1 @%%@NL@%
  29800.                                                  Lord Campbell (1779-1861)%@NL@%
  29801.                                                             English jurist%@NL@%
  29802. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29803. %@NL@%
  29804. %@NL@%
  29805. %@2@%There are few grave legal questions involved in a poor estate.%@NL@%
  29806. %@CR:LAWYERHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  29807.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  29808.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  29809. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29810. %@NL@%
  29811. %@NL@%
  29812. %@2@%I think we may class the lawyer in the natural history of monsters.%@NL@%
  29813. %@CR:LAWYERKeats     @%%@NL@%
  29814.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  29815.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  29816. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29817. %@NL@%
  29818. %@NL@%
  29819. %@2@%I really went to the Bar because I thought it would be easier%@EH@%
  29820. to go on the stage after failing at the Bar than to go to the Bar
  29821. after failing on the stage.%@NL@%
  29822. %@CR:LAWYERGardiner  @%%@NL@%
  29823.                                                    Lord Gardiner (b. 1900)%@NL@%
  29824.                                    former Lord Chancellor of Great Britain%@NL@%
  29825. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29826. %@NL@%
  29827. %@NL@%
  29828. %@2@%If there were no bad people there would be no good lawyers.%@NL@%
  29829. %@CR:LAWYERDickens   @%%@NL@%
  29830.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  29831.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  29832. %@AS@%                                                                   Lawyers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29833. %@NL@%
  29834. %@NL@%
  29835. %@NL@%
  29836. %@1@%%@AS@%Leadership%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29837. %@CR:LEADERSHIP      @%%@NL@%
  29838. %@2@%See:%@QR:Leadership@%%@NL@%
  29839.      Generals: %@AB@%Defoe%@AE@%%@BO:          105829@%%@NL@%
  29840.      Mobs: %@AB@%Ledru-Rollin%@AE@%%@BO:          1a9a95@%%@NL@%
  29841.      Obedience: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:          1c19e8@%%@NL@%
  29842.      Political Parties: %@AB@%Rogers%@AE@%%@BO:          1e9ed0@%%@NL@%
  29843. %@NL@%
  29844. %@2@%It is a fine thing to command, even if it be only a herd of%@EH@%
  29845. cattle.%@NL@%
  29846. %@CR:LEADERCervantes @%%@NL@%
  29847.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  29848.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  29849. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29850. %@NL@%
  29851. %@NL@%
  29852.      %@2@%To be%@NL@%
  29853.      Omnipotent but friendless is to reign.%@NL@%
  29854. %@CR:LEADERShelley   @%%@NL@%
  29855.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  29856.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  29857. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29858. %@NL@%
  29859. %@NL@%
  29860. %@2@%To be a leader of men one must turn one's back on men.%@NL@%
  29861. %@CR:LEADEREllis     @%%@NL@%
  29862.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  29863.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  29864. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29865. %@NL@%
  29866. %@NL@%
  29867. %@2@%Charlatanism of some degree is indispensable to effective leadership.%@NL@%
  29868. %@CR:LEADERHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  29869.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  29870.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  29871. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29872. %@NL@%
  29873. %@NL@%
  29874. %@2@%Only he can command who has the courage and initiative to disobey.%@NL@%
  29875. %@CR:LEADERMcDougall @%%@NL@%
  29876.                                              William McDougall (1871-1938)%@NL@%
  29877.                                                       British psychologist%@NL@%
  29878. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29879. %@NL@%
  29880. %@NL@%
  29881. %@2@%We were not born to sue, but to command.%@NL@%
  29882. %@CR:LEADERShakespear@%%@NL@%
  29883.                                              King Richard, %@AI@%King Richard II%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29884.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  29885.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  29886. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29887. %@NL@%
  29888. %@NL@%
  29889. %@2@%It is always a great mistake to command when you are not sure%@EH@%
  29890. you will be obeyed.%@NL@%
  29891. %@CR:LEADERComtedeMir@%%@NL@%
  29892.                                      Honore, Comte de Mirabeau (1749-1791)%@NL@%
  29893.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  29894. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29895. %@NL@%
  29896. %@NL@%
  29897. %@2@%Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others.%@NL@%
  29898. %@CR:LEADERStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  29899.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  29900.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  29901. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29902. %@NL@%
  29903. %@NL@%
  29904. %@2@%Follow me if I advance! Kill me if I retreat! Revenge me if%@EH@%
  29905. I die!%@NL@%
  29906. %@CR:LEADERNgoDinhDie@%%@NL@%
  29907.                                                    Ngo Dinh Diem (d. 1963)%@NL@%
  29908.                                     on becoming president of Vietnam, 1954%@NL@%
  29909. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29910. %@NL@%
  29911. %@NL@%
  29912. %@2@%The efficiency of the truly national leader consists primarily%@EH@%
  29913. in preventing the division of the attention of a people, and always
  29914. in concentrating it on a single enemy.%@NL@%
  29915. %@CR:LEADERHitler    @%%@NL@%
  29916.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  29917.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  29918. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29919. %@NL@%
  29920. %@NL@%
  29921. %@2@%For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare%@EH@%
  29922. himself to the battle?%@NL@%
  29923. %@CR:LEADERSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  29924.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  29925.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  29926. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29927. %@NL@%
  29928. %@NL@%
  29929. %@2@%The wise man who is not heeded is counted a fool, and the fool%@EH@%
  29930. who proclaims the general folly first and loudest passes for a
  29931. prophet and Fuhrer, and sometimes it is luckily the other way
  29932. round as well, or else mankind would long since have perished of
  29933. stupidity.%@NL@%
  29934. %@CR:LEADERJung      @%%@NL@%
  29935.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  29936.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  29937. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29938. %@NL@%
  29939. %@NL@%
  29940. %@2@%I am a lone monk walking the world with a leaky umbrella.%@NL@%
  29941. %@CR:LEADERMaoZedong @%%@NL@%
  29942.                                                     Mao Zedong (1893-1976)%@NL@%
  29943.                                  founder of the People's Republic of China%@NL@%
  29944. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29945. %@NL@%
  29946. %@NL@%
  29947. %@2@%What is the throne? A bit of wood, gilt and draped. I am the%@EH@%
  29948. state. Here it is I alone who represent the people. Even if I had
  29949. done wrong you should not have accused me publicly. People wash
  29950. their dirty linen at home. France has more need of me than I of
  29951. France.%@NL@%
  29952. %@CR:LEADERNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  29953.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  29954.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  29955.                                               to the French Senate in 1814%@NL@%
  29956. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29957. %@NL@%
  29958. %@NL@%
  29959. %@2@%In Poland everyone is a leader.%@NL@%
  29960. %@CR:LEADERWalesa    @%%@NL@%
  29961.                                                      Lech Walesa (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  29962.                                                   Polish Solidarity leader%@NL@%
  29963. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29964. %@NL@%
  29965. %@NL@%
  29966. %@2@%We want a few mad people now. See where the sane ones have%@EH@%
  29967. landed us!%@NL@%
  29968. %@CR:LEADERShaw      @%%@NL@%
  29969.                                                      Poulengey, %@AI@%Saint Joan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29970.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  29971.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  29972. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29973. %@NL@%
  29974. %@NL@%
  29975. %@2@%No one would have doubted his ability to reign had he never%@EH@%
  29976. been emperor.%@NL@%
  29977. %@CR:LEADERTacitus   @%%@NL@%
  29978.                                                     Tacitus (c. 55-c. 120)%@NL@%
  29979.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  29980.                                                           of Emperor Galba%@NL@%
  29981. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29982. %@NL@%
  29983. %@NL@%
  29984. %@2@%So long as the people of any country place their hopes of political%@EH@%
  29985. salvation %@AI@%in leadership of any description,%@AE@% so long will disappointment
  29986. attend them.%@NL@%
  29987. %@CR:LEADERLovett    @%%@NL@%
  29988.                                                 William Lovett (1800-1877)%@NL@%
  29989.                                                    English Chartist leader%@NL@%
  29990. %@AS@%                                                                Leadership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  29991. %@NL@%
  29992. %@NL@%
  29993. %@NL@%
  29994. %@1@%%@AS@%Learning%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  29995. %@CR:LEARNING        @%%@NL@%
  29996. %@2@%See:%@QR:Learning@%%@NL@%
  29997.      Quotations: %@AB@%Young%@AE@%%@BO:          215b7c@%%@NL@%
  29998.      Reading: %@AB@%Penn%@AE@%%@BO:          219891@%%@NL@%
  29999.      %@AB@%Scholarship%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          238a93@%%@NL@%
  30000.      Shakespeare: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:          24ff4e@%%@NL@%
  30001. %@NL@%
  30002.      %@2@%A little learning is a dangerous thing;%@NL@%
  30003.      Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring:%@NL@%
  30004.      There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,%@NL@%
  30005.      And drinking largely sobers us again.%@NL@%
  30006. %@CR:LEARNIPope      @%%@NL@%
  30007.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  30008.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30009. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30010. %@NL@%
  30011. %@NL@%
  30012. %@2@%A learned fool is one who has read everything, and simply remembered%@EH@%
  30013. it.%@NL@%
  30014. %@CR:LEARNIBillings  @%%@NL@%
  30015.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  30016.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  30017. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30018. %@NL@%
  30019. %@NL@%
  30020. %@2@%His knowledge of books had in some degree diminished his knowledge%@EH@%
  30021. of the world.%@NL@%
  30022. %@CR:LEARNIShenstone @%%@NL@%
  30023.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  30024.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30025. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30026. %@NL@%
  30027. %@NL@%
  30028. %@2@%Learning. The kind of ignorance distinguishing the studious.%@NL@%
  30029. %@CR:LEARNIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  30030.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  30031.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30032. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30033. %@NL@%
  30034. %@NL@%
  30035. %@2@%No person ever knew so much that was so little of purpose.%@NL@%
  30036. %@CR:LEARNIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  30037.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  30038.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  30039.                                                                of Macaulay%@NL@%
  30040. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30041. %@NL@%
  30042. %@NL@%
  30043. %@2@%He not only overflowed with learning, but stood in the slop.%@NL@%
  30044. %@CR:LEARNISmith8    @%%@NL@%
  30045.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  30046.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  30047.                                           of Macaulay as conversationalist%@NL@%
  30048. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30049. %@NL@%
  30050. %@NL@%
  30051. %@2@%All other men are specialists, but his specialism is omniscience.%@NL@%
  30052. %@CR:LEARNIDoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  30053.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  30054.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30055.                                                          of Mycroft Holmes%@NL@%
  30056. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30057. %@NL@%
  30058. %@NL@%
  30059. %@2@%A learned blockhead is a greater blockhead than an ignorant%@EH@%
  30060. one.%@NL@%
  30061. %@CR:LEARNIFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  30062.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  30063.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  30064. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30065. %@NL@%
  30066. %@NL@%
  30067. %@2@%Wear your learning, like your watch, in a private pocket: and%@EH@%
  30068. do not merely pull it out and strike it; merely to show that you
  30069. have one.%@NL@%
  30070. %@CR:LEARNIChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  30071.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  30072.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  30073. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30074. %@NL@%
  30075. %@NL@%
  30076. %@2@%Pedantry is the dotage of knowledge.%@NL@%
  30077. %@CR:LEARNIJackson3  @%%@NL@%
  30078.                                               Holbrook Jackson (1874-1948)%@NL@%
  30079.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  30080. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30081. %@NL@%
  30082. %@NL@%
  30083. %@2@%Erudition. Dust shaken out of a book into an empty skull.%@NL@%
  30084. %@CR:LEARNIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  30085.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  30086.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30087. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30088. %@NL@%
  30089. %@NL@%
  30090. %@2@%Some people will never learn anything; for this reason, because%@EH@%
  30091. they understand everything too soon.%@NL@%
  30092. %@CR:LEARNIPope      @%%@NL@%
  30093.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  30094.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30095. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30096. %@NL@%
  30097. %@NL@%
  30098. %@2@%The man who is too old to learn was probably always too old%@EH@%
  30099. to learn.%@NL@%
  30100. %@CR:LEARNIHaskins   @%%@NL@%
  30101.                                                 Henry S. Haskins (b. 1875)%@NL@%
  30102.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30103. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30104. %@NL@%
  30105. %@NL@%
  30106. %@2@%With just enough of learning to misquote.%@NL@%
  30107. %@CR:LEARNIByron2    @%%@NL@%
  30108.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  30109.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30110. %@AS@%                                                                  Learning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30111. %@NL@%
  30112. %@NL@%
  30113. %@NL@%
  30114. %@1@%%@AS@%Lebanon%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30115. %@CR:LEBANON         @%%@NL@%
  30116. %@2@%%@QR:Lebanon@%Here, even the law of the jungle has broken down.%@NL@%
  30117. %@CR:LEBANOJumblatt  @%%@NL@%
  30118.                                                   Walid Jumblatt (b. 1949)%@NL@%
  30119.                                               leader of the Lebanese Druze%@NL@%
  30120. %@AS@%                                                                   Lebanon%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30121. %@NL@%
  30122. %@NL@%
  30123. %@NL@%
  30124. %@1@%%@AS@%The Left%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30125. %@CR:THELEFT         @%%@NL@%
  30126. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Left@%%@NL@%
  30127.      %@AB@%Communism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           75702@%%@NL@%
  30128.      %@AB@%Marxism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19b75a@%%@NL@%
  30129.      %@AB@%Socialism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          25dc63@%%@NL@%
  30130. %@NL@%
  30131. %@2@%Leftwingers are incapable of conspiring because they are all%@EH@%
  30132. egomaniacs.%@NL@%
  30133. %@CR:THELEFMailer    @%%@NL@%
  30134.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  30135.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30136. %@AS@%                                                                  The Left%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30137. %@NL@%
  30138. %@NL@%
  30139. %@NL@%
  30140. %@1@%%@AS@%Leisure%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30141. %@CR:LEISURE         @%%@NL@%
  30142. %@2@%%@QR:Leisure@%A perpetual holiday is a good working definition of hell.%@NL@%
  30143. %@CR:LEISURShaw      @%%@NL@%
  30144.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  30145.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  30146. %@AS@%                                                                   Leisure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30147. %@NL@%
  30148. %@NL@%
  30149. %@2@%More free time means more time to waste. The worker who used%@EH@%
  30150. to have only a little time in which to get drunk and beat his wife
  30151. now has time to get drunk, beat his wife - and watch TV.%@NL@%
  30152. %@CR:LEISURHutchins  @%%@NL@%
  30153.                                             Robert M. Hutchins (1899-1977)%@NL@%
  30154.                                                  American educator, writer%@NL@%
  30155. %@AS@%                                                                   Leisure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30156. %@NL@%
  30157. %@NL@%
  30158. %@2@%Leisure is the mother of philosophy.%@NL@%
  30159. %@CR:LEISURHobbes    @%%@NL@%
  30160.                                                  Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)%@NL@%
  30161.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  30162. %@AS@%                                                                   Leisure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30163. %@NL@%
  30164. %@NL@%
  30165. %@2@%The basis on which good repute in any highly organized industrial%@EH@%
  30166. community ultimately rests is pecuniary strength; and the means
  30167. of showing pecuniary strength, and so of gaining or retaining
  30168. a good name, are leisure and a conspicuous consumption of goods.%@NL@%
  30169. %@CR:LEISURVeblen    @%%@NL@%
  30170.                                               Thorstein Veblen (1857-1929)%@NL@%
  30171.                                                  American social scientist%@NL@%
  30172. %@AS@%                                                                   Leisure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30173. %@NL@%
  30174. %@NL@%
  30175. %@2@%To be able to fill leisure intelligently is the last product%@EH@%
  30176. of civilisation.%@NL@%
  30177. %@CR:LEISURRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  30178.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  30179.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  30180. %@AS@%                                                                   Leisure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30181. %@NL@%
  30182. %@NL@%
  30183. %@NL@%
  30184. %@1@%%@AS@%Liberals%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30185. %@CR:LIBERALS        @%%@NL@%
  30186. %@2@%%@QR:Liberals@%Cosmopolitan critics, men who are the friends of every country%@EH@%
  30187. save their own.%@NL@%
  30188. %@CR:LIBERADisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  30189.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  30190.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  30191. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30192. %@NL@%
  30193. %@NL@%
  30194. %@2@%They act as if they supposed that to be very sanguine about%@EH@%
  30195. the general improvement of mankind is a virtue that relieves them
  30196. from taking trouble about any improvement in particular.%@NL@%
  30197. %@CR:LIBERAMorley2   @%%@NL@%
  30198.                                              John, Lord Morley (1838-1923)%@NL@%
  30199.                                         English writer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  30200. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30201. %@NL@%
  30202. %@NL@%
  30203. %@2@%The liberals have not softened their view of actuality to make%@EH@%
  30204. themselves live closer to the dream, but instead sharpen their
  30205. perceptions and fight to make the dream actuality or give up the
  30206. battle in despair.%@NL@%
  30207. %@CR:LIBERAMead      @%%@NL@%
  30208.                                                  Margaret Mead (1901-1978)%@NL@%
  30209.                                                    American anthropologist%@NL@%
  30210. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30211. %@NL@%
  30212. %@NL@%
  30213. %@2@%Liberalism  . . .  is the supreme form of generosity; it is the%@EH@%
  30214. right which the majority concedes to minorities and hence it is
  30215. %@AI@%the noblest cry%@AE@% that has ever resounded in this planet.%@NL@%
  30216. %@CR:LIBERAOrtegayGas@%%@NL@%
  30217.                                           Jose Ortega y Gasset (1883-1955)%@NL@%
  30218.                                              Spanish essayist, philosopher%@NL@%
  30219. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30220. %@NL@%
  30221. %@NL@%
  30222. %@2@%We who are liberal and progressive know that the poor are our%@EH@%
  30223. equals in every sense except that of being equal to us.%@NL@%
  30224. %@CR:LIBERATrilling  @%%@NL@%
  30225.                                                Lionel Trilling (1905-1975)%@NL@%
  30226.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  30227. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30228. %@NL@%
  30229. %@NL@%
  30230. %@2@%I sit on a man's back, choking him and making him carry me,%@EH@%
  30231. and yet assure myself and others that I am very sorry for him and
  30232. wish to ease his lot by all possible means - except by getting
  30233. off his back.%@NL@%
  30234. %@CR:LIBERATolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  30235.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  30236.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  30237. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30238. %@NL@%
  30239. %@NL@%
  30240. %@2@%The Liberal State is a mask behind which there is no face;%@EH@%
  30241. it is a scaffolding behind which there is no building.%@NL@%
  30242. %@CR:LIBERAMussolini @%%@NL@%
  30243.                                               Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)%@NL@%
  30244.                                                  Fascist dictator of Italy%@NL@%
  30245. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30246. %@NL@%
  30247. %@NL@%
  30248. %@2@%The worst enemy of the new radicals are the old liberals.%@NL@%
  30249. %@CR:LIBERALenin     @%%@NL@%
  30250.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  30251.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  30252. %@AS@%                                                                  Liberals%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30253. %@NL@%
  30254. %@NL@%
  30255. %@NL@%
  30256. %@1@%%@AS@%Liberation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30257. %@CR:LIBERATION      @%%@NL@%
  30258. %@2@%%@QR:Liberation@%We sure liberated the hell out of this place.%@NL@%
  30259. %@CR:LIBERALenin     @%%@NL@%
  30260.             American soldier in ruined French village quoted by Max Miller%@NL@%
  30261. %@AS@%                                                                Liberation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30262. %@NL@%
  30263. %@NL@%
  30264. %@NL@%
  30265. %@1@%%@AS@%Liberty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30266. %@CR:LIBERTY         @%%@NL@%
  30267. %@2@%See:%@QR:Liberty@%%@NL@%
  30268.      Corruption: %@AB@%Gibbon%@AE@%%@BO:           853b9@%%@NL@%
  30269.      %@AB@%Freedom%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fa446@%%@NL@%
  30270.      Patriotism: %@AB@%Jefferson and Paine%@AE@%%@CF:PATRIOJefferson @%%@NL@%
  30271.      Repression: %@AB@%Wilkie%@AE@%%@BO:          225b97@%%@NL@%
  30272.      Revolution: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:          22ad98@%%@NL@%
  30273. %@NL@%
  30274. %@2@%I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give%@EH@%
  30275. me liberty or give me death.%@NL@%
  30276. %@CR:LIBERTHenry2    @%%@NL@%
  30277.                                                  Patrick Henry (1736-1799)%@NL@%
  30278.                                                         American statesman%@NL@%
  30279. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30280. %@NL@%
  30281. %@NL@%
  30282. %@2@%Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it.%@NL@%
  30283. %@CR:LIBERTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  30284.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  30285.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  30286. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30287. %@NL@%
  30288. %@NL@%
  30289. %@2@%He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his%@EH@%
  30290. enemy from oppression.%@NL@%
  30291. %@CR:LIBERTPaine     @%%@NL@%
  30292.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  30293.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  30294. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30295. %@NL@%
  30296. %@NL@%
  30297. %@2@%Liberty has never come from the government. Liberty has always%@EH@%
  30298. come from the subjects of it. The history of liberty is a history
  30299. of resistance.%@NL@%
  30300. %@CR:LIBERTWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  30301.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  30302.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  30303. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30304. %@NL@%
  30305. %@NL@%
  30306. %@2@%A regard for liberty, though a laudable passion, ought commonly%@EH@%
  30307. to be subordinate to a reverence for established government.%@NL@%
  30308. %@CR:LIBERTHume      @%%@NL@%
  30309.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  30310.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  30311. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30312. %@NL@%
  30313. %@NL@%
  30314. %@2@%It is true that liberty is precious - so precious that it%@EH@%
  30315. must be rationed.%@NL@%
  30316. %@CR:LIBERTLenin     @%%@NL@%
  30317.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  30318.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  30319.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  30320. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30321. %@NL@%
  30322. %@NL@%
  30323. %@2@%It will be found an unjust and unwise jealousy, to deprive%@EH@%
  30324. a man of his natural liberty upon a supposition that he may abuse
  30325. it.%@NL@%
  30326. %@CR:LIBERTCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  30327.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  30328.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  30329. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30330. %@NL@%
  30331. %@NL@%
  30332. %@2@%Of what use is political liberty to those who have no bread?%@EH@%
  30333. It is of value only to ambitious theorists and politicians.%@NL@%
  30334. %@CR:LIBERTMarat     @%%@NL@%
  30335.                                                Jean-Paul Marat (1743-1793)%@NL@%
  30336.                                                       French revolutionary%@NL@%
  30337. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30338. %@NL@%
  30339. %@NL@%
  30340. %@2@%The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal%@EH@%
  30341. vigilance.%@NL@%
  30342. %@CR:LIBERTCurran    @%%@NL@%
  30343.                                            John Philpot Curran (1750-1817)%@NL@%
  30344.                                                   Irish lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  30345. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30346. %@NL@%
  30347. %@NL@%
  30348. %@2@%I see that you, too, put up monuments to your great dead.%@NL@%
  30349. %@CR:LIBERTCurran    @%%@NL@%
  30350.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  30351.                   Frenchman arriving by sea in New York during Prohibition%@NL@%
  30352. %@AS@%                                                                   Liberty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30353. %@NL@%
  30354. %@NL@%
  30355. %@NL@%
  30356. %@1@%%@AS@%Libraries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30357. %@CR:LIBRARIES       @%%@NL@%
  30358. %@2@%%@QR:Libraries@%Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or%@EH@%
  30359. we know where we can find information upon it.%@NL@%
  30360. %@CR:LIBRARJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  30361.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  30362.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  30363. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30364. %@NL@%
  30365. %@NL@%
  30366. %@2@%A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the%@EH@%
  30367. furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away
  30368. in the lumber room of his library, where he can get it if he wants
  30369. it.%@NL@%
  30370. %@CR:LIBRARDoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  30371.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  30372.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30373. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30374. %@NL@%
  30375. %@NL@%
  30376. %@2@%The true University of these days is a collection of books.%@NL@%
  30377. %@CR:LIBRARCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  30378.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  30379.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  30380. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30381. %@NL@%
  30382. %@NL@%
  30383. %@2@%Every library should try to be complete on something, if it%@EH@%
  30384. were only the history of pinheads.%@NL@%
  30385. %@CR:LIBRARHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  30386.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  30387.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  30388. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30389. %@NL@%
  30390. %@NL@%
  30391. %@2@%My library was dukedom large enough.%@NL@%
  30392. %@CR:LIBRARShakespear@%%@NL@%
  30393.                                                      Prospero, %@AI@%The Tempest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30394.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  30395.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  30396. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30397. %@NL@%
  30398. %@NL@%
  30399. %@2@%Meek young men grow up in libraries.%@NL@%
  30400. %@CR:LIBRAREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  30401.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  30402.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  30403. %@AS@%                                                                 Libraries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30404. %@NL@%
  30405. %@NL@%
  30406. %@NL@%
  30407. %@1@%%@AS@%Life%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30408. %@CR:LIFE            @%%@NL@%
  30409. %@2@%See:%@QR:Life@%%@NL@%
  30410.      Comedy: %@AB@%Chaplin%@AE@%%@BO:           73789@%%@NL@%
  30411.      Ennui: %@AB@%Laforgue%@AE@%%@BO:           cffb6@%%@NL@%
  30412. %@NL@%
  30413. %@2@%Life. A spiritual pickle preserving the body from decay.%@NL@%
  30414. %@CR:LIFE  Bierce    @%%@NL@%
  30415.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  30416.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30417. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30418. %@NL@%
  30419. %@NL@%
  30420. %@2@%Life is a %@AI@%mauvais quart d'heure%@AE@% made up of exquisite moments.%@NL@%
  30421. %@CR:LIFE  Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  30422.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  30423.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  30424. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30425. %@NL@%
  30426. %@NL@%
  30427.      %@2@%The dreamcrossed twilight between birth and dying.%@NL@%
  30428. %@CR:LIFE  Eliot2    @%%@NL@%
  30429.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  30430.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  30431. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30432. %@NL@%
  30433. %@NL@%
  30434. %@2@%Life is an offensive, directed against the repetitious mechanisms%@EH@%
  30435. of the universe.%@NL@%
  30436. %@CR:LIFE  Whitehead @%%@NL@%
  30437.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  30438.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  30439. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30440. %@NL@%
  30441. %@NL@%
  30442. %@2@%Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient%@EH@%
  30443. premises.%@NL@%
  30444. %@CR:LIFE  Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  30445.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  30446.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30447. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30448. %@NL@%
  30449. %@NL@%
  30450. %@2@%Life consists of what a man is thinking of all day.%@NL@%
  30451. %@CR:LIFE  Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  30452.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  30453.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  30454. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30455. %@NL@%
  30456. %@NL@%
  30457. %@2@%Living is my profession and my art.%@NL@%
  30458. %@CR:LIFE  Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  30459.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  30460.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  30461. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30462. %@NL@%
  30463. %@NL@%
  30464. %@2@%Either the soul is immortal and we shall not die, or it perishes%@EH@%
  30465. with the flesh, and we shall not know then that we are dead. Live,
  30466. then, as if you were eternal.%@NL@%
  30467. %@CR:LIFE  Maurois   @%%@NL@%
  30468.                                                  Andre Maurois (1885-1967)%@NL@%
  30469.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  30470. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30471. %@NL@%
  30472. %@NL@%
  30473. %@2@%May you live all the days of your life.%@NL@%
  30474. %@CR:LIFE  Swift     @%%@NL@%
  30475.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  30476.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  30477. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30478. %@NL@%
  30479. %@NL@%
  30480. %@2@%There's night and day, brother, both sweet things; sun, moon,%@EH@%
  30481. and stars, brother, all sweet things; there's likewise a wind on
  30482. the heath. Life is very sweet, brother; who would wish to die?%@NL@%
  30483. %@CR:LIFE  Borrow    @%%@NL@%
  30484.                                                  George Borrow (1803-1881)%@NL@%
  30485.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  30486. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30487. %@NL@%
  30488. %@NL@%
  30489. %@2@%Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the%@EH@%
  30490. instrument as one goes on.%@NL@%
  30491. %@CR:LIFE  Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  30492.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  30493.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30494. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30495. %@NL@%
  30496. %@NL@%
  30497. %@2@%Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived%@EH@%
  30498. forwards.%@NL@%
  30499. %@CR:LIFE  Kierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  30500.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  30501.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  30502. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30503. %@NL@%
  30504. %@NL@%
  30505.      %@2@%'Tis all a Chequer-board of Nights and%@NL@%
  30506.      Days%@NL@%
  30507.      Where Destiny with Men for Pieces plays:%@NL@%
  30508.      Hither and thither moves, and mates and slays,%@NL@%
  30509.      And one by one back in the Closest lays.%@NL@%
  30510. %@CR:LIFE  Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  30511.                                          from the %@AI@%Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30512.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  30513. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30514. %@NL@%
  30515. %@NL@%
  30516.      %@2@%As flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods;%@NL@%
  30517.      They kill us for their sport.%@NL@%
  30518. %@CR:LIFE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  30519.                                                      Gloucester, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30520.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  30521.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  30522. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30523. %@NL@%
  30524. %@NL@%
  30525. %@2@%Life is a zoo in a jungle.%@NL@%
  30526. %@CR:LIFE  deVries   @%%@NL@%
  30527.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  30528.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  30529. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30530. %@NL@%
  30531. %@NL@%
  30532. %@2@%The meaning of life is that it stops.%@NL@%
  30533. %@CR:LIFE  Kafka     @%%@NL@%
  30534.                                                    Franz Kafka (1883-1924)%@NL@%
  30535.                                        German novelist, short story writer%@NL@%
  30536. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30537. %@NL@%
  30538. %@NL@%
  30539.      %@2@%But there is good news yet to hear and fine things to be seen%@NL@%
  30540.      Before we go to Paradise by way of%@NL@%
  30541.      Kensal Green.%@NL@%
  30542. %@CR:LIFE  Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  30543.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  30544.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30545. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30546. %@NL@%
  30547. %@NL@%
  30548.      %@2@%It is a tale%@NL@%
  30549.      Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury;%@NL@%
  30550.      Signifying nothing.%@NL@%
  30551. %@CR:LIFE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  30552.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30553.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  30554.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  30555. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30556. %@NL@%
  30557. %@NL@%
  30558. %@2@%Man that is born of woman hath but a short time to live, and%@EH@%
  30559. is full of misery. He cometh up, and is cut down, like a flower;
  30560. he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay.%@NL@%
  30561. %@CR:LIFE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  30562.                                                      Book of Common Prayer%@NL@%
  30563. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30564. %@NL@%
  30565. %@NL@%
  30566. %@2@%A useless life is an early death.%@NL@%
  30567. %@CR:LIFE  Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  30568.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  30569.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  30570. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30571. %@NL@%
  30572. %@NL@%
  30573. %@2@%We should kick and struggle and determine to live as long as%@EH@%
  30574. we can. For however long we live, we shall feel at the last that
  30575. we have not got half the things into life that we ought to have
  30576. done.%@NL@%
  30577. %@CR:LIFE  Jowett    @%%@NL@%
  30578.                                                Benjamin Jowett (1817-1893)%@NL@%
  30579.                                                  English scholar, essayist%@NL@%
  30580. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30581. %@NL@%
  30582. %@NL@%
  30583.      %@2@%The force that through the green fuse drives the flower%@NL@%
  30584.      Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees%@NL@%
  30585.      Is my destroyer.%@NL@%
  30586. %@CR:LIFE  Thomas1   @%%@NL@%
  30587.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  30588.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  30589. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30590. %@NL@%
  30591. %@NL@%
  30592. %@2@%A physician can sometimes parry the scythe of death, but has%@EH@%
  30593. no power over the sand in the hourglass.%@NL@%
  30594. %@CR:LIFE  Thrale    @%%@NL@%
  30595.                                     Hester Piozzi, Mrs. Thrale (1741-1821)%@NL@%
  30596.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  30597. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30598. %@NL@%
  30599. %@NL@%
  30600. %@2@%The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if%@EH@%
  30601. by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength
  30602. labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.%@NL@%
  30603. %@CR:LIFE  BiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  30604.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  30605. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30606. %@NL@%
  30607. %@NL@%
  30608. %@2@%Droll thing life is - that mysterious arrangement of merciless%@EH@%
  30609. logic for a futile purpose. The most you can hope from it is some
  30610. knowledge of yourself - that comes too late - a crop of unextinguishable
  30611. regrets.%@NL@%
  30612. %@CR:LIFE  Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  30613.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  30614.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  30615. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30616. %@NL@%
  30617. %@NL@%
  30618. %@2@%Living is a sickness from which sleep provides relief every%@EH@%
  30619. sixteen hours. It's a palliative. The remedy is death.%@NL@%
  30620. %@CR:LIFE  Chamfort  @%%@NL@%
  30621.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  30622.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  30623. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30624. %@NL@%
  30625. %@NL@%
  30626. %@2@%When I hear somebody sigh that "Life is hard," I am always%@EH@%
  30627. tempted to ask, "Compared to what?"%@NL@%
  30628. %@CR:LIFE  Harris    @%%@NL@%
  30629.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  30630.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  30631. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30632. %@NL@%
  30633. %@NL@%
  30634. %@2@%I should have no objection to a repetition of the same life%@EH@%
  30635. from its beginning, only asking the advantages authors have in
  30636. a second edition to correct some faults of the first.%@NL@%
  30637. %@CR:LIFE  Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  30638.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  30639.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  30640. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30641. %@NL@%
  30642. %@NL@%
  30643. %@2@%Is life worth living? This is a question for an embryo, not%@EH@%
  30644. for a man.%@NL@%
  30645. %@CR:LIFE  Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  30646.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  30647.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30648. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30649. %@NL@%
  30650. %@NL@%
  30651. %@2@%Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether%@EH@%
  30652. it is worth living is whether you have had enough of it.%@NL@%
  30653. %@CR:LIFE  Holmes1   @%%@NL@%
  30654.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  30655.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  30656. %@AS@%                                                                      Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30657. %@NL@%
  30658. %@NL@%
  30659. %@NL@%
  30660. %@1@%%@AS@%Literature%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30661. %@CR:LITERATURE      @%%@NL@%
  30662. %@2@%See:%@QR:Literature@%%@NL@%
  30663.      Hero-worship: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          12b679@%%@NL@%
  30664.      %@AB@%Writers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2c6216@%%@NL@%
  30665.      %@AB@%Writing%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2cb98f@%%@NL@%
  30666. %@NL@%
  30667. %@2@%Literature - the most seductive, the most deceiving, the%@EH@%
  30668. most dangerous of professions.%@NL@%
  30669. %@CR:LITERAMorley2   @%%@NL@%
  30670.                                              John, Lord Morley (1838-1923)%@NL@%
  30671.                                         English writer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  30672. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30673. %@NL@%
  30674. %@NL@%
  30675. %@2@%Literature is the effort of man to indemnify himself from the%@EH@%
  30676. wrongs of his condition.%@NL@%
  30677. %@CR:LITERAEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  30678.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  30679.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  30680. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30681. %@NL@%
  30682. %@NL@%
  30683. %@2@%Literature flourishes best when it is half a trade and half%@EH@%
  30684. an art.%@NL@%
  30685. %@CR:LITERAInge      @%%@NL@%
  30686.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  30687.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  30688. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30689. %@NL@%
  30690. %@NL@%
  30691. %@2@%Literature is the orchestration of platitudes.%@NL@%
  30692. %@CR:LITERAWilder2   @%%@NL@%
  30693.                                                Thornton Wilder (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  30694.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30695. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30696. %@NL@%
  30697. %@NL@%
  30698. %@2@%Great literature is simply language charged with meaning to%@EH@%
  30699. the utmost possible degree.%@NL@%
  30700. %@CR:LITERAPound     @%%@NL@%
  30701.                                                     Ezra Pound (1885-1972)%@NL@%
  30702.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  30703. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30704. %@NL@%
  30705. %@NL@%
  30706. %@2@%The cultivation of literary pursuits forms the basis of all%@EH@%
  30707. sciences, and in their perfection consist the reputation and prosperity
  30708. of kingdoms.%@NL@%
  30709. %@CR:LITERAPombal    @%%@NL@%
  30710.                                              Marques de Pombal (1699-1782)%@NL@%
  30711.                                                       Portuguese statesman%@NL@%
  30712. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30713. %@NL@%
  30714. %@NL@%
  30715. %@2@%Literature is always a good card to play for Honours. It makes%@EH@%
  30716. people think that Cabinet ministers are educated.%@NL@%
  30717. %@CR:LITERABennett   @%%@NL@%
  30718.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  30719.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  30720. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30721. %@NL@%
  30722. %@NL@%
  30723. %@2@%Our American professors like their literature clear and cold%@EH@%
  30724. and pure and very dead.%@NL@%
  30725. %@CR:LITERALewis3    @%%@NL@%
  30726.                                                 Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951)%@NL@%
  30727.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  30728. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30729. %@NL@%
  30730. %@NL@%
  30731. %@2@%All that is literature seeks to communicate power: all that%@EH@%
  30732. is not literature, to communicate knowledge.%@NL@%
  30733. %@CR:LITERAdeQuincey @%%@NL@%
  30734.                                              Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859)%@NL@%
  30735.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30736. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30737. %@NL@%
  30738. %@NL@%
  30739. %@2@%Literature  . . .  is the union of suffering with the instinct%@EH@%
  30740. for form.%@NL@%
  30741. %@CR:LITERAMann      @%%@NL@%
  30742.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  30743.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  30744. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30745. %@NL@%
  30746. %@NL@%
  30747. %@2@%All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they%@EH@%
  30748. had really happened.%@NL@%
  30749. %@CR:LITERAHemingway @%%@NL@%
  30750.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  30751.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  30752. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30753. %@NL@%
  30754. %@NL@%
  30755. %@2@%Great literature must spring from an upheaval in the author's%@EH@%
  30756. soul. If that upheaval is not present then it must come from the
  30757. works of any other author which happens to be handy and easily
  30758. adapted.%@NL@%
  30759. %@CR:LITERABenchley  @%%@NL@%
  30760.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  30761.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  30762. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30763. %@NL@%
  30764. %@NL@%
  30765. %@2@%A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and%@EH@%
  30766. nobody wants to read.%@NL@%
  30767. %@CR:LITERATwain     @%%@NL@%
  30768.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  30769.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30770. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30771. %@NL@%
  30772. %@NL@%
  30773. %@2@%Speak of the moderns without contempt, and of the ancients%@EH@%
  30774. without idolatry.%@NL@%
  30775. %@CR:LITERAChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  30776.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  30777.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  30778. %@AS@%                                                                Literature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30779. %@NL@%
  30780. %@NL@%
  30781. %@NL@%
  30782. %@1@%%@AS@%Litigation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30783. %@CR:LITIGATION      @%%@NL@%
  30784. %@2@%See:%@QR:Litigation@%%@NL@%
  30785.      %@AB@%Trials%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29482c@%%@NL@%
  30786. %@NL@%
  30787. %@2@%Come, agree, the law's costly.%@NL@%
  30788. %@CR:LITIGASwift     @%%@NL@%
  30789.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  30790.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  30791. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30792. %@NL@%
  30793. %@NL@%
  30794. %@2@%To go to law and not be out of one's mind is scarcely granted%@EH@%
  30795. to the saints.%@NL@%
  30796. %@CR:LITIGAStFrancisd@%%@NL@%
  30797.                                           St. Francis de Sales (1567-1622)%@NL@%
  30798.                                        French churchman, devotional writer%@NL@%
  30799. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30800. %@NL@%
  30801. %@NL@%
  30802. %@2@%I was never ruined but twice: once when I lost a lawsuit, and%@EH@%
  30803. once when I won one.%@NL@%
  30804. %@CR:LITIGAVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  30805.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  30806.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  30807. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30808. %@NL@%
  30809. %@NL@%
  30810. %@2@%Keep out of Chancery  . . .  It's being ground to bits in a slow%@EH@%
  30811. mill; it's being roasted at a slow fire; it's being stung to death
  30812. by single bees; it's being drowned by drops; it's going mad by
  30813. grains.%@NL@%
  30814. %@CR:LITIGADickens   @%%@NL@%
  30815.                                                  Tom Jarndyce, %@AI@%Bleak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30816.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  30817.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  30818. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30819. %@NL@%
  30820. %@NL@%
  30821. %@2@%Litigant. A person about to give up his skin for the hope of%@EH@%
  30822. retaining his bones.%@NL@%
  30823. %@CR:LITIGABierce    @%%@NL@%
  30824.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  30825.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  30826. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30827. %@NL@%
  30828. %@NL@%
  30829. %@2@%For certain people, after fifty, litigation takes the place%@EH@%
  30830. of sex.%@NL@%
  30831. %@CR:LITIGAVidal     @%%@NL@%
  30832.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  30833.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  30834. %@AS@%                                                                Litigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30835. %@NL@%
  30836. %@NL@%
  30837. %@NL@%
  30838. %@1@%%@AS@%Living Together%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30839. %@CR:LIVINGTOGETHER  @%%@NL@%
  30840. %@2@%%@QR:Living Together@%Do you think your mother and I should have lived comfortably%@EH@%
  30841. so long together if ever we had been married? Baggage!%@NL@%
  30842. %@CR:LIVINGGay       @%%@NL@%
  30843.                                                Peachum, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30844.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  30845.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  30846. %@AS@%                                                           Living Together%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30847. %@NL@%
  30848. %@NL@%
  30849. %@2@%Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking%@EH@%
  30850. others to live as one wishes to live.%@NL@%
  30851. %@CR:LIVINGWilde     @%%@NL@%
  30852.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  30853.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  30854. %@AS@%                                                           Living Together%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30855. %@NL@%
  30856. %@NL@%
  30857. %@2@%It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop than with%@EH@%
  30858. a brawling woman in a wide house.%@NL@%
  30859. %@CR:LIVINGBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  30860.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  30861. %@AS@%                                                           Living Together%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30862. %@NL@%
  30863. %@NL@%
  30864. %@NL@%
  30865. %@1@%%@AS@%Logic%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30866. %@CR:LOGIC           @%%@NL@%
  30867. %@2@%%@QR:Logic@%Walter Shandy attributed most of his son's misfortunes to the%@EH@%
  30868. fact that at a highly critical moment his wife had asked him if
  30869. he had wound the clock, a question so irrelevant that he despaired
  30870. of the child's ever being able to pursue a logical train of thought.%@NL@%
  30871. %@CR:LOGIC Sterne    @%%@NL@%
  30872.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  30873.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  30874. %@AS@%                                                                     Logic%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30875. %@NL@%
  30876. %@NL@%
  30877. %@NL@%
  30878. %@1@%%@AS@%London%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  30879. %@CR:LONDON          @%%@NL@%
  30880. %@2@%See:%@QR:London@%%@NL@%
  30881.      %@AB@%City Life%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           6cab5@%%@NL@%
  30882. %@NL@%
  30883. %@2@%Dear damned distracting town.%@NL@%
  30884. %@CR:LONDONPope      @%%@NL@%
  30885.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  30886.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30887. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30888. %@NL@%
  30889. %@NL@%
  30890. %@2@%Behold now this vast city; a city of refuge, the mansion-house%@EH@%
  30891. of liberty, encompassed and surrounded with His protection.%@NL@%
  30892. %@CR:LONDONMilton    @%%@NL@%
  30893.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  30894.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30895. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30896. %@NL@%
  30897. %@NL@%
  30898.      %@2@%London, that great sea, whose ebb%@NL@%
  30899.      and flow%@NL@%
  30900.      At once is deaf and loud.%@NL@%
  30901. %@CR:LONDONShelley   @%%@NL@%
  30902.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  30903.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30904. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30905. %@NL@%
  30906. %@NL@%
  30907. %@2@%That monstrous tuberosity of civilised life, the capital of%@EH@%
  30908. England.%@NL@%
  30909. %@CR:LONDONCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  30910.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  30911.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  30912. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30913. %@NL@%
  30914. %@NL@%
  30915.      %@2@%Here falling houses thunder on your head,%@NL@%
  30916.      And here a female atheist talks you dead.%@NL@%
  30917. %@CR:LONDONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  30918.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  30919.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  30920. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30921. %@NL@%
  30922. %@NL@%
  30923. %@2@%The worst place in the world for a good woman to grow better%@EH@%
  30924. in.%@NL@%
  30925. %@CR:LONDONVanbrugh  @%%@NL@%
  30926.                                              Sir John Vanbrugh (1664-1726)%@NL@%
  30927.                                              English playwright, architect%@NL@%
  30928. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30929. %@NL@%
  30930. %@NL@%
  30931. %@2@%London is a modern Babylon.%@NL@%
  30932. %@CR:LONDONDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  30933.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  30934.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  30935. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30936. %@NL@%
  30937. %@NL@%
  30938.      %@2@%Hell is a city much like London -%@NL@%
  30939.      A populous and a smoky city;%@NL@%
  30940.      There are all sorts of people undone,%@NL@%
  30941.      And there is little or no fun done;%@NL@%
  30942.      Small justice shown, and still less pity.%@NL@%
  30943. %@CR:LONDONShelley   @%%@NL@%
  30944.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  30945.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  30946. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30947. %@NL@%
  30948. %@NL@%
  30949. %@2@%London is a roost for every bird.%@NL@%
  30950. %@CR:LONDONDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  30951.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  30952.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  30953. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30954. %@NL@%
  30955. %@NL@%
  30956. %@2@%I have passed all my days in London, until I have formed as%@EH@%
  30957. many and intense local attachments as any of you mountaineers can
  30958. have done with dead nature. The lighted shops of the Strand and
  30959. Fleet Street, the innumerable trades, tradesmen, and customers,
  30960. coaches, waggons, playhouses, all the bustle and wickedness round
  30961. about Covent Garden, the very women of the town, the watchmen,
  30962. drunken scenes, rattles  . . .  I often shed tears in the motley
  30963. Strand from fullness of joy at so much life.%@NL@%
  30964. %@CR:LONDONLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  30965.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  30966.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  30967. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30968. %@NL@%
  30969. %@NL@%
  30970. %@2@%What rubbish!%@NL@%
  30971. %@CR:LONDONBlucher   @%%@NL@%
  30972.                                         Marshal GebhardBlucher (1742-1819)%@NL@%
  30973.                                                           Prussian general%@NL@%
  30974.                                                    on first view of London%@NL@%
  30975. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30976. %@NL@%
  30977. %@NL@%
  30978. %@2@%You find no man, at all intellectual, who is willing to leave%@EH@%
  30979. London. No, Sir, when a man is tired of London, he is tired of
  30980. life; for there is in London all that life can afford.%@NL@%
  30981. %@CR:LONDONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  30982.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  30983.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  30984. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30985. %@NL@%
  30986. %@NL@%
  30987. %@2@%A broken heart is a very pleasant complaint for a man in London%@EH@%
  30988. if he has a comfortable income.%@NL@%
  30989. %@CR:LONDONShaw      @%%@NL@%
  30990.                                                      Ann, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30991.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  30992.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  30993. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  30994. %@NL@%
  30995. %@NL@%
  30996. %@2@%It is strange with how little notice, good, bad or indifferent,%@EH@%
  30997. a man may live and die in London.%@NL@%
  30998. %@CR:LONDONDickens   @%%@NL@%
  30999.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  31000.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  31001. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31002. %@NL@%
  31003. %@NL@%
  31004.      %@2@%%@AI@%Enfin, dans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31005.      %@AI@%un amas de choses, sombre, immense,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31006.      %@AI@%Un peuple noir, vivant et mourant en silence.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31007. %@NL@%
  31008. %@2@%Finally, within a huge and sombre mass of things, a blackened
  31009. people, living and dying in silence.%@NL@%
  31010. %@CR:LONDONBarbier   @%%@NL@%
  31011.                                          Henri Auguste Barbier (1805-1882)%@NL@%
  31012.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  31013. %@AS@%                                                                    London%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31014. %@NL@%
  31015. %@NL@%
  31016. %@NL@%
  31017. %@1@%%@AS@%Loneliness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31018. %@CR:LONELINESS      @%%@NL@%
  31019. %@2@%See:%@QR:Loneliness@%%@NL@%
  31020.      City Life: %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:           6cc1f@%%@NL@%
  31021.      Stardom: %@AB@%Garland%@AE@%%@BO:          26bacd@%; %@AB@%Joplin%@AE@%%@BO:          26bc40@%%@NL@%
  31022.      Suspicion: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          279147@%%@NL@%
  31023. %@NL@%
  31024. %@2@%Only in a house where one has learnt to be lonely does one%@EH@%
  31025. have this solicitude for %@AI@%things.%@AE@% One's relation to them, the
  31026. daily seeing or touching, begins to become love, and to lay one
  31027. open to pain.%@NL@%
  31028. %@CR:LONELIBowen2    @%%@NL@%
  31029.                                                Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  31030.                                                       Anglo-Irish novelist%@NL@%
  31031. %@AS@%                                                                Loneliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31032. %@NL@%
  31033. %@NL@%
  31034. %@2@%Loneliness is to endure the presence of one who does not understand.%@NL@%
  31035. %@CR:LONELIHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  31036.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  31037.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  31038. %@AS@%                                                                Loneliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31039. %@NL@%
  31040. %@NL@%
  31041. %@2@%Who knows what true loneliness is - not the conventional%@EH@%
  31042. word but the naked terror? To the lonely themselves it wears a
  31043. mask.%@NL@%
  31044. %@CR:LONELIConrad    @%%@NL@%
  31045.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  31046.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  31047. %@AS@%                                                                Loneliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31048. %@NL@%
  31049. %@NL@%
  31050. %@2@%Man's loneliness is but his fear of life.%@NL@%
  31051. %@CR:LONELIONeill    @%%@NL@%
  31052.                                                 Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953)%@NL@%
  31053.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  31054. %@AS@%                                                                Loneliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31055. %@NL@%
  31056. %@NL@%
  31057. %@NL@%
  31058. %@1@%%@AS@%Loquacity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31059. %@CR:LOQUACITY       @%%@NL@%
  31060. %@2@%See:%@QR:Loquacity@%%@NL@%
  31061.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Jonson%@AE@%%@BO:            f4d4@%%@NL@%
  31062.      Anecdotes: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           1efda@%%@NL@%
  31063.      Politicians: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          1eb6c2@%%@NL@%
  31064.      Silence: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          252760@%%@NL@%
  31065. %@NL@%
  31066.      %@2@%They never taste who always drink;%@NL@%
  31067.      They always talk who never think.%@NL@%
  31068. %@CR:LOQUACPrior     @%%@NL@%
  31069.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  31070.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  31071. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31072. %@NL@%
  31073. %@NL@%
  31074. %@2@%To talk without thinking is to shoot without aiming.%@NL@%
  31075. %@CR:LOQUACPrior     @%%@NL@%
  31076.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  31077. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31078. %@NL@%
  31079. %@NL@%
  31080. %@2@%The habit of common and continuous speech is a symptom of mental%@EH@%
  31081. deficiency. It proceeds from not knowing what is going on in other
  31082. people's minds.%@NL@%
  31083. %@CR:LOQUACBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  31084.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  31085.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  31086. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31087. %@NL@%
  31088. %@NL@%
  31089. %@2@%The round-faced man in black entered, and dissipated all doubts%@EH@%
  31090. on the subject, by beginning to talk. He did not cease while he
  31091. stayed; nor has he since, that I know of.%@NL@%
  31092. %@CR:LOQUACHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  31093.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  31094.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  31095.                                                               of Coleridge%@NL@%
  31096. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31097. %@NL@%
  31098. %@NL@%
  31099. %@2@%He can compress the most words into the smallest ideas, of%@EH@%
  31100. any man I ever met.%@NL@%
  31101. %@CR:LOQUACLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  31102.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  31103.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  31104. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31105. %@NL@%
  31106. %@NL@%
  31107. %@2@%Half the world is composed of people who have something to%@EH@%
  31108. say and can't, and the other half who have nothing to say and keep
  31109. on saying it.%@NL@%
  31110. %@CR:LOQUACFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  31111.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  31112.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  31113. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31114. %@NL@%
  31115. %@NL@%
  31116. %@2@%There are few wild beasts more to be dreaded than a talking%@EH@%
  31117. man having nothing to say.%@NL@%
  31118. %@CR:LOQUACSwift     @%%@NL@%
  31119.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  31120.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  31121. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31122. %@NL@%
  31123. %@NL@%
  31124. %@2@%I prefer tongue-tied knowledge to ignorant loquacity.%@NL@%
  31125. %@CR:LOQUACCicero    @%%@NL@%
  31126.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  31127.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  31128. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31129. %@NL@%
  31130. %@NL@%
  31131. %@2@%The only way to entertain some folks is to listen to them.%@NL@%
  31132. %@CR:LOQUACHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  31133.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  31134.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  31135. %@AS@%                                                                 Loquacity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31136. %@NL@%
  31137. %@NL@%
  31138. %@NL@%
  31139. %@1@%%@AS@%Losing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31140. %@CR:LOSING          @%%@NL@%
  31141. %@2@%%@QR:Losing@%We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat.%@NL@%
  31142. %@CR:LOSINGQueenVicto@%%@NL@%
  31143.                                       Queen Victoriaof England (1819-1901)%@NL@%
  31144. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31145. %@NL@%
  31146. %@NL@%
  31147. %@2@%Victory has a hundred fathers but defeat is an orphan.%@NL@%
  31148. %@CR:LOSINGCiano     @%%@NL@%
  31149.                                                 Galeazzo Ciano (1903-1944)%@NL@%
  31150.                                                     Italian Fascist leader%@NL@%
  31151. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31152. %@NL@%
  31153. %@NL@%
  31154. %@2@%We have resolved to endure the unendurable and suffer what%@EH@%
  31155. is unsufferable.%@NL@%
  31156. %@CR:LOSINGEmperorHir@%%@NL@%
  31157.                                       Emperor Hirohitoof Japan (1901-1989)%@NL@%
  31158.                     following the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima%@NL@%
  31159. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31160. %@NL@%
  31161. %@NL@%
  31162. %@2@%One of the first businesses of a sensible man is to know when%@EH@%
  31163. he is beaten, and to leave off fighting at once.%@NL@%
  31164. %@CR:LOSINGButler4   @%%@NL@%
  31165.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  31166.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  31167. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31168. %@NL@%
  31169. %@NL@%
  31170. %@2@%What makes us so bitter against people who outwit us is that%@EH@%
  31171. they think themselves cleverer than we are.%@NL@%
  31172. %@CR:LOSINGLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31173.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31174.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31175. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31176. %@NL@%
  31177. %@NL@%
  31178. %@2@%Show me a good loser and I will show you a loser.%@NL@%
  31179. %@CR:LOSINGNewman3   @%%@NL@%
  31180.                                                      Paul Newman (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  31181.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  31182. %@AS@%                                                                    Losing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31183. %@NL@%
  31184. %@NL@%
  31185. %@NL@%
  31186. %@1@%%@AS@%Love%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31187. %@CR:LOVE            @%%@NL@%
  31188. %@2@%See:%@QR:Love@%%@NL@%
  31189.      Death: %@AB@%Marvell%@AE@%%@BO:           9a170@%%@NL@%
  31190.      Fidelity: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           f0711@%%@NL@%
  31191.      Food: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           f3b88@%%@NL@%
  31192.      Happiness: %@AB@%de Unamuno%@AE@%%@BO:          121afa@%%@NL@%
  31193.      %@AB@%Heartbreak%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1247e0@%%@NL@%
  31194.      Jealousy: %@AB@%Bible, Song of Solomon%@AE@%%@BO:          15d590@%%@NL@%
  31195.      %@AB@%Lovers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          185cc8@%%@NL@%
  31196.      Marriage: %@AB@%Baudelaire%@AE@%%@BO:          196322@%; %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:          196674@%; %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:          193cfd@%; %@AB@%de Maupassant%@AE@%%@BO:          195e42@%; %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          1964cc@%%@NL@%
  31197.      Marriage: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:          19617c@%; %@AB@%Wycherley%@AE@%%@BO:          195ce5@%%@NL@%
  31198.      Passion: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          1ced49@%%@NL@%
  31199.      Promises: %@AB@%Etherege%@AE@%%@BO:          208458@%%@NL@%
  31200.      Reason: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:          21c86c@%%@NL@%
  31201.      Religion: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          224541@%%@NL@%
  31202.      Secrets: %@AB@%Antiphanes%@AE@%%@BO:          23fd0f@%%@NL@%
  31203.      Sex: %@AB@%Donne%@AE@%%@BO:          24d47f@%; %@AB@%Gauguin%@AE@%%@BO:          24eca1@%; %@AB@%Perelman%@AE@%%@BO:          24c393@%%@NL@%
  31204.      Suicide: %@AB@%Walsh%@AE@%%@BO:          275fa5@%%@NL@%
  31205. %@NL@%
  31206.      %@2@%O lyric Love, half angel and half bird%@NL@%
  31207.      And all a wonder and a wild desire.%@NL@%
  31208. %@CR:LOVE  Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  31209.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  31210.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31211. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31212. %@NL@%
  31213. %@NL@%
  31214. %@2@%What a recreation it is to be in love! It sets the heart aching%@EH@%
  31215. so delicately, there's no taking a wink of sleep for the pleasure
  31216. of the pain.%@NL@%
  31217. %@CR:LOVE  ColmantheY@%%@NL@%
  31218.                                      George Colman the Younger (1762-1836)%@NL@%
  31219.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  31220. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31221. %@NL@%
  31222. %@NL@%
  31223. %@2@%All the little emptiness of love!%@NL@%
  31224. %@CR:LOVE  Brooke    @%%@NL@%
  31225.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  31226.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  31227. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31228. %@NL@%
  31229. %@NL@%
  31230. %@2@%True love is like ghosts, which everyone talks about and few%@EH@%
  31231. have seen.%@NL@%
  31232. %@CR:LOVE  LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31233.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31234.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31235. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31236. %@NL@%
  31237. %@NL@%
  31238. %@2@%Whoso loves believes the impossible.%@NL@%
  31239. %@CR:LOVE  Browning1 @%%@NL@%
  31240.                                     Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)%@NL@%
  31241.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31242. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31243. %@NL@%
  31244. %@NL@%
  31245.      %@2@%When one is in love one begins to deceive oneself.%@NL@%
  31246.      And one ends by deceiving others.%@NL@%
  31247. %@CR:LOVE  Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  31248.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  31249.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  31250. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31251. %@NL@%
  31252. %@NL@%
  31253. %@2@%Love is too young to know what conscience is.%@NL@%
  31254. %@CR:LOVE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  31255.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31256.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31257. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31258. %@NL@%
  31259. %@NL@%
  31260. %@2@%There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear.%@NL@%
  31261. %@CR:LOVE  SaintJohn @%%@NL@%
  31262.                                             Saint John (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  31263.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  31264. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31265. %@NL@%
  31266. %@NL@%
  31267. %@2@%Many people when they fall in love look for a little haven%@EH@%
  31268. of refuge from the world, where they can be sure of being admired
  31269. when they are not admirable, and praised when they are not praiseworthy.%@NL@%
  31270. %@CR:LOVE  Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  31271.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  31272.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  31273. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31274. %@NL@%
  31275. %@NL@%
  31276. %@2@%Love is a gross exaggeration of the difference between one%@EH@%
  31277. person and everybody else.%@NL@%
  31278. %@CR:LOVE  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  31279.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  31280.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  31281. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31282. %@NL@%
  31283. %@NL@%
  31284. %@2@%Love is the wisdom of the fool and the folly of the wise.%@NL@%
  31285. %@CR:LOVE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  31286.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  31287.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  31288. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31289. %@NL@%
  31290. %@NL@%
  31291. %@2@%People who are not in love fail to understand how an intelligent%@EH@%
  31292. man can suffer because of a very ordinary woman. This is like being
  31293. surprised that anyone should be stricken with cholera because
  31294. of a creature so insignificant as the comma bacillus.%@NL@%
  31295. %@CR:LOVE  Proust    @%%@NL@%
  31296.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  31297.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  31298. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31299. %@NL@%
  31300. %@NL@%
  31301. %@2@%Love is a disease which fills you with a desire to be desired.%@NL@%
  31302. %@CR:LOVE  ToulouseLa@%%@NL@%
  31303.                               Henri, Comte de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)%@NL@%
  31304.                                               French painter, lithographer%@NL@%
  31305. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31306. %@NL@%
  31307. %@NL@%
  31308. %@2@%Love's like the measles - all the worse when it comes late%@EH@%
  31309. in life.%@NL@%
  31310. %@CR:LOVE  Jerrold   @%%@NL@%
  31311.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  31312.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  31313. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31314. %@NL@%
  31315. %@NL@%
  31316. %@2@%Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples, for I am sick%@EH@%
  31317. of love.%@NL@%
  31318. %@CR:LOVE  BibleSongo@%%@NL@%
  31319.                                                     Bible, Song of Solomon%@NL@%
  31320. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31321. %@NL@%
  31322. %@NL@%
  31323.      %@2@%How sad and bad and mad it was -%@NL@%
  31324.      But then, how it was sweet!%@NL@%
  31325. %@CR:LOVE  Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  31326.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  31327.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31328. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31329. %@NL@%
  31330. %@NL@%
  31331. %@2@%It is best to love wisely, no doubt; but to love foolishly%@EH@%
  31332. is better than not to be able to love at all.%@NL@%
  31333. %@CR:LOVE  Thackeray @%%@NL@%
  31334.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  31335.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  31336. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31337. %@NL@%
  31338. %@NL@%
  31339. %@2@%To say the truth, reason and love keep little company together%@EH@%
  31340. now-a-days.%@NL@%
  31341. %@CR:LOVE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  31342.                                          Bottom, %@AI@%A Midsummer Night's Dream%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31343.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31344.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31345. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31346. %@NL@%
  31347. %@NL@%
  31348. %@2@%Love is not really blind - the bandage is never so tight%@EH@%
  31349. but that it can peep.%@NL@%
  31350. %@CR:LOVE  Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  31351.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  31352.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  31353. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31354. %@NL@%
  31355. %@NL@%
  31356. %@2@%Love is not blind; that is the last thing it is. Love is bound;%@EH@%
  31357. and the more it is bound the less it is blind.%@NL@%
  31358. %@CR:LOVE  Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  31359.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  31360.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  31361. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31362. %@NL@%
  31363. %@NL@%
  31364.      %@2@%Take me to you, imprison me. For I,%@NL@%
  31365.      Except you enthrall me, never shall be free,%@NL@%
  31366.      Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.%@NL@%
  31367. %@CR:LOVE  Donne     @%%@NL@%
  31368.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  31369.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  31370. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31371. %@NL@%
  31372. %@NL@%
  31373. %@2@%Love seeks not to possess, but to be possessed.%@NL@%
  31374. %@CR:LOVE  Benson    @%%@NL@%
  31375.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  31376.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  31377. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31378. %@NL@%
  31379. %@NL@%
  31380.      %@2@%If there's delight in love, 'tis when I see%@NL@%
  31381.      That heart, which others bleed for, bleed for me.%@NL@%
  31382. %@CR:LOVE  Congreve  @%%@NL@%
  31383.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  31384.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  31385. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31386. %@NL@%
  31387. %@NL@%
  31388. %@2@%Do you want to enjoy her love, or do you want to dominate it?%@NL@%
  31389. %@CR:LOVE  Drinkwater@%%@NL@%
  31390.                                                John Drinkwater (1882-1937)%@NL@%
  31391.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  31392. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31393. %@NL@%
  31394. %@NL@%
  31395. %@2@%Love doesn't grow on the trees like apples in Eden - it's%@EH@%
  31396. something you have to make. And you must use your imagination to
  31397. make it too, just like anything else. It's all work, work.%@NL@%
  31398. %@CR:LOVE  Cary      @%%@NL@%
  31399.                                                     Joyce Cary (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  31400.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  31401. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31402. %@NL@%
  31403. %@NL@%
  31404. %@2@%Much more genius is needed to make love than to command armies.%@NL@%
  31405. %@CR:LOVE  Lenclos   @%%@NL@%
  31406.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  31407.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  31408. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31409. %@NL@%
  31410. %@NL@%
  31411.      %@2@%When first we met we did not guess%@NL@%
  31412.      That Love would prove so hard a master.%@NL@%
  31413. %@CR:LOVE  Bridges   @%%@NL@%
  31414.                                                 Robert Bridges (1844-1930)%@NL@%
  31415.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  31416. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31417. %@NL@%
  31418. %@NL@%
  31419. %@2@%The course of true love never did run smooth.%@NL@%
  31420. %@CR:LOVE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  31421.                                        Lysander, %@AI@%A Midsummer Night's Dream%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31422.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31423.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31424. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31425. %@NL@%
  31426. %@NL@%
  31427. %@2@%Never the time and the place and the loved one all together!%@NL@%
  31428. %@CR:LOVE  Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  31429.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  31430.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31431. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31432. %@NL@%
  31433. %@NL@%
  31434. %@2@%A thick head can do as much damage as a hard heart.%@NL@%
  31435. %@CR:LOVE  Dodds2    @%%@NL@%
  31436.                                                    H. W. Dodds (1889-1980)%@NL@%
  31437.                                             Princeton University president%@NL@%
  31438. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31439. %@NL@%
  31440. %@NL@%
  31441. %@2@%Every theory of love, from Plato down, teaches that each individual%@EH@%
  31442. loves in the other sex what he lacks in himself.%@NL@%
  31443. %@CR:LOVE  Hall1     @%%@NL@%
  31444.                                                G. Stanley Hall (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  31445.                               American psychologist, philosopher, educator%@NL@%
  31446. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31447. %@NL@%
  31448. %@NL@%
  31449. %@2@%We are nearer loving those who hate us than those who love%@EH@%
  31450. us more than we wish.%@NL@%
  31451. %@CR:LOVE  LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31452.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31453.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31454. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31455. %@NL@%
  31456. %@NL@%
  31457. %@2@%The fickleness of the women I love is only equalled by the%@EH@%
  31458. infernal constancy of the women who love me.%@NL@%
  31459. %@CR:LOVE  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  31460.                                                 Charteris, %@AI@%The Philanderer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31461.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  31462.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  31463. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31464. %@NL@%
  31465. %@NL@%
  31466. %@2@%I love her and she loves me, and we hate each other with a%@EH@%
  31467. wild hatred born of love.%@NL@%
  31468. %@CR:LOVE  Strindberg@%%@NL@%
  31469.                                           J. August Strindberg (1849-1912)%@NL@%
  31470.                                                          Swedish dramatist%@NL@%
  31471. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31472. %@NL@%
  31473. %@NL@%
  31474. %@2@%The more one loves a mistress, the more one is ready to hate%@EH@%
  31475. her.%@NL@%
  31476. %@CR:LOVE  LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31477.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31478.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31479. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31480. %@NL@%
  31481. %@NL@%
  31482.      %@2@%If she herself will not love,%@NL@%
  31483.      Nothing can make her:%@NL@%
  31484.      The devil take her!%@NL@%
  31485. %@CR:LOVE  Suckling  @%%@NL@%
  31486.                                              Sir John Suckling (1609-1642)%@NL@%
  31487.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31488. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31489. %@NL@%
  31490. %@NL@%
  31491.      %@2@%And I shall find some girl perhaps,%@NL@%
  31492.      And a better one than you,%@NL@%
  31493.      With eyes as wise, but kindlier,%@NL@%
  31494.      And lips as soft, but true,%@NL@%
  31495.      And I daresay she will do.%@NL@%
  31496. %@CR:LOVE  Brooke    @%%@NL@%
  31497.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  31498.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  31499. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31500. %@NL@%
  31501. %@NL@%
  31502. %@2@%Men have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them,%@EH@%
  31503. but not for love.%@NL@%
  31504. %@CR:LOVE  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  31505.                                                   Rosalind, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31506.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31507.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31508. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31509. %@NL@%
  31510. %@NL@%
  31511. %@2@%When love grows diseas'd, the best thing we can do is to put%@EH@%
  31512. it to a violent death; I cannot endure the torture of a ling'ring
  31513. and consumptive passion.%@NL@%
  31514. %@CR:LOVE  Etherege  @%%@NL@%
  31515.                                            Sir George Etherege (1635-1691)%@NL@%
  31516.                                                English dramatist, diplomat%@NL@%
  31517. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31518. %@NL@%
  31519. %@NL@%
  31520. %@2@%Love never dies of starvation, but often of indigestion.%@NL@%
  31521. %@CR:LOVE  Lenclos   @%%@NL@%
  31522.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  31523.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  31524. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31525. %@NL@%
  31526. %@NL@%
  31527. %@2@%Love is like linen, often changed, the sweeter.%@NL@%
  31528. %@CR:LOVE  Fletcher2 @%%@NL@%
  31529.                                               Phineas Fletcher (1582-1650)%@NL@%
  31530.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31531. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31532. %@NL@%
  31533. %@NL@%
  31534. %@2@%It is better to love two too many than one too few.%@NL@%
  31535. %@CR:LOVE  Harington @%%@NL@%
  31536.                                             Sir John Harington (1561-1612)%@NL@%
  31537.                                                   English writer, courtier%@NL@%
  31538. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31539. %@NL@%
  31540. %@NL@%
  31541. %@2@%One can find women who have never had one love affair, but%@EH@%
  31542. it is rare indeed to find any who have had only one.%@NL@%
  31543. %@CR:LOVE  LaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31544.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31545.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31546. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31547. %@NL@%
  31548. %@NL@%
  31549. %@2@%Women fall in love through their ears and men through their%@EH@%
  31550. eyes.%@NL@%
  31551. %@CR:LOVE  Wyatt     @%%@NL@%
  31552.                                                    Woodrow Wyatt (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  31553.                                      British journalist, Labour politician%@NL@%
  31554. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31555. %@NL@%
  31556. %@NL@%
  31557. %@2@%In women pity begets love, in men love begets pity.%@NL@%
  31558. %@CR:LOVE  Collins1  @%%@NL@%
  31559.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  31560.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  31561. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31562. %@NL@%
  31563. %@NL@%
  31564. %@2@%Love is the history of a woman's life; it is an episode in%@EH@%
  31565. man's.%@NL@%
  31566. %@CR:LOVE  Stael     @%%@NL@%
  31567.                                                Madame de Stael (1766-1817)%@NL@%
  31568.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  31569. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31570. %@NL@%
  31571. %@NL@%
  31572. %@2@%Falling in love is a matter of intermittent propinquity; the%@EH@%
  31573. cure for it, propinquity.%@NL@%
  31574. %@CR:LOVE  Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  31575.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  31576.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  31577. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31578. %@NL@%
  31579. %@NL@%
  31580. %@2@%Familiar acts are beautiful through love.%@NL@%
  31581. %@CR:LOVE  Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  31582.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  31583.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31584. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31585. %@NL@%
  31586. %@NL@%
  31587. %@2@%Love does not consist in gazing at each other but in looking%@EH@%
  31588. together in the same direction.%@NL@%
  31589. %@CR:LOVE  SaintExupe@%%@NL@%
  31590.                                       Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900-1944)%@NL@%
  31591.                                                     French aviator, writer%@NL@%
  31592. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31593. %@NL@%
  31594. %@NL@%
  31595. %@2@%One of the glories of society is to have created woman where%@EH@%
  31596. Nature made a female, to have created a continuity of desire where
  31597. Nature only thought of perpetuating the species; %@AI@%in fine,%@AE@% to
  31598. have invented love.%@NL@%
  31599. %@CR:LOVE  Moore3    @%%@NL@%
  31600.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  31601.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  31602. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31603. %@NL@%
  31604. %@NL@%
  31605. %@2@%A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another.%@NL@%
  31606. %@CR:LOVE  Jesus     @%%@NL@%
  31607.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  31608.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  31609. %@AS@%                                                                      Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31610. %@NL@%
  31611. %@NL@%
  31612. %@1@%%@AS@%Love: First Love%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31613. %@CR:FIRSTLOVE       @%%@NL@%
  31614. %@2@%%@QR:Love: First Love@%First love is only a little foolishness and a lot of curiosity.%@NL@%
  31615. %@CR:FIRSTLShaw      @%%@NL@%
  31616.                                        Broadbent, %@AI@%John Bull's Other Island%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31617.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  31618.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  31619. %@AS@%                                                          Love: First Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31620. %@NL@%
  31621. %@NL@%
  31622. %@2@%The magic of first love is our ignorance that it can ever end.%@NL@%
  31623. %@CR:FIRSTLDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  31624.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  31625.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  31626. %@AS@%                                                          Love: First Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31627. %@NL@%
  31628. %@NL@%
  31629. %@2@%We always believe our first love is our last, and our last%@EH@%
  31630. love our first.%@NL@%
  31631. %@CR:FIRSTLWhyteMelvi@%%@NL@%
  31632.                                          George Whyte-Melville (1821-1878)%@NL@%
  31633.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  31634. %@AS@%                                                          Love: First Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31635. %@NL@%
  31636. %@NL@%
  31637.      %@2@%In her first passion woman loves her lover,%@NL@%
  31638.      In all the others all she loves is love.%@NL@%
  31639. %@CR:FIRSTLByron2    @%%@NL@%
  31640.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  31641.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31642. %@AS@%                                                          Love: First Love%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31643. %@NL@%
  31644. %@NL@%
  31645. %@NL@%
  31646. %@1@%%@AS@%Love: at First Sight%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31647. %@CR:LOVE.ATFIRSTSIGH@%%@NL@%
  31648. %@2@%%@QR:Love: at First Sight@%I did but see her passing by%@NL@%
  31649.      And yet I love her till I die.%@NL@%
  31650. %@CR:LOVE.AFord4     @%%@NL@%
  31651.                                                    Thomas Ford (1580-1648)%@NL@%
  31652.                                                           English composer%@NL@%
  31653. %@AS@%                                                      Love: at First Sight%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31654. %@NL@%
  31655. %@NL@%
  31656.      %@2@%Where both deliberate, the love is slight:%@NL@%
  31657.      Who ever lov'd, that lov'd not at first sight?%@NL@%
  31658. %@CR:LOVE.AMarlowe   @%%@NL@%
  31659.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  31660.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31661. %@AS@%                                                      Love: at First Sight%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31662. %@NL@%
  31663. %@NL@%
  31664. %@2@%The only true love is love at first sight; second sight dispels%@EH@%
  31665. it.%@NL@%
  31666. %@CR:LOVE.AZangwill  @%%@NL@%
  31667.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  31668.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  31669. %@AS@%                                                      Love: at First Sight%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31670. %@NL@%
  31671. %@NL@%
  31672. %@NL@%
  31673. %@1@%%@AS@%Lovers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31674. %@CR:LOVERS          @%%@NL@%
  31675. %@2@%See:%@QR:Lovers@%%@NL@%
  31676.      Husbands: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          13dbac@%%@NL@%
  31677.      Promises: %@AB@%Catullus%@AE@%%@BO:          2082cc@%%@NL@%
  31678. %@NL@%
  31679. %@2@%And the lovers lie abed with all their griefs in their arms.%@NL@%
  31680. %@CR:LOVERSThomas1   @%%@NL@%
  31681.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  31682.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  31683. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31684. %@NL@%
  31685. %@NL@%
  31686. %@2@%Imparadised in one another's arms.%@NL@%
  31687. %@CR:LOVERSMilton    @%%@NL@%
  31688.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  31689.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31690. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31691. %@NL@%
  31692. %@NL@%
  31693.      %@2@%Busy old fool, unruly Sun,%@NL@%
  31694.      Why dost thou thus,%@NL@%
  31695.      Through windows and through curtains call on us?%@NL@%
  31696.      Must to thy motions lovers' seasons run?%@NL@%
  31697. %@CR:LOVERSDonne     @%%@NL@%
  31698.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  31699.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  31700. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31701. %@NL@%
  31702. %@NL@%
  31703. %@2@%We that are true lovers run into strange capers.%@NL@%
  31704. %@CR:LOVERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  31705.                                                 Touchstone, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31706.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31707.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31708. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31709. %@NL@%
  31710. %@NL@%
  31711. %@2@%A lover is someone who gives as much consideration to your%@EH@%
  31712. warts as you do, and continues to admire you as you do. Many love
  31713. affairs are simply servings of self-pity for two.%@NL@%
  31714. %@CR:LOVERSBrien     @%%@NL@%
  31715.                                                       Alan Brien (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  31716.                                               British novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  31717. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31718. %@NL@%
  31719. %@NL@%
  31720. %@2@%Every man wants a woman to appeal to his better side, his nobler%@EH@%
  31721. instincts and his higher nature - and another woman to help
  31722. him forget them.%@NL@%
  31723. %@CR:LOVERSRowland1  @%%@NL@%
  31724.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  31725.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  31726. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31727. %@NL@%
  31728. %@NL@%
  31729. %@2@%A mistress should be like a little country retreat near the%@EH@%
  31730. town; not to dwell in constantly, but only for a night and away.%@NL@%
  31731. %@CR:LOVERSWycherley @%%@NL@%
  31732.                                              William Wycherley (1640-1716)%@NL@%
  31733.                                                         English dramatist
  31734. %@NL@%
  31735. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31736. %@NL@%
  31737. %@NL@%
  31738. %@2@%One can be a soldier without dying, and a lover without sighing.%@NL@%
  31739. %@CR:LOVERSArnold1   @%%@NL@%
  31740.                                                   Edwin Arnold (1832-1904)%@NL@%
  31741.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  31742. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31743. %@NL@%
  31744. %@NL@%
  31745. %@2@%I would not miss your face, your neck, your hands, your limbs,%@EH@%
  31746. your bosom and certain other of your charms. Indeed, not to become
  31747. boring by naming them all, I could do without you, Chloe, altogether.%@NL@%
  31748. %@CR:LOVERSMartial   @%%@NL@%
  31749.                                                     Martial (c. 40-c. 104)%@NL@%
  31750.                                                                 Roman poet%@NL@%
  31751. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31752. %@NL@%
  31753. %@NL@%
  31754.      %@2@%Nay but you, who do not love her,%@NL@%
  31755.      Is she not pure gold, my mistress?%@NL@%
  31756. %@CR:LOVERSBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  31757.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  31758.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31759. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31760. %@NL@%
  31761. %@NL@%
  31762.      %@2@%Age cannot wither her, not custom stale%@NL@%
  31763.      Her infinite variety. Other women cloy%@NL@%
  31764.      The appetites they feed, but she makes hungry%@NL@%
  31765.      Where most she satisfies.%@NL@%
  31766. %@CR:LOVERSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  31767.                                            Enobarbus, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31768.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  31769.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  31770. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31771. %@NL@%
  31772. %@NL@%
  31773.      %@2@%When Death to either shall come,%@NL@%
  31774.       - I pray it be first to me.%@NL@%
  31775. %@CR:LOVERSBridges   @%%@NL@%
  31776.                                                 Robert Bridges (1844-1930)%@NL@%
  31777.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  31778. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31779. %@NL@%
  31780. %@NL@%
  31781. %@2@%Love ceases to be a pleasure when it ceases to be a secret.%@NL@%
  31782. %@CR:LOVERSBehn      @%%@NL@%
  31783.                                                     Aphra Behn (1640-1689)%@NL@%
  31784.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  31785. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31786. %@NL@%
  31787. %@NL@%
  31788. %@2@%A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all.%@NL@%
  31789. %@CR:LOVERSHardy     @%%@NL@%
  31790.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  31791.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  31792. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31793. %@NL@%
  31794. %@NL@%
  31795. %@2@%Lovers' quarrels are the renewal of love.%@NL@%
  31796. %@CR:LOVERSTerence   @%%@NL@%
  31797.                                                    Terence (c. 190-159 BC)%@NL@%
  31798.                                                            Roman dramatist%@NL@%
  31799. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31800. %@NL@%
  31801. %@NL@%
  31802. %@2@%The difference is wide that the sheets will not decide.%@NL@%
  31803. %@CR:LOVERSPROVERB   @%%@NL@%
  31804.                                                                    Proverb%@NL@%
  31805. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31806. %@NL@%
  31807. %@NL@%
  31808. %@2@%At the beginning of love and at its end, lovers are embarrassed%@EH@%
  31809. if left alone.%@NL@%
  31810. %@CR:LOVERSlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  31811.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  31812.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31813. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31814. %@NL@%
  31815. %@NL@%
  31816. %@2@%There are few people who are not ashamed of their love affairs%@EH@%
  31817. when the infatuation is over.%@NL@%
  31818. %@CR:LOVERSLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  31819.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  31820.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  31821. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31822. %@NL@%
  31823. %@NL@%
  31824. %@2@%Scratch a lover and find a foe.%@NL@%
  31825. %@CR:LOVERSParker1   @%%@NL@%
  31826.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  31827.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  31828. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31829. %@NL@%
  31830. %@NL@%
  31831. %@2@%Queen Guinevere, for whom I make here a little mention, that%@EH@%
  31832. while she lived she was a true lover, and therefore she had a good
  31833. end.%@NL@%
  31834. %@CR:LOVERSMalory    @%%@NL@%
  31835.                                           Sir Thomas Malory (c. 1430-1471)%@NL@%
  31836.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  31837. %@AS@%                                                                    Lovers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31838. %@NL@%
  31839. %@NL@%
  31840. %@NL@%
  31841. %@1@%%@AS@%Loyalty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31842. %@CR:LOYALTY         @%%@NL@%
  31843. %@2@%See:%@QR:Loyalty@%%@NL@%
  31844.      %@AB@%Fidelity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           f0478@%%@NL@%
  31845.      Royalty: %@AB@%Queen Elizabeth I%@AE@%%@BO:          23259d@%%@NL@%
  31846. %@NL@%
  31847. %@2@%If you are not too long, I will wait for you all my life.%@NL@%
  31848. %@CR:LOYALTWilde     @%%@NL@%
  31849.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  31850.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  31851. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31852. %@NL@%
  31853. %@NL@%
  31854. %@2@%Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after%@EH@%
  31855. thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest,
  31856. I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.%@NL@%
  31857. %@CR:LOYALTBibleRuth @%%@NL@%
  31858.                                                                Bible, Ruth%@NL@%
  31859. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31860. %@NL@%
  31861. %@NL@%
  31862. %@2@%Histories are more full of examples of the fidelity of dogs%@EH@%
  31863. than of friends.%@NL@%
  31864. %@CR:LOYALTPope      @%%@NL@%
  31865.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  31866.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31867. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31868. %@NL@%
  31869. %@NL@%
  31870. %@2@%To be sure, the dog is loyal. But why, on that account, should%@EH@%
  31871. we take him as an example? He is loyal to men, not to other dogs.%@NL@%
  31872. %@CR:LOYALTKraus     @%%@NL@%
  31873.                                                     Karl Kraus (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  31874.                                                  Austrian poet, journalist%@NL@%
  31875. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31876. %@NL@%
  31877. %@NL@%
  31878. %@2@%There are two kinds of fidelity, that of dogs and that of%@EH@%
  31879. cats:  you, gentlemen, have the fidelity of cats, who never leave
  31880. the house.%@NL@%
  31881. %@CR:LOYALTNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  31882.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  31883.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  31884.                                speaking after he had escaped from Elba, to%@NL@%
  31885.                            French courtiers who had not followed him there%@NL@%
  31886. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31887. %@NL@%
  31888. %@NL@%
  31889. %@2@%We are all the President's men.%@NL@%
  31890. %@CR:LOYALTKissinger @%%@NL@%
  31891.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  31892.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  31893.                                           after invasion of Cambodia, 1970%@NL@%
  31894. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31895. %@NL@%
  31896. %@NL@%
  31897. %@2@%No man can serve two masters.%@NL@%
  31898. %@CR:LOYALTJesus     @%%@NL@%
  31899.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  31900.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  31901. %@AS@%                                                                   Loyalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31902. %@NL@%
  31903. %@NL@%
  31904. %@NL@%
  31905. %@1@%%@AS@%Luck%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31906. %@CR:LUCK            @%%@NL@%
  31907. %@2@%%@QR:Luck@%now and then%@NL@%
  31908.      there is a person born%@NL@%
  31909.      who is so unlucky%@NL@%
  31910.      that he runs into accidents%@NL@%
  31911.      which started out to happen%@NL@%
  31912.      to somebody else.%@NL@%
  31913. %@CR:LUCK  Marquis   @%%@NL@%
  31914.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  31915.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  31916. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31917. %@NL@%
  31918. %@NL@%
  31919. %@2@%Luck's always to blame.%@NL@%
  31920. %@CR:LUCK  laFontaine@%%@NL@%
  31921.                                            Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695)%@NL@%
  31922.                                                      French poet, fabulist%@NL@%
  31923. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31924. %@NL@%
  31925. %@NL@%
  31926. %@2@%It often amuses me to hear men impute all their misfortunes%@EH@%
  31927. to fate, luck, or destiny, whilst their successes or good fortune
  31928. they ascribe to their own sagacity, cleverness or penetration.%@NL@%
  31929. %@CR:LUCK  Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  31930.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  31931.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  31932. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31933. %@NL@%
  31934. %@NL@%
  31935. %@2@%Chance is a word that does not make sense. Nothing happens%@EH@%
  31936. without a cause.%@NL@%
  31937. %@CR:LUCK  Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  31938.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  31939.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  31940. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31941. %@NL@%
  31942. %@NL@%
  31943. %@2@%Chance is perhaps the pseudonym of God when he does not wish%@EH@%
  31944. to sign his work.%@NL@%
  31945. %@CR:LUCK  France    @%%@NL@%
  31946.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  31947.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  31948. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31949. %@NL@%
  31950. %@NL@%
  31951. %@2@%When God throws the dice are loaded.%@NL@%
  31952. %@CR:LUCK  LUCKGREEKP@%%@NL@%
  31953.                                                              Greek proverb%@NL@%
  31954. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31955. %@NL@%
  31956. %@NL@%
  31957. %@2@%Fortune's a right whore: If she give ought, she deals it in%@EH@%
  31958. small parcels, that she may take away all at one swoop.%@NL@%
  31959. %@CR:LUCK  Webster2  @%%@NL@%
  31960.                                                   John Webster (1580-1625)%@NL@%
  31961.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  31962. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31963. %@NL@%
  31964. %@NL@%
  31965. %@2@%If at first you do succeed, don't take any more chances.%@NL@%
  31966. %@CR:LUCK  Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  31967.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  31968.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  31969. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31970. %@NL@%
  31971. %@NL@%
  31972. %@2@%Watch out when you're getting all you want; fattening frogs%@EH@%
  31973. ain't in luck.%@NL@%
  31974. %@CR:LUCK  Harris2   @%%@NL@%
  31975.                                           Joel Chandler Harris (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  31976.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  31977. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31978. %@NL@%
  31979. %@NL@%
  31980. %@2@%There is death in the pot.%@NL@%
  31981. %@CR:LUCK  BibleKings@%%@NL@%
  31982.                                                               Bible, Kings%@NL@%
  31983. %@AS@%                                                                      Luck%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31984. %@NL@%
  31985. %@NL@%
  31986. %@NL@%
  31987. %@1@%%@AS@%Lust%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  31988. %@CR:LUST            @%%@NL@%
  31989. %@2@%%@QR:Lust@%Abstinence sows sand all over%@NL@%
  31990.      The ruddy limbs and flaming hair,%@NL@%
  31991.      But desire gratified%@NL@%
  31992.      Plants fruits of life and beauty there.%@NL@%
  31993. %@CR:LUST  Blake     @%%@NL@%
  31994.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  31995.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  31996. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  31997. %@NL@%
  31998. %@NL@%
  31999. %@2@%The trouble with life is that there are so many beautiful women%@EH@%
  32000. and so little time.%@NL@%
  32001. %@CR:LUST  Barrymore2@%%@NL@%
  32002.                                                 John Barrymore (1882-1942)%@NL@%
  32003.                                              American stage and film actor%@NL@%
  32004. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32005. %@NL@%
  32006. %@NL@%
  32007. %@2@%This is the monstruosity in love, lady, that the will is infinite%@EH@%
  32008. and the execution confined; that the desire is boundless, and the
  32009. act a slave to limit.%@NL@%
  32010. %@CR:LUST  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  32011.                                              Troilus, %@AI@%Troilus and Cressida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32012.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  32013.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  32014. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32015. %@NL@%
  32016. %@NL@%
  32017. %@2@%He is every woman's man and every man's woman.%@NL@%
  32018. %@CR:LUST  Curio     @%%@NL@%
  32019.                                          Gaius Scribonius Curio (d. 53 BC)%@NL@%
  32020.                                                               Roman consul%@NL@%
  32021.                                                           of Julius Caesar%@NL@%
  32022. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32023. %@NL@%
  32024. %@NL@%
  32025. %@2@%What most men desire is a virgin who is a whore.%@NL@%
  32026. %@CR:LUST  Dahlberg  @%%@NL@%
  32027.                                                Edward Dahlberg (1900-1977)%@NL@%
  32028.                                            American novelist, poet, critic%@NL@%
  32029. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32030. %@NL@%
  32031. %@NL@%
  32032. %@2@%People will insist  . . .  on treating the %@AI@%mons Veneris%@AE@% as%@EH@%
  32033. though it were Mount Everest.%@NL@%
  32034. %@CR:LUST  Huxley1   @%%@NL@%
  32035.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  32036.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  32037. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32038. %@NL@%
  32039. %@NL@%
  32040.      %@2@%Down, wanton, down! Have you no shame%@NL@%
  32041.      That at the whisper of Love's name,%@NL@%
  32042.      Or Beauty's, presto! up you raise%@NL@%
  32043.      Your angry head and stand and gaze?%@NL@%
  32044. %@CR:LUST  Graves    @%%@NL@%
  32045.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  32046.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  32047. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32048. %@NL@%
  32049. %@NL@%
  32050. %@2@%We have two tyrannous physical passions; concupiscence and%@EH@%
  32051. chastity. We become mad in pursuit of sex: we become equally mad
  32052. in the persecution of that pursuit.%@NL@%
  32053. %@CR:LUST  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  32054.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  32055.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  32056. %@AS@%                                                                      Lust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32057. %@NL@%
  32058. %@NL@%
  32059. %@NL@%
  32060. %@1@%%@AS@%Luxury%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32061. %@CR:LUXURY          @%%@NL@%
  32062. %@2@%%@QR:Luxury@%Give us the luxuries of life, and we will dispense with its%@EH@%
  32063. necessities.%@NL@%
  32064. %@CR:LUXURYMotley    @%%@NL@%
  32065.                                                   J. L. Motley (1814-1877)%@NL@%
  32066.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  32067. %@AS@%                                                                    Luxury%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32068. %@NL@%
  32069. %@NL@%
  32070. %@2@%The lust for comfort, that stealthy thing that enters the house%@EH@%
  32071. a guest, and then becomes a host, and then a master.%@NL@%
  32072. %@CR:LUXURYGibran    @%%@NL@%
  32073.                                                  Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)%@NL@%
  32074.                                                        Syrian mystic, poet%@NL@%
  32075. %@AS@%                                                                    Luxury%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32076. %@NL@%
  32077. %@NL@%
  32078. %@2@%The saddest thing I can imagine is to get used to luxury.%@NL@%
  32079. %@CR:LUXURYChaplin   @%%@NL@%
  32080.                                                Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977)%@NL@%
  32081.                                              English comic actor, director%@NL@%
  32082. %@AS@%                                                                    Luxury%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32083. %@NL@%
  32084. %@NL@%
  32085. %@2@%Living in the lap of luxury isn't bad, except you never know%@EH@%
  32086. when luxury is going to stand up.%@NL@%
  32087. %@CR:LUXURYWelles    @%%@NL@%
  32088.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  32089.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  32090. %@AS@%                                                                    Luxury%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32091. %@NL@%
  32092. %@NL@%
  32093. %@NL@%
  32094. %@1@%%@AS@%Lying%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32095. %@CR:LYING           @%%@NL@%
  32096. %@2@%See:%@QR:Lying@%%@NL@%
  32097.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:            f66c@%%@NL@%
  32098.      Excuses: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:           d6d19@%%@NL@%
  32099.      Men: and Women: %@AB@%Gay%@AE@%%@BO:          1a1e03@%%@NL@%
  32100.      Poets: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          1e4e67@%%@NL@%
  32101.      Politicians: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:          1ef7b7@%%@NL@%
  32102.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Lichtenberg%@AE@%%@BO:          209d4f@%%@NL@%
  32103.      Self-deception: %@AB@%Hoffer%@AE@%%@BO:          245372@%%@NL@%
  32104.      Statistics: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          26d285@%%@NL@%
  32105.      Truth: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:          295c42@%%@NL@%
  32106.      Visionaries: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:          2a58fe@%%@NL@%
  32107.      Wives: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          2b8f2f@%%@NL@%
  32108. %@NL@%
  32109. %@2@%A little inaccuracy sometimes saves tons of explanation.%@NL@%
  32110. %@CR:LYING Munro2    @%%@NL@%
  32111.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  32112.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  32113. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32114. %@NL@%
  32115. %@NL@%
  32116.      %@2@%And, after all, what is a lie? 'Tis but%@NL@%
  32117.      The truth in masquerade.%@NL@%
  32118. %@CR:LYING Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  32119.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  32120.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32121. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32122. %@NL@%
  32123. %@NL@%
  32124.      %@2@%Oh what a tangled web we weave%@NL@%
  32125.      When first we practise to deceive!%@NL@%
  32126. %@CR:LYING Scott4    @%%@NL@%
  32127.                                               Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)%@NL@%
  32128.                                                    Scottish novelist, poet%@NL@%
  32129. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32130. %@NL@%
  32131. %@NL@%
  32132. %@2@%Most lies are quite successful, and human society would be%@EH@%
  32133. impossible without a great deal of good-natured lying.%@NL@%
  32134. %@CR:LYING Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  32135.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  32136.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  32137. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32138. %@NL@%
  32139. %@NL@%
  32140. %@2@%The silent colossal National Lie that is the support and confederate%@EH@%
  32141. of all the tyrannies and shams and inequalities and unfairnesses
  32142. that afflict the peoples - that is the one to throw bricks
  32143. and sermons at.%@NL@%
  32144. %@CR:LYING Twain     @%%@NL@%
  32145.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  32146.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32147. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32148. %@NL@%
  32149. %@NL@%
  32150. %@2@%The great mass of people  . . .  will more easily fall victim%@EH@%
  32151. to a big lie than to a small one.%@NL@%
  32152. %@CR:LYING Hitler    @%%@NL@%
  32153.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  32154.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  32155. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32156. %@NL@%
  32157. %@NL@%
  32158. %@2@%No man spreads a lie with so good a race as he that believes%@EH@%
  32159. it.%@NL@%
  32160. %@CR:LYING Arbuthnot @%%@NL@%
  32161.                                                 John Arbuthnot (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  32162.                                                  English writer, physician%@NL@%
  32163. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32164. %@NL@%
  32165. %@NL@%
  32166. %@2@%No man lies so boldly as the man who is indignant.%@NL@%
  32167. %@CR:LYING Nietzsche @%%@NL@%
  32168.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  32169.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  32170. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32171. %@NL@%
  32172. %@NL@%
  32173. %@2@%Women lie about their age; men about their income.%@NL@%
  32174. %@CR:LYING Feather   @%%@NL@%
  32175.                                                  William Feather (b. 1889)%@NL@%
  32176.                                                       American businessman%@NL@%
  32177. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32178. %@NL@%
  32179. %@NL@%
  32180. %@2@%When I make a mistake every one can see it, but not when I%@EH@%
  32181. lie.%@NL@%
  32182. %@CR:LYING Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  32183.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  32184.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  32185. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32186. %@NL@%
  32187. %@NL@%
  32188. %@2@%Husband a lie, and trump it up in some extraordinary emergency.%@NL@%
  32189. %@CR:LYING Addison   @%%@NL@%
  32190.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  32191.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  32192. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32193. %@NL@%
  32194. %@NL@%
  32195. %@2@%Good lies need a leavening of truth to make them palatable.%@NL@%
  32196. %@CR:LYING McIlvanney@%%@NL@%
  32197.                                               William McIlvanney (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  32198.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  32199. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32200. %@NL@%
  32201. %@NL@%
  32202. %@2@%The best liar is he who makes the smallest amount of lying%@EH@%
  32203. go the longest way.%@NL@%
  32204. %@CR:LYING Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  32205.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  32206.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  32207. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32208. %@NL@%
  32209. %@NL@%
  32210. %@2@%He did not stand shivering upon the brink, he was a thorough-paced%@EH@%
  32211. liar, and plunged at once into the depths of your credulity.%@NL@%
  32212. %@CR:LYING Lamb1     @%%@NL@%
  32213.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  32214.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  32215. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32216. %@NL@%
  32217. %@NL@%
  32218. %@2@%I do not mind lying, but I hate inaccuracy.%@NL@%
  32219. %@CR:LYING Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  32220.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  32221.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  32222. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32223. %@NL@%
  32224. %@NL@%
  32225. %@2@%The cruellest lies are often told in silence.%@NL@%
  32226. %@CR:LYING Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  32227.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  32228.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  32229. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32230. %@NL@%
  32231. %@NL@%
  32232. %@2@%If you are going to lie, you go to jail for the lie rather%@EH@%
  32233. than the crime. So believe me, don't ever lie.%@NL@%
  32234. %@CR:LYING Nixon     @%%@NL@%
  32235.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  32236.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  32237.    to John Dean III, due to testify before Watergate Committee, April 1973%@NL@%
  32238. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32239. %@NL@%
  32240. %@NL@%
  32241. %@2@%A lie will easily get you out of a scrape, and yet, strangely%@EH@%
  32242. and beautifully, rapture possesses you when you have taken the
  32243. scrape and left out the lie.%@NL@%
  32244. %@CR:LYING Montague  @%%@NL@%
  32245.                                                 C. E. Montague (1867-1928)%@NL@%
  32246.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  32247. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32248. %@NL@%
  32249. %@NL@%
  32250. %@2@%He will lie even when it is inconvenient, the sign of the true%@EH@%
  32251. artist.%@NL@%
  32252. %@CR:LYING Vidal     @%%@NL@%
  32253.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  32254.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  32255. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32256. %@NL@%
  32257. %@NL@%
  32258. %@2@%It is hard to believe that a man is telling the truth when%@EH@%
  32259. you know that you would lie if you were in his place.%@NL@%
  32260. %@CR:LYING Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  32261.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  32262.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  32263. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32264. %@NL@%
  32265. %@NL@%
  32266. %@2@%The liar's punishment is not in the least that he is not believed,%@EH@%
  32267. but that he cannot believe anyone else.%@NL@%
  32268. %@CR:LYING Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  32269.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  32270.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  32271. %@AS@%                                                                     Lying%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32272. %@NL@%
  32273. %@NL@%
  32274. %@NL@%
  32275. %@1@%%@AS@%Machinery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32276. %@CR:MACHINERY       @%%@NL@%
  32277. %@2@%See:%@QR:Machinery@%%@NL@%
  32278.      %@AB@%Technology%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2821bb@%%@NL@%
  32279. %@NL@%
  32280.      %@2@%From coupler-flange to spindle-guide I see Thy Hand, O God -%@NL@%
  32281.      Predestination in the stride o' yon connectin'-rod.%@NL@%
  32282. %@CR:MACHINKipling   @%%@NL@%
  32283.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  32284.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  32285. %@AS@%                                                                 Machinery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32286. %@NL@%
  32287. %@NL@%
  32288. %@2@%The machine does not isolate man from the great problems of%@EH@%
  32289. nature but plunges him more deeply into them.%@NL@%
  32290. %@CR:MACHINSaintExupe@%%@NL@%
  32291.                                       Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900-1944)%@NL@%
  32292.                                                     French aviator, writer%@NL@%
  32293. %@AS@%                                                                 Machinery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32294. %@NL@%
  32295. %@NL@%
  32296. %@2@%Machines are worshipped because they are beautiful and valued%@EH@%
  32297. because they confer power; they are hated because they are hideous
  32298. and loathed because they impose slavery.%@NL@%
  32299. %@CR:MACHINRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  32300.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  32301.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  32302. %@AS@%                                                                 Machinery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32303. %@NL@%
  32304. %@NL@%
  32305. %@2@%Ever since our love for machines replaced the love we used%@EH@%
  32306. to have for our fellow men, catastrophes proceed to increase.%@NL@%
  32307. %@CR:MACHINRay       @%%@NL@%
  32308.                                                        Man Ray (1890-1976)%@NL@%
  32309.                                                        French photographer%@NL@%
  32310. %@AS@%                                                                 Machinery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32311. %@NL@%
  32312. %@NL@%
  32313. %@2@%Men have become the tools of their tools.%@NL@%
  32314. %@CR:MACHINThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  32315.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  32316.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  32317. %@AS@%                                                                 Machinery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32318. %@NL@%
  32319. %@NL@%
  32320. %@NL@%
  32321. %@1@%%@AS@%Madness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32322. %@CR:MADNESS         @%%@NL@%
  32323. %@2@%See:%@QR:Madness@%%@NL@%
  32324.      Power: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          1f88b5@%%@NL@%
  32325.      Royalty: %@AB@%Bagehot%@AE@%%@BO:          2304fa@%%@NL@%
  32326. %@NL@%
  32327.      %@2@%The mind is its own place, and in itself%@NL@%
  32328.      Can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of%@NL@%
  32329.      Heaven.%@NL@%
  32330. %@CR:MADNESMilton    @%%@NL@%
  32331.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  32332.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32333. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32334. %@NL@%
  32335. %@NL@%
  32336. %@2@%Insanity is often the logic of an accurate mind overtaxed.%@NL@%
  32337. %@CR:MADNESHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  32338.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  32339.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  32340. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32341. %@NL@%
  32342. %@NL@%
  32343. %@2@%It is his reasonable conversation which mostly frightens us%@EH@%
  32344. in a madman.%@NL@%
  32345. %@CR:MADNESFrance    @%%@NL@%
  32346.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  32347.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  32348. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32349. %@NL@%
  32350. %@NL@%
  32351. %@2@%We must remember that every "mental" symptom is a veiled%@EH@%
  32352. cry of anguish. Against what? Against oppression, or what the patient
  32353. experiences as oppression. The oppressed speak a million
  32354. tongues . . . .%@NL@%
  32355. %@CR:MADNESSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  32356.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  32357.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  32358. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32359. %@NL@%
  32360. %@NL@%
  32361. %@2@%Schizophrenic behaviour is a special strategy that a person%@EH@%
  32362. invents in order to live in an unlivable situation.%@NL@%
  32363. %@CR:MADNESLaing     @%%@NL@%
  32364.                                                    R. D. Laing (1927-1989)%@NL@%
  32365.                                                       British psychiatrist%@NL@%
  32366. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32367. %@NL@%
  32368. %@NL@%
  32369. %@2@%Schizophrenia is the name for a condition that most psychiatrists%@EH@%
  32370. ascribe to patients they call schizophrenic.%@NL@%
  32371. %@CR:MADNESLaing     @%%@NL@%
  32372.                                                    R. D. Laing (1927-1989)%@NL@%
  32373.                                                       British psychiatrist%@NL@%
  32374. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32375. %@NL@%
  32376. %@NL@%
  32377. %@2@%In the past, men created witches: now they create mental patients.%@NL@%
  32378. %@CR:MADNESSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  32379.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  32380.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  32381. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32382. %@NL@%
  32383. %@NL@%
  32384. %@2@%If a patient is poor he is committed to a public hospital as%@EH@%
  32385. a "psychotic." If he can afford a sanatorium, the diagnosis is
  32386. "neurasthenia." If he is wealthy enough to be in his own home
  32387. under the constant watch of nurses and physicians, he is simply
  32388. "an indisposed eccentric."%@NL@%
  32389. %@CR:MADNESJanet     @%%@NL@%
  32390.                                                   Pierre Janet (1859-1947)%@NL@%
  32391.                                             French physician, psychologist%@NL@%
  32392. %@AS@%                                                                   Madness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32393. %@NL@%
  32394. %@NL@%
  32395. %@NL@%
  32396. %@1@%%@AS@%Makeup%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32397. %@CR:MAKEUP          @%%@NL@%
  32398. %@2@%See:%@QR:Makeup@%%@NL@%
  32399.      Faces: %@AB@%Holmes%@AE@%%@BO:           db548@%%@NL@%
  32400. %@NL@%
  32401. %@2@%God hath given you one face, and you make yourselves another.%@NL@%
  32402. %@CR:MAKEUPShakespear@%%@NL@%
  32403.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32404.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  32405.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  32406. %@AS@%                                                                    Makeup%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32407. %@NL@%
  32408. %@NL@%
  32409. %@2@%Most women are not so young as they are painted.%@NL@%
  32410. %@CR:MAKEUPBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  32411.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  32412.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  32413. %@AS@%                                                                    Makeup%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32414. %@NL@%
  32415. %@NL@%
  32416. %@2@%I always wear boot polish on my eyelashes, because I am a very%@EH@%
  32417. emotional person and it doesn't run when I cry.%@NL@%
  32418. %@CR:MAKEUPCartland  @%%@NL@%
  32419.                                                 Barbara Cartland (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  32420.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  32421. %@AS@%                                                                    Makeup%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32422. %@NL@%
  32423. %@NL@%
  32424. %@2@%[Be it resolved] that all women, of whatever age, rank, profession,%@EH@%
  32425. or degree; whether virgin maids or widows; that shall after the
  32426. passing of this Act, impose upon and betray into matrimony any
  32427. of His Majesty's male subjects, by scents, paints, cosmetics, washes,
  32428. artificial teeth, false hair, Spanish wool, iron stays, hoops,
  32429. high-heeled shoes, or bolstered hips, shall incur the penalty of
  32430. the laws now in force against witchcraft, sorcery, and such like
  32431. misdemeanours, and that the marriage, upon conviction, shall stand
  32432. null and void.%@NL@%
  32433. %@CR:MAKEUPCartland  @%%@NL@%
  32434.                                                    Act of Parliament, 1670%@NL@%
  32435. %@AS@%                                                                    Makeup%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32436. %@NL@%
  32437. %@NL@%
  32438. %@NL@%
  32439. %@1@%%@AS@%Management%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32440. %@CR:MANAGEMENT      @%%@NL@%
  32441. %@2@%See:%@QR:Management@%%@NL@%
  32442.      %@AB@%Business%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           4d0d7@%%@NL@%
  32443.      Work: %@AB@%Frost%@AE@%%@BO:          2c3f2e@%; %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          2c32bb@%%@NL@%
  32444.      The Working Class: %@AB@%Giraudoux%@AE@%%@BO:          2c5180@%%@NL@%
  32445. %@NL@%
  32446. %@2@%A man is known by the company he organizes.%@NL@%
  32447. %@CR:MANAGEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  32448.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  32449.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32450. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32451. %@NL@%
  32452. %@NL@%
  32453. %@2@%The ability to deal with people is as purchasable a commodity%@EH@%
  32454. as sugar or coffee. And I pay more for that ability than for any
  32455. other under the sun.%@NL@%
  32456. %@CR:MANAGERockefelle@%%@NL@%
  32457.                                            John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937)%@NL@%
  32458.                                     American industrialist, philanthropist%@NL@%
  32459. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32460. %@NL@%
  32461. %@NL@%
  32462. %@2@%The trouble with senior management to an outsider is that there%@EH@%
  32463. are too many one-ulcer men holding down two-ulcer men's jobs.%@NL@%
  32464. %@CR:MANAGEPrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  32465.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  32466. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32467. %@NL@%
  32468. %@NL@%
  32469. %@2@%The great requisite for the prosperous management of ordinary%@EH@%
  32470. business is the want of imagination.%@NL@%
  32471. %@CR:MANAGEHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  32472.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  32473.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  32474. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32475. %@NL@%
  32476. %@NL@%
  32477. %@2@%The eye of a master will do more work than both his hands.%@NL@%
  32478. %@CR:MANAGEFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  32479.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  32480.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  32481. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32482. %@NL@%
  32483. %@NL@%
  32484. %@2@%The good governor should have a broken leg and keep at home.%@NL@%
  32485. %@CR:MANAGECervantes @%%@NL@%
  32486.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  32487.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  32488. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32489. %@NL@%
  32490. %@NL@%
  32491. %@2@%I always suspect a director who says he can afford to be away%@EH@%
  32492. from the office only for a week at a time. This generally means
  32493. either that he is a frightened man or else he is thoroughly inefficient
  32494. and incapable of delegation.%@NL@%
  32495. %@CR:MANAGEPowell2   @%%@NL@%
  32496.                                                Sir Robert Powell (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  32497.                                         British businessman, civil servant%@NL@%
  32498. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32499. %@NL@%
  32500. %@NL@%
  32501. %@2@%I won't keep a dog and bark myself.%@NL@%
  32502. %@CR:MANAGESwift     @%%@NL@%
  32503.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  32504.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  32505. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32506. %@NL@%
  32507. %@NL@%
  32508. %@2@%Let us have patience with our inferiors. They are ourselves%@EH@%
  32509. of yesterday.%@NL@%
  32510. %@CR:MANAGEGoldberg1 @%%@NL@%
  32511.                                                 Isaac Goldberg (1887-1938)%@NL@%
  32512.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  32513. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32514. %@NL@%
  32515. %@NL@%
  32516. %@2@%There is something rarer than ability. It is the ability to%@EH@%
  32517. recognize ability.%@NL@%
  32518. %@CR:MANAGEHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  32519.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  32520.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32521. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32522. %@NL@%
  32523. %@NL@%
  32524. %@2@%Lots of folks confuse bad management with destiny.%@NL@%
  32525. %@CR:MANAGEHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  32526.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  32527.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  32528. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32529. %@NL@%
  32530. %@NL@%
  32531.      %@2@%I am a young executive.%@NL@%
  32532.      No cuffs than mine are cleaner;%@NL@%
  32533.      I have a Slimline brief-case%@NL@%
  32534.      and I use the firm's Cortina.%@NL@%
  32535. %@CR:MANAGEBetjeman  @%%@NL@%
  32536.                                                  John Betjeman (1906-1984)%@NL@%
  32537.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  32538. %@AS@%                                                                Management%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32539. %@NL@%
  32540. %@NL@%
  32541. %@NL@%
  32542. %@1@%%@AS@%Manana%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32543. %@CR:MANANA          @%%@NL@%
  32544. %@2@%See:%@QR:Manana@%%@NL@%
  32545.      Reform: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          21ed59@%%@NL@%
  32546. %@NL@%
  32547. %@2@%Procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday.%@NL@%
  32548. %@CR:MANANAMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  32549.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  32550.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  32551. %@AS@%                                                                    Manana%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32552. %@NL@%
  32553. %@NL@%
  32554. %@2@%Procrastination is the thief of time.%@NL@%
  32555. %@CR:MANANAYoung3    @%%@NL@%
  32556.                                                   Edward Young (1683-1765)%@NL@%
  32557.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  32558. %@AS@%                                                                    Manana%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32559. %@NL@%
  32560. %@NL@%
  32561. %@2@%Don't put off till tomorrow what can be enjoyed today.%@NL@%
  32562. %@CR:MANANABillings  @%%@NL@%
  32563.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  32564.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  32565. %@AS@%                                                                    Manana%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32566. %@NL@%
  32567. %@NL@%
  32568. %@NL@%
  32569. %@1@%%@AS@%Manners%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32570. %@CR:MANNERS         @%%@NL@%
  32571. %@2@%See:%@QR:Manners@%%@NL@%
  32572.      The Aristocracy: %@AB@%James%@AE@%%@BO:           27a78@%%@NL@%
  32573.      %@AB@%Courtesy%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           88ad9@%%@NL@%
  32574.      The English: %@AB@%Perelman%@AE@%%@BO:           cbcb2@%%@NL@%
  32575.      Intimacy: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          15847f@%%@NL@%
  32576.      %@AB@%Tact%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          27b716@%%@NL@%
  32577. %@NL@%
  32578. %@2@%I don't recall your name but your manners are familiar.%@NL@%
  32579. %@CR:MANNERHerford   @%%@NL@%
  32580.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  32581.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  32582. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32583. %@NL@%
  32584. %@NL@%
  32585. %@2@%Good manners are made up of petty sacrifices.%@NL@%
  32586. %@CR:MANNEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  32587.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  32588.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  32589. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32590. %@NL@%
  32591. %@NL@%
  32592.      %@2@%Unruly manners of ill-timed applause%@NL@%
  32593.      Wrong the best speaker or the justest cause.%@NL@%
  32594. %@CR:MANNERPope      @%%@NL@%
  32595.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  32596.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32597. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32598. %@NL@%
  32599. %@NL@%
  32600. %@2@%Good breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves%@EH@%
  32601. and how little we think of the other person.%@NL@%
  32602. %@CR:MANNERTwain     @%%@NL@%
  32603.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  32604.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32605. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32606. %@NL@%
  32607. %@NL@%
  32608. %@2@%The society of women is the foundation of good manners.%@NL@%
  32609. %@CR:MANNERGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  32610.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  32611.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  32612. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32613. %@NL@%
  32614. %@NL@%
  32615. %@2@%Manhood is meted into courtesies, valour into compliment, and%@EH@%
  32616. men are only turned into tongue.%@NL@%
  32617. %@CR:MANNERShakespear@%%@NL@%
  32618.                                           Beatrice, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32619.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  32620.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  32621. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32622. %@NL@%
  32623. %@NL@%
  32624. %@2@%If a person has no delicacy, he has you in his power.%@NL@%
  32625. %@CR:MANNERHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  32626.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  32627.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  32628. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32629. %@NL@%
  32630. %@NL@%
  32631. %@2@%I have always been of the mind that in a democracy manners%@EH@%
  32632. are the only effective weapons against the bowie-knife.%@NL@%
  32633. %@CR:MANNERLowell2   @%%@NL@%
  32634.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  32635.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  32636. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32637. %@NL@%
  32638. %@NL@%
  32639. %@2@%The highest perfection of politeness is only a beautiful edifice,%@EH@%
  32640. built, from the base to the dome, of ungraceful and gilded forms
  32641. of charitable and unselfish lying.%@NL@%
  32642. %@CR:MANNERTwain     @%%@NL@%
  32643.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  32644.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32645. %@AS@%                                                                   Manners%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32646. %@NL@%
  32647. %@NL@%
  32648. %@NL@%
  32649. %@1@%%@AS@%Marketing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32650. %@CR:MARKETING       @%%@NL@%
  32651. %@2@%%@QR:Marketing@%You can automate the production of cars but you cannot atuomate%@EH@%
  32652. the production of customers.%@NL@%
  32653. %@CR:MARKETReuther   @%%@NL@%
  32654.                                                 Walter Reuther (1907-1970)%@NL@%
  32655.                                                American trade union leader%@NL@%
  32656. %@AS@%                                                                 Marketing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32657. %@NL@%
  32658. %@NL@%
  32659. %@NL@%
  32660. %@1@%%@AS@%Marriage%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  32661. %@CR:MARRIAGE        @%%@NL@%
  32662. %@2@%See:%@QR:Marriage@%%@NL@%
  32663.      Books: %@AB@%Moliere%@AE@%%@BO:           477d0@%%@NL@%
  32664.      %@AB@%Divorce%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           afc14@%%@NL@%
  32665.      %@AB@%Husbands%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          13d033@%%@NL@%
  32666.      Passion: %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          1ced49@%%@NL@%
  32667.      Virtue: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2a35e7@%%@NL@%
  32668.      %@AB@%Wives%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b824a@%%@NL@%
  32669.      Women: %@AB@%Keats%@AE@%%@BO:          2bc9b0@%%@NL@%
  32670. %@NL@%
  32671. %@2@%For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and%@EH@%
  32672. shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh.%@NL@%
  32673. %@CR:MARRIASaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  32674.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  32675.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  32676. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32677. %@NL@%
  32678. %@NL@%
  32679. %@2@%The marriage state, with and without the affection suitable%@EH@%
  32680. to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable
  32681. of receiving in this life.%@NL@%
  32682. %@CR:MARRIASteele    @%%@NL@%
  32683.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  32684.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  32685. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32686. %@NL@%
  32687. %@NL@%
  32688. %@2@%By all means marry: if you get a good wife you'll become happy;%@EH@%
  32689. if you get a bad one, you'll become a philosopher.%@NL@%
  32690. %@CR:MARRIASocrates  @%%@NL@%
  32691.                                                      Socrates (469-399 BC)%@NL@%
  32692.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  32693. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32694. %@NL@%
  32695. %@NL@%
  32696. %@2@%One was never married, and that's his hell; another is, and%@EH@%
  32697. that's his plague.%@NL@%
  32698. %@CR:MARRIABurton2   @%%@NL@%
  32699.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  32700.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  32701. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32702. %@NL@%
  32703. %@NL@%
  32704. %@2@%It is like a cage; one sees the birds outside desperate to%@EH@%
  32705. get in, and those inside equally desperate to get out.%@NL@%
  32706. %@CR:MARRIAMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  32707.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  32708.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  32709. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32710. %@NL@%
  32711. %@NL@%
  32712. %@2@%There is, indeed, nothing that so much seduces reason from%@EH@%
  32713. vigilance, as the thought of passing life with an amiable woman.%@NL@%
  32714. %@CR:MARRIAJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  32715.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  32716.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  32717. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32718. %@NL@%
  32719. %@NL@%
  32720. %@2@%Marriage is a great institution, but I'm not ready for an institution%@EH@%
  32721. yet.%@NL@%
  32722. %@CR:MARRIAWest1     @%%@NL@%
  32723.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  32724.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  32725. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32726. %@NL@%
  32727. %@NL@%
  32728. %@2@%Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation%@EH@%
  32729. with the maximum of opportunity.%@NL@%
  32730. %@CR:MARRIAShaw      @%%@NL@%
  32731.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  32732.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  32733. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32734. %@NL@%
  32735. %@NL@%
  32736. %@2@%Be not hasty to marry; it's better to have one plough going%@EH@%
  32737. than two cradles; and more profit to have a barn filled than a
  32738. bed.%@NL@%
  32739. %@CR:MARRIAFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  32740.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  32741.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  32742. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32743. %@NL@%
  32744. %@NL@%
  32745. %@2@%Marriage. The state or condition of a community consisting%@EH@%
  32746. of a master, a mistress and two slaves, making in all, two.%@NL@%
  32747. %@CR:MARRIABierce    @%%@NL@%
  32748.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  32749.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32750. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32751. %@NL@%
  32752. %@NL@%
  32753. %@2@%I would rather be a beggar and single than a queen and married.%@NL@%
  32754. %@CR:MARRIAQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  32755.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  32756. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32757. %@NL@%
  32758. %@NL@%
  32759. %@2@%I gravely doubt whether women ever were married by capture.%@EH@%
  32760. I think they pretended to be; as they still do.%@NL@%
  32761. %@CR:MARRIAChesterton@%%@NL@%
  32762.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  32763.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  32764. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32765. %@NL@%
  32766. %@NL@%
  32767. %@2@%It is always incomprehensible to a man that a woman should%@EH@%
  32768. ever refuse an offer of marriage.%@NL@%
  32769. %@CR:MARRIAAusten    @%%@NL@%
  32770.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  32771.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  32772. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32773. %@NL@%
  32774. %@NL@%
  32775. %@2@%Alas, she married another. They frequently do. I hope she is%@EH@%
  32776. happy - because I am.%@NL@%
  32777. %@CR:MARRIAWard1     @%%@NL@%
  32778.                                                   Artemus Ward (1834-1867)%@NL@%
  32779.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  32780. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32781. %@NL@%
  32782. %@NL@%
  32783. %@2@%Marriage is the only adventure open to the cowardly.%@NL@%
  32784. %@CR:MARRIAVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  32785.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  32786.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  32787. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32788. %@NL@%
  32789. %@NL@%
  32790. %@2@%The greatest sacrifice in marriage is the sacrifice of the%@EH@%
  32791. adventurous attitude towards life.%@NL@%
  32792. %@CR:MARRIAShaw      @%%@NL@%
  32793.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  32794.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  32795. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32796. %@NL@%
  32797. %@NL@%
  32798. %@2@%You, that are going to be married, think things can never be%@EH@%
  32799. done too fast; but we, that are old, and know what we are about,
  32800. must elope methodically, madam.%@NL@%
  32801. %@CR:MARRIAGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  32802.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  32803.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  32804. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32805. %@NL@%
  32806. %@NL@%
  32807. %@2@%I am not against hasty marriages, where a mutual flame is fanned%@EH@%
  32808. by an adequate income.%@NL@%
  32809. %@CR:MARRIACollins4  @%%@NL@%
  32810.                                                 Wilkie Collins (1824-1889)%@NL@%
  32811.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  32812. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32813. %@NL@%
  32814. %@NL@%
  32815.      %@2@%To church the parties went,%@NL@%
  32816.      At once with carnal and devout intent.%@NL@%
  32817. %@CR:MARRIAPope      @%%@NL@%
  32818.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  32819.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32820. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32821. %@NL@%
  32822. %@NL@%
  32823. %@2@%Let us embrace, and from this very moment vow an eternal misery%@EH@%
  32824. together.%@NL@%
  32825. %@CR:MARRIAOtway     @%%@NL@%
  32826.                                                   Thomas Otway (1652-1685)%@NL@%
  32827.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  32828. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32829. %@NL@%
  32830. %@NL@%
  32831. %@2@%The world must be peopled. When I said I would die a bachelor,%@EH@%
  32832. I did not think I should live till I were married.%@NL@%
  32833. %@CR:MARRIAShakespear@%%@NL@%
  32834.                                           Benedick, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32835.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  32836.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  32837. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32838. %@NL@%
  32839. %@NL@%
  32840. %@2@%When a man marries, dies, or turns Hindoo, his best friends%@EH@%
  32841. hear no more of him.%@NL@%
  32842. %@CR:MARRIAShelley   @%%@NL@%
  32843.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  32844.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32845. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32846. %@NL@%
  32847. %@NL@%
  32848. %@2@%In marriage, a man becomes slack and selfish, and undergoes%@EH@%
  32849. a fatty degeneration of his moral being.%@NL@%
  32850. %@CR:MARRIAStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  32851.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  32852.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  32853. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32854. %@NL@%
  32855. %@NL@%
  32856. %@2@%When a girl marries she exchanges the attentions of many men%@EH@%
  32857. for the inattention of one.%@NL@%
  32858. %@CR:MARRIARowland1  @%%@NL@%
  32859.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  32860.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  32861. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32862. %@NL@%
  32863. %@NL@%
  32864. %@2@%Many a man in love with a dimple makes the mistake of marrying%@EH@%
  32865. the whole girl.%@NL@%
  32866. %@CR:MARRIALeacock   @%%@NL@%
  32867.                                                Stephen Leacock (1869-1944)%@NL@%
  32868.                                               Canadian humorist, economist%@NL@%
  32869. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32870. %@NL@%
  32871. %@NL@%
  32872. %@2@%When the blind leads the blind, no wonder they both fall into%@EH@%
  32873. matrimony.%@NL@%
  32874. %@CR:MARRIAFarquhar  @%%@NL@%
  32875.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  32876.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  32877. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32878. %@NL@%
  32879. %@NL@%
  32880. %@2@%The deep, deep bliss of the double bed after the hurly-burly%@EH@%
  32881. of the chaise longue.%@NL@%
  32882. %@CR:MARRIACampbell2 @%%@NL@%
  32883.                                          Mrs. Patrick Campbell (1865-1940)%@NL@%
  32884.                                                            British actress%@NL@%
  32885. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32886. %@NL@%
  32887. %@NL@%
  32888. %@2@%They flaunt their conjugal felicity in one's face, as if it%@EH@%
  32889. were the most fascinating of sins.%@NL@%
  32890. %@CR:MARRIAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  32891.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  32892.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  32893. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32894. %@NL@%
  32895. %@NL@%
  32896. %@2@%Marriage is a ghastly public confession of a strictly private%@EH@%
  32897. intention.%@NL@%
  32898. %@CR:MARRIAHay       @%%@NL@%
  32899.                                                        Ian Hay (1876-1952)%@NL@%
  32900.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  32901. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32902. %@NL@%
  32903. %@NL@%
  32904. %@2@%Marriage is like a dull meal with the dessert at the beginning.%@NL@%
  32905. %@CR:MARRIAToulouseLa@%%@NL@%
  32906.                               Henri, Comte de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)%@NL@%
  32907.                                               French painter, lithographer%@NL@%
  32908. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32909. %@NL@%
  32910. %@NL@%
  32911. %@2@%'Tis safest in matrimony to begin with a little aversion.%@NL@%
  32912. %@CR:MARRIASheridan  @%%@NL@%
  32913.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  32914.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  32915. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32916. %@NL@%
  32917. %@NL@%
  32918. %@2@%It doesn't much signify whom one marries, for one is sure to%@EH@%
  32919. find next morning that it was someone else.%@NL@%
  32920. %@CR:MARRIARogers2   @%%@NL@%
  32921.                                                  Samuel Rogers (1763-1855)%@NL@%
  32922.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32923. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32924. %@NL@%
  32925. %@NL@%
  32926. %@2@%They dream in courtship, but in wedlock wake.%@NL@%
  32927. %@CR:MARRIAPope      @%%@NL@%
  32928.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  32929.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32930. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32931. %@NL@%
  32932. %@NL@%
  32933. %@2@%Before marriage, a man will lie awake thinking about something%@EH@%
  32934. you said; after marriage, he'll fall asleep before you finish saying
  32935. it.%@NL@%
  32936. %@CR:MARRIARowland1  @%%@NL@%
  32937.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  32938.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  32939. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32940. %@NL@%
  32941. %@NL@%
  32942. %@2@%There is a lot to get used to in the first year of marriage.%@EH@%
  32943. One wakes up in the morning and finds a pair of pigtails on the
  32944. pillow that were not there before.%@NL@%
  32945. %@CR:MARRIALuther    @%%@NL@%
  32946.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  32947.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  32948. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32949. %@NL@%
  32950. %@NL@%
  32951. %@2@%The critical period in matrimony is breakfasttime.%@NL@%
  32952. %@CR:MARRIAHerbert1  @%%@NL@%
  32953.                                                  A. P. Herbert (1890-1971)%@NL@%
  32954.                                                 British author, politician%@NL@%
  32955. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32956. %@NL@%
  32957. %@NL@%
  32958. %@2@%A man who marries a woman to educate her falls into the same%@EH@%
  32959. fallacy as the woman who marries a man to reform him.%@NL@%
  32960. %@CR:MARRIAHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  32961.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  32962.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  32963. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32964. %@NL@%
  32965. %@NL@%
  32966. %@2@%Marrying to increase love is like gaming to become rich; you%@EH@%
  32967. only lose what little stock you had before.%@NL@%
  32968. %@CR:MARRIAWycherley @%%@NL@%
  32969.                                              William Wycherley (1640-1716)%@NL@%
  32970.                                                         English dramatist
  32971. %@NL@%
  32972. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32973. %@NL@%
  32974. %@NL@%
  32975. %@2@%Marriage is law, and love is instinct.%@NL@%
  32976. %@CR:MARRIAdeMaupassa@%%@NL@%
  32977.                                              Guy de Maupassant (1850-1893)%@NL@%
  32978.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  32979. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32980. %@NL@%
  32981. %@NL@%
  32982. %@2@%Though women are angels, yet wedlock's the devil.%@NL@%
  32983. %@CR:MARRIAByron2    @%%@NL@%
  32984.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  32985.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  32986. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32987. %@NL@%
  32988. %@NL@%
  32989. %@2@%Venus, a beautiful, good-natured lady, was the goddess of love;%@EH@%
  32990. Juno, a terrible shrew, the goddess of marriage: and they were
  32991. always mortal enemies.%@NL@%
  32992. %@CR:MARRIASwift     @%%@NL@%
  32993.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  32994.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  32995. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  32996. %@NL@%
  32997. %@NL@%
  32998. %@2@%Being unable to abolish love, the Church has decided at least%@EH@%
  32999. to disinfect it, and has invented marriage.%@NL@%
  33000. %@CR:MARRIABaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  33001.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  33002.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  33003. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33004. %@NL@%
  33005. %@NL@%
  33006. %@2@%Love as a relation between men and women was ruined by the%@EH@%
  33007. desire to make sure of the legitimacy of children.%@NL@%
  33008. %@CR:MARRIARussell1  @%%@NL@%
  33009.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  33010.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  33011. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33012. %@NL@%
  33013. %@NL@%
  33014. %@2@%Marriage has no %@AI@%natural%@AE@% relation to love. Marriage belongs%@EH@%
  33015. to society; it is a social contract.%@NL@%
  33016. %@CR:MARRIAColeridge @%%@NL@%
  33017.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  33018.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  33019. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33020. %@NL@%
  33021. %@NL@%
  33022. %@2@%The chain of wedlock is so heavy that it takes two to carry%@EH@%
  33023. it, sometimes three.%@NL@%
  33024. %@CR:MARRIADumas1    @%%@NL@%
  33025.                                                Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870)%@NL@%
  33026.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  33027. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33028. %@NL@%
  33029. %@NL@%
  33030. %@2@%There can only be one end to marriage without love, and that%@EH@%
  33031. is love without marriage.%@NL@%
  33032. %@CR:MARRIACollins1  @%%@NL@%
  33033.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  33034.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  33035. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33036. %@NL@%
  33037. %@NL@%
  33038. %@2@%Keep your eyes wide open before marriage, and half-shut afterwards.%@NL@%
  33039. %@CR:MARRIAFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  33040.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  33041.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  33042. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33043. %@NL@%
  33044. %@NL@%
  33045. %@2@%Marriage always demands the greatest understanding of the art%@EH@%
  33046. of insincerity possible between two human beings.%@NL@%
  33047. %@CR:MARRIABaum      @%%@NL@%
  33048.                                                     Vicki Baum (1888-1960)%@NL@%
  33049.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  33050. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33051. %@NL@%
  33052. %@NL@%
  33053. %@2@%Every time a woman makes herself laugh at her husband's often-told%@EH@%
  33054. jokes she betrays him. The man who looks at his woman and says
  33055. "What would I do without you?" is already destroyed.%@NL@%
  33056. %@CR:MARRIAGreer     @%%@NL@%
  33057.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  33058.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  33059. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33060. %@NL@%
  33061. %@NL@%
  33062. %@2@%The amount of women in London who flirt with their own husbands%@EH@%
  33063. is perfectly scandalous. It looks so bad. It is simply washing
  33064. one's clean linen in public.%@NL@%
  33065. %@CR:MARRIAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33066.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33067.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33068. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33069. %@NL@%
  33070. %@NL@%
  33071. %@2@%Once you are married, there is nothing for you, not even suicide,%@EH@%
  33072. but to be good.%@NL@%
  33073. %@CR:MARRIAStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  33074.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  33075.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  33076. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33077. %@NL@%
  33078. %@NL@%
  33079. %@2@%After a few years of marriage a man can look right at a woman%@EH@%
  33080. without seeing her and a woman can see right through a man without
  33081. looking at him.%@NL@%
  33082. %@CR:MARRIARowland1  @%%@NL@%
  33083.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  33084.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  33085. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33086. %@NL@%
  33087. %@NL@%
  33088. %@2@%Twenty years of romance make a woman look like a ruin, but%@EH@%
  33089. twenty years of marriage make her something like a public building.%@NL@%
  33090. %@CR:MARRIAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33091.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33092.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33093. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33094. %@NL@%
  33095. %@NL@%
  33096.      %@2@%Without love, hatred, joy, or fear,%@NL@%
  33097.      They led - a kind of - as it were:%@NL@%
  33098.      Nor wish'd, nor car'd, nor laugh'd, nor cried:%@NL@%
  33099.      And so they liv'd, and so they died.%@NL@%
  33100. %@CR:MARRIAPrior     @%%@NL@%
  33101.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  33102.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  33103. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33104. %@NL@%
  33105. %@NL@%
  33106. %@2@%In my conscience I believe the baggage loves me, for she never%@EH@%
  33107. speaks well of me herself, nor suffers any body else to rail at
  33108. me.%@NL@%
  33109. %@CR:MARRIACongreve  @%%@NL@%
  33110.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  33111.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  33112. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33113. %@NL@%
  33114. %@NL@%
  33115. %@2@%A successful marriage is an edifice that must be rebuilt every%@EH@%
  33116. day.%@NL@%
  33117. %@CR:MARRIAMaurois   @%%@NL@%
  33118.                                                  Andre Maurois (1885-1967)%@NL@%
  33119.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  33120. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33121. %@NL@%
  33122. %@NL@%
  33123. %@2@%A marriage is likely to be called happy if neither party ever%@EH@%
  33124. expected to get much happiness out of it.%@NL@%
  33125. %@CR:MARRIARussell1  @%%@NL@%
  33126.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  33127.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  33128. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33129. %@NL@%
  33130. %@NL@%
  33131. %@2@%Whenever a husband and wife begin to discuss their marriage,%@EH@%
  33132. they are giving evidence at an inquest.%@NL@%
  33133. %@CR:MARRIAMencken   @%%@NL@%
  33134.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  33135.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  33136. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33137. %@NL@%
  33138. %@NL@%
  33139. %@2@%Marriage is one long conversation, chequered by disputes.%@NL@%
  33140. %@CR:MARRIAStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  33141.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  33142.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  33143. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33144. %@NL@%
  33145. %@NL@%
  33146. %@2@%A wise woman will always let her husband have her way.%@NL@%
  33147. %@CR:MARRIASheridan  @%%@NL@%
  33148.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  33149.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  33150. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33151. %@NL@%
  33152. %@NL@%
  33153. %@2@%One fool at least in every married couple.%@NL@%
  33154. %@CR:MARRIAFielding  @%%@NL@%
  33155.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  33156.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  33157. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33158. %@NL@%
  33159. %@NL@%
  33160. %@2@%Incompatibility. In matrimony a similarity of tastes, particularly%@EH@%
  33161. the taste for domination.%@NL@%
  33162. %@CR:MARRIABierce    @%%@NL@%
  33163.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  33164.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  33165. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33166. %@NL@%
  33167. %@NL@%
  33168. %@2@%The calmest husbands make the stormiest wives.%@NL@%
  33169. %@CR:MARRIAdIsraeli2 @%%@NL@%
  33170.                                                Isaac d'Israeli (1766-1848)%@NL@%
  33171.                        English man of letters, father of Benjamin Disraeli%@NL@%
  33172. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33173. %@NL@%
  33174. %@NL@%
  33175. %@2@%Marriages not infrequently break up because the more compliant%@EH@%
  33176. partner eventually feels compelled to reassert his or her lost,
  33177. separate identity.%@NL@%
  33178. %@CR:MARRIAStorr     @%%@NL@%
  33179.                                                    Anthony Storr (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  33180.                                                       British psychiatrist%@NL@%
  33181. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33182. %@NL@%
  33183. %@NL@%
  33184. %@2@%It is not marriage that fails; it is the people that fail.%@EH@%
  33185. All that marriage does is to show people up.%@NL@%
  33186. %@CR:MARRIAFosdick1  @%%@NL@%
  33187.                                                  H. E. Fosdick (1878-1969)%@NL@%
  33188.                                                  American Baptist minister%@NL@%
  33189. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33190. %@NL@%
  33191. %@NL@%
  33192. %@2@%A good marriage is at least 80 percent good luck in finding%@EH@%
  33193. the right person at the right time. The rest is trust.%@NL@%
  33194. %@CR:MARRIANewman2   @%%@NL@%
  33195.                                                   Nanette Newman (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  33196.                                                            British actress%@NL@%
  33197. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33198. %@NL@%
  33199. %@NL@%
  33200. %@2@%Only one marriage I regret. I remember after I got that marriage%@EH@%
  33201. licence I went across from the marriage bureau to a bar for a drink.
  33202. The bartender said, "What will you have, sir?" And I said, "
  33203. A glass of hemlock."%@NL@%
  33204. %@CR:MARRIAHemingway @%%@NL@%
  33205.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  33206.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  33207. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33208. %@NL@%
  33209. %@NL@%
  33210. %@2@%I've been married once on the level, and twice in America.%@NL@%
  33211. %@CR:MARRIAGuinan    @%%@NL@%
  33212.                                                   Texas Guinan (188?-1934)%@NL@%
  33213.                                                       Canadian entertainer%@NL@%
  33214. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33215. %@NL@%
  33216. %@NL@%
  33217. %@2@%The plural of spouse is spice.%@NL@%
  33218. %@CR:MARRIAMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  33219.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  33220.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  33221. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33222. %@NL@%
  33223. %@NL@%
  33224. %@2@%Wen you're a married man, Samivel, you'll understand a good%@EH@%
  33225. many things as you don't understand now; but vether it's worth
  33226. goin' through so much, to learn so little, as the charity-boy
  33227. said ven he got to the end of the alphabet, is a matter of taste.%@NL@%
  33228. %@CR:MARRIADickens   @%%@NL@%
  33229.                                            Mr. Weller, %@AI@%The Pickwick Papers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33230.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  33231.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  33232. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33233. %@NL@%
  33234. %@NL@%
  33235. %@2@%Marriage has many pains, but celibacy has no pleasures.%@NL@%
  33236. %@CR:MARRIAJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  33237.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  33238.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  33239. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33240. %@NL@%
  33241. %@NL@%
  33242. %@2@%Even if we take matrimony at its lowest, even if we regard%@EH@%
  33243. it as no more than a sort of friendship recognised by the police.%@NL@%
  33244. %@CR:MARRIAStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  33245.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  33246.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  33247. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33248. %@NL@%
  33249. %@NL@%
  33250. %@2@%Marriage develops a binocular view of life, both masculine%@EH@%
  33251. and feminine.%@NL@%
  33252. %@CR:MARRIABrown1    @%%@NL@%
  33253.                                              Dr. William Brown (1881-1962)%@NL@%
  33254.                                         British psychologist, psychiatrist%@NL@%
  33255. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33256. %@NL@%
  33257. %@NL@%
  33258. %@2@%Marriage is an act of will that signifies and involves a mutual%@EH@%
  33259. gift, which unites the spouses and binds them to their eventual
  33260. souls, with whom they make up a sole family - a domestic church.%@NL@%
  33261. %@CR:MARRIAPopeJohnPa@%%@NL@%
  33262.                                                Pope John Paul II (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  33263. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33264. %@NL@%
  33265. %@NL@%
  33266. %@2@%The value of marriage is not that adults produce children,%@EH@%
  33267. but that children produce adults.%@NL@%
  33268. %@CR:MARRIAdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  33269.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  33270.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  33271. %@AS@%                                                                  Marriage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33272. %@NL@%
  33273. %@NL@%
  33274. %@NL@%
  33275. %@1@%%@AS@%Martyrdom%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33276. %@CR:MARTYRDOM       @%%@NL@%
  33277. %@2@%See:%@QR:Martyrdom@%%@NL@%
  33278.      The Afterlife: %@AB@%Granville-Barker%@AE@%%@BO:            c326@%%@NL@%
  33279.      Conformity: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:           7ba93@%%@NL@%
  33280.      Freedom: %@AB@%Ewer%@AE@%%@BO:           fb96c@%%@NL@%
  33281.      God: %@AB@%Reed%@AE@%%@BO:          10f46e@%%@NL@%
  33282.      Persecution: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          1d5a63@%%@NL@%
  33283.      Self-denial: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          2467bd@%; %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2463e1@%%@NL@%
  33284.      Visionaries: %@AB@%Eco%@AE@%%@BO:          2a5790@%%@NL@%
  33285. %@NL@%
  33286. %@2@%If a man hasn't discovered something that he will die for,%@EH@%
  33287. he isn't fit to live.%@NL@%
  33288. %@CR:MARTYRKing3     @%%@NL@%
  33289.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  33290.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  33291. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33292. %@NL@%
  33293. %@NL@%
  33294. %@2@%Man is ready to die for an idea, provided that idea is not%@EH@%
  33295. quite clear to him.%@NL@%
  33296. %@CR:MARTYREldridge  @%%@NL@%
  33297.                                                    Paul Eldridge (b. 1888)%@NL@%
  33298.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  33299. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33300. %@NL@%
  33301. %@NL@%
  33302. %@2@%It is the cause, not the death, that makes the martyr.%@NL@%
  33303. %@CR:MARTYRNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  33304.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  33305.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  33306. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33307. %@NL@%
  33308. %@NL@%
  33309. %@2@%A cause may be inconvenient, but it's magnificent. It's like%@EH@%
  33310. champagne or high shoes, and one must be prepared to suffer for
  33311. it.%@NL@%
  33312. %@CR:MARTYRBennett   @%%@NL@%
  33313.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  33314.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  33315. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33316. %@NL@%
  33317. %@NL@%
  33318. %@2@%What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree%@EH@%
  33319. of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of
  33320. patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.%@NL@%
  33321. %@CR:MARTYRJefferson @%%@NL@%
  33322.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  33323.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  33324. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33325. %@NL@%
  33326. %@NL@%
  33327. %@2@%I don't mind martyrdom for a policy in which I believe, but%@EH@%
  33328. I object to being burnt for someone else's principles.%@NL@%
  33329. %@CR:MARTYRGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  33330.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  33331.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  33332. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33333. %@NL@%
  33334. %@NL@%
  33335. %@2@%There have been quite as many martyrs for bad causes as for%@EH@%
  33336. good ones.%@NL@%
  33337. %@CR:MARTYRVanLoon   @%%@NL@%
  33338.                                               Hendrik Van Loon (1882-1944)%@NL@%
  33339.                                             American journalist, historian%@NL@%
  33340. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33341. %@NL@%
  33342. %@NL@%
  33343. %@2@%I am very fond of truth, but not at all of martyrdom.%@NL@%
  33344. %@CR:MARTYRVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  33345.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  33346.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  33347. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33348. %@NL@%
  33349. %@NL@%
  33350. %@2@%The tyrant dies and his rule is over; the martyr dies and his%@EH@%
  33351. rule begins.%@NL@%
  33352. %@CR:MARTYRKierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  33353.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  33354.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  33355. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33356. %@NL@%
  33357. %@NL@%
  33358. %@2@%It is well for his peace that the saint goes to his martyrdom.%@EH@%
  33359. He is spared the sight of the horror of his harvest.%@NL@%
  33360. %@CR:MARTYRWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33361.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33362.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33363. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33364. %@NL@%
  33365. %@NL@%
  33366. %@2@%The torments of martyrdom are probably most keenly felt by%@EH@%
  33367. the bystanders.%@NL@%
  33368. %@CR:MARTYREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  33369.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  33370.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  33371. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33372. %@NL@%
  33373. %@NL@%
  33374. %@2@%Play the man, Master Ridley; we shall this day light such a%@EH@%
  33375. candle, by God's grace, in England, as I trust shall never be put
  33376. out.%@NL@%
  33377. %@CR:MARTYRLatimer   @%%@NL@%
  33378.                                            Bishop Hugh Latimer (1485-1555)%@NL@%
  33379.                         English churchman, Protestant martyr, schoolmaster%@NL@%
  33380.                                                      at his execution pyre%@NL@%
  33381. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33382. %@NL@%
  33383. %@NL@%
  33384. %@2@%In a few minutes I am going out to shape all the singing tomorrows.%@NL@%
  33385. %@CR:MARTYRPeri      @%%@NL@%
  33386.                                                               Gabriel Peri%@NL@%
  33387.                                                    French Communist leader%@NL@%
  33388.                                  before his execution by the Germans, 1942%@NL@%
  33389. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33390. %@NL@%
  33391. %@NL@%
  33392.      %@2@%But whether on the scaffold high,%@NL@%
  33393.      Or in the battle's van;%@NL@%
  33394.      The fittest place where man can die%@NL@%
  33395.      Is where he dies for man.%@NL@%
  33396. %@CR:MARTYRBarry2    @%%@NL@%
  33397.                                               Michael J. Barry (1817-1889)%@NL@%
  33398.                                                            Irish barrister%@NL@%
  33399. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33400. %@NL@%
  33401. %@NL@%
  33402. %@2@%Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.%@NL@%
  33403. %@CR:MARTYRBiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  33404.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  33405. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33406. %@NL@%
  33407. %@NL@%
  33408. %@2@%A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies for it.%@NL@%
  33409. %@CR:MARTYRWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33410.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33411.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33412. %@AS@%                                                                 Martyrdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33413. %@NL@%
  33414. %@NL@%
  33415. %@NL@%
  33416. %@1@%%@AS@%Marxism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33417. %@CR:MARXISM         @%%@NL@%
  33418. %@2@%See:%@QR:Marxism@%%@NL@%
  33419.      %@AB@%Communism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           75702@%%@NL@%
  33420.      %@AB@%Socialism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          25dc63@%%@NL@%
  33421. %@NL@%
  33422. %@2@%The Marxist analysis has got nothing to do with what happened%@EH@%
  33423. in Stalin's Russia: it's like blaming Jesus Christ for the Inquisition
  33424. in Spain.%@NL@%
  33425. %@CR:MARXISBenn      @%%@NL@%
  33426.                                                        Tony Benn (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  33427.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  33428. %@AS@%                                                                   Marxism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33429. %@NL@%
  33430. %@NL@%
  33431. %@2@%Marxism is essentially a product of the bourgeois mind.%@NL@%
  33432. %@CR:MARXISSchumpeter@%%@NL@%
  33433.                                               J. A. Schumpeter (1883-1950)%@NL@%
  33434.                                              American economist, socialist%@NL@%
  33435. %@AS@%                                                                   Marxism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33436. %@NL@%
  33437. %@NL@%
  33438. %@2@%All I know is I'm not a Marxist.%@NL@%
  33439. %@CR:MARXISMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  33440.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  33441.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  33442. %@AS@%                                                                   Marxism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33443. %@NL@%
  33444. %@NL@%
  33445. %@NL@%
  33446. %@1@%%@AS@%The Masses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33447. %@CR:THEMASSES       @%%@NL@%
  33448. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Masses@%%@NL@%
  33449.      Sincerity: %@AB@%Bacon%@AE@%%@BO:          255324@%%@NL@%
  33450. %@NL@%
  33451. %@2@%I can't help feeling wary when I hear anything said about the%@EH@%
  33452. masses. First you take their faces from 'em, calling them the masses,
  33453. and then you accuse 'em of not having any faces.%@NL@%
  33454. %@CR:THEMASPriestley @%%@NL@%
  33455.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  33456.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  33457. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33458. %@NL@%
  33459. %@NL@%
  33460. %@2@%The people are that part of the state which does not know what%@EH@%
  33461. it wants.%@NL@%
  33462. %@CR:THEMASHegel     @%%@NL@%
  33463.                                                   George Hegel (1770-1831)%@NL@%
  33464.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  33465. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33466. %@NL@%
  33467. %@NL@%
  33468.      %@2@%It's no go the Government grants, it's no go the elections,%@NL@%
  33469.      Sit on your arse for fifty years and hang your hat on a pension.%@NL@%
  33470. %@CR:THEMASMacNeice  @%%@NL@%
  33471.                                                 Louis MacNeice (1907-1963)%@NL@%
  33472.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  33473. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33474. %@NL@%
  33475. %@NL@%
  33476. %@2@%The forgotten man at the bottom of the economic pyramid.%@NL@%
  33477. %@CR:THEMASRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  33478.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  33479.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  33480. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33481. %@NL@%
  33482. %@NL@%
  33483. %@2@%The mind of the people is like mud, from which arise strange%@EH@%
  33484. and beautiful things.%@NL@%
  33485. %@CR:THEMASTurner3   @%%@NL@%
  33486.                                                   W. J. Turner (1889-1946)%@NL@%
  33487.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  33488. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33489. %@NL@%
  33490. %@NL@%
  33491. %@2@%Masses are always breeding grounds of psychic epidemics.%@NL@%
  33492. %@CR:THEMASJung      @%%@NL@%
  33493.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  33494.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  33495. %@AS@%                                                                The Masses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33496. %@NL@%
  33497. %@NL@%
  33498. %@NL@%
  33499. %@1@%%@AS@%Masturbation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33500. %@CR:MASTURBATION    @%%@NL@%
  33501. %@2@%%@QR:Masturbation@%Don't knock it, it's sex with someone you love.%@NL@%
  33502. %@CR:MASTURAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  33503.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  33504.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  33505. %@AS@%                                                              Masturbation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33506. %@NL@%
  33507. %@NL@%
  33508. %@2@%Masturbation: the primary sexual activity of mankind. In the%@EH@%
  33509. nineteenth century it was a disease; in the twentieth, it's a cure.%@NL@%
  33510. %@CR:MASTURSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  33511.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  33512.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  33513. %@AS@%                                                              Masturbation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33514. %@NL@%
  33515. %@NL@%
  33516. %@NL@%
  33517. %@1@%%@AS@%Mathematics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33518. %@CR:MATHEMATICS     @%%@NL@%
  33519. %@2@%See:%@QR:Mathematics@%%@NL@%
  33520.      Music: %@AB@%Debussy%@AE@%%@BO:          1b45e9@%%@NL@%
  33521. %@NL@%
  33522. %@2@%The concept of number is the obvious distinction between the%@EH@%
  33523. beast and man. Thanks to number, the cry becomes song, noise acquires
  33524. rhythm, the spring is transformed into a dance, force becomes
  33525. dynamic, and outlines figures.%@NL@%
  33526. %@CR:MATHEMMaistre   @%%@NL@%
  33527.                                        Joseph Marie de Maistre (1753-1821)%@NL@%
  33528.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  33529. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33530. %@NL@%
  33531. %@NL@%
  33532. %@2@%I admit that twice two makes four is an excellent thing, but%@EH@%
  33533. if we are to give everything its due, twice two makes five is sometimes
  33534. a very charming thing too.%@NL@%
  33535. %@CR:MATHEMDostoievsk@%%@NL@%
  33536.                                             Feodor Dostoievski (1821-1881)%@NL@%
  33537.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  33538. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33539. %@NL@%
  33540. %@NL@%
  33541. %@2@%Mathematics is the only science where one never knows what%@EH@%
  33542. one is talking about nor whether what is said is true.%@NL@%
  33543. %@CR:MATHEMRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  33544.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  33545.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  33546. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33547. %@NL@%
  33548. %@NL@%
  33549. %@2@%As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are%@EH@%
  33550. not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer
  33551. to reality.%@NL@%
  33552. %@CR:MATHEMEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  33553.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  33554.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  33555. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33556. %@NL@%
  33557. %@NL@%
  33558. %@2@%Stand firm in your refusal to remain conscious during algebra.%@EH@%
  33559. In real life, I assure you, there is no such thing as algebra.%@NL@%
  33560. %@CR:MATHEMLebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  33561.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  33562.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  33563. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33564. %@NL@%
  33565. %@NL@%
  33566. %@2@%I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of%@EH@%
  33567. reasoning.%@NL@%
  33568. %@CR:MATHEMPlato     @%%@NL@%
  33569.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  33570.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  33571. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33572. %@NL@%
  33573. %@NL@%
  33574. %@2@%Mathematics possesses not only truth, but supreme beauty - a%@EH@%
  33575. beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture.%@NL@%
  33576. %@CR:MATHEMRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  33577.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  33578.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  33579. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33580. %@NL@%
  33581. %@NL@%
  33582. %@2@%I could never make out what those damned dots meant.%@NL@%
  33583. %@CR:MATHEMChurchill2@%%@NL@%
  33584.                                         Lord RandolphChurchill (1849-1894)%@NL@%
  33585.                                                          English statesman%@NL@%
  33586.                                                          of decimal points%@NL@%
  33587. %@AS@%                                                               Mathematics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33588. %@NL@%
  33589. %@NL@%
  33590. %@NL@%
  33591. %@1@%%@AS@%Maturity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33592. %@CR:MATURITY        @%%@NL@%
  33593. %@2@%See:%@QR:Maturity@%%@NL@%
  33594.      %@AB@%Age: Old Age%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            e846@%%@NL@%
  33595.      %@AB@%Middle Age%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a550d@%%@NL@%
  33596. %@NL@%
  33597. %@2@%A child becomes an adult when he realizes that he has a right%@EH@%
  33598. not only to be right but also to be wrong.%@NL@%
  33599. %@CR:MATURISzasz     @%%@NL@%
  33600.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  33601.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  33602. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33603. %@NL@%
  33604. %@NL@%
  33605. %@2@%We have not passed that subtle line between childhood and adulthood%@EH@%
  33606. until we move from the passive voice to the active voice - that
  33607. is, until we have stopped saying, "It got lost," and say, "I
  33608. lost it."%@NL@%
  33609. %@CR:MATURIHarris    @%%@NL@%
  33610.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  33611.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  33612. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33613. %@NL@%
  33614. %@NL@%
  33615. %@2@%Your lordship, though not clean past your youth, hath yet some%@EH@%
  33616. smack of age in you, some relish of the saltness of time.%@NL@%
  33617. %@CR:MATURIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  33618.                                             Falstaff, %@AI@%King Henry IV part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33619.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  33620.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  33621. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33622. %@NL@%
  33623. %@NL@%
  33624. %@2@%When people are old enough to know better they are old enough%@EH@%
  33625. to do worse.%@NL@%
  33626. %@CR:MATURIPearson   @%%@NL@%
  33627.                                                Hesketh Pearson (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  33628.                                                         British biographer%@NL@%
  33629. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33630. %@NL@%
  33631. %@NL@%
  33632. %@2@%One of the signs of passing youth is the birth of the sense%@EH@%
  33633. of fellowship with other human beings as we take our place among
  33634. them.%@NL@%
  33635. %@CR:MATURIWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  33636.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  33637.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  33638. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33639. %@NL@%
  33640. %@NL@%
  33641. %@2@%To be adult is to be alone.%@NL@%
  33642. %@CR:MATURIRostand2  @%%@NL@%
  33643.                                                   Jean Rostand (1894-1977)%@NL@%
  33644.                                                   French biologist, writer%@NL@%
  33645. %@AS@%                                                                  Maturity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33646. %@NL@%
  33647. %@NL@%
  33648. %@NL@%
  33649. %@1@%%@AS@%Meanness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33650. %@CR:MEANNESS        @%%@NL@%
  33651. %@2@%See:%@QR:Meanness@%%@NL@%
  33652.      %@AB@%Economizing%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           bebd7@%%@NL@%
  33653. %@NL@%
  33654. %@2@%Meanness is more in half-doing than in omitting acts of generosity.%@NL@%
  33655. %@CR:MEANNEHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  33656.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  33657.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  33658. %@AS@%                                                                  Meanness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33659. %@NL@%
  33660. %@NL@%
  33661. %@2@%Mere parsimony is not economy  . . .  Expense, and great expense,%@EH@%
  33662. may be an essential part of true economy.%@NL@%
  33663. %@CR:MEANNEBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  33664.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  33665.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  33666. %@AS@%                                                                  Meanness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33667. %@NL@%
  33668. %@NL@%
  33669. %@2@%It was said of old Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, that she%@EH@%
  33670. never puts dots over her i's, to save ink.%@NL@%
  33671. %@CR:MEANNEWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  33672.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  33673.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  33674. %@AS@%                                                                  Meanness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33675. %@NL@%
  33676. %@NL@%
  33677. %@2@%There are many things that we would throw away, if we were%@EH@%
  33678. not afraid that others might pick them up.%@NL@%
  33679. %@CR:MEANNEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33680.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33681.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33682. %@AS@%                                                                  Meanness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33683. %@NL@%
  33684. %@NL@%
  33685. %@2@%Man hoards himself when he has nothing to give away.%@NL@%
  33686. %@CR:MEANNEDahlberg  @%%@NL@%
  33687.                                                Edward Dahlberg (1900-1977)%@NL@%
  33688.                                            American novelist, poet, critic%@NL@%
  33689. %@AS@%                                                                  Meanness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33690. %@NL@%
  33691. %@NL@%
  33692. %@NL@%
  33693. %@1@%%@AS@%Medicine%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33694. %@CR:MEDICINE        @%%@NL@%
  33695. %@2@%See:%@QR:Medicine@%%@NL@%
  33696.      %@AB@%Doctors%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b0761@%%@NL@%
  33697.      Hope: %@AB@%Rice%@AE@%%@BO:          134ba3@%; %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          135337@%%@NL@%
  33698. %@NL@%
  33699.      %@2@%Some fell by laudanum, and some by steel,%@NL@%
  33700.      And death in ambush lay in every pill.%@NL@%
  33701. %@CR:MEDICIGarth     @%%@NL@%
  33702.                                               Sir Samuel Garth (1661-1719)%@NL@%
  33703.                                                    English physician, poet%@NL@%
  33704. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33705. %@NL@%
  33706. %@NL@%
  33707. %@2@%Medicine is a collection of uncertain prescriptions, the results%@EH@%
  33708. of which, taken collectively, are more fatal than useful to mankind.
  33709. Water, air, and cleanliness are the chief articles in my pharmacopoeia.%@NL@%
  33710. %@CR:MEDICINapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  33711.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  33712.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  33713. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33714. %@NL@%
  33715. %@NL@%
  33716. %@2@%The desire to take medicine is perhaps the greatest feature%@EH@%
  33717. which distinguishes man from animals.%@NL@%
  33718. %@CR:MEDICIOsler     @%%@NL@%
  33719.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  33720.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  33721. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33722. %@NL@%
  33723. %@NL@%
  33724. %@2@%Vaccination is the medical sacrament corresponding to baptism.%@NL@%
  33725. %@CR:MEDICIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  33726.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  33727.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  33728. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33729. %@NL@%
  33730. %@NL@%
  33731. %@2@%Half the modern drugs could well be thrown out of the window,%@EH@%
  33732. except that the birds might eat them.%@NL@%
  33733. %@CR:MEDICIFischer   @%%@NL@%
  33734.                                           Martin Henry Fischer (1879-1962)%@NL@%
  33735.                                       American scientist, educator, author%@NL@%
  33736. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33737. %@NL@%
  33738. %@NL@%
  33739. %@2@%The whole imposing edifice of modern medicine is like the celebrated%@EH@%
  33740. tower of Pisa slightly off balance.%@NL@%
  33741. %@CR:MEDICIPrinceOfWa@%%@NL@%
  33742.                                         Charles, Prince of Wales (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  33743. %@AS@%                                                                  Medicine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33744. %@NL@%
  33745. %@NL@%
  33746. %@NL@%
  33747. %@1@%%@AS@%Memory%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33748. %@CR:MEMORY          @%%@NL@%
  33749. %@2@%See:%@QR:Memory@%%@NL@%
  33750.      Anecdotes: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           1efda@%%@NL@%
  33751.      %@AB@%Nostalgia%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bf156@%%@NL@%
  33752. %@NL@%
  33753. %@2@%A memory is what is left when something happens and does not%@EH@%
  33754. completely unhappen.%@NL@%
  33755. %@CR:MEMORYdeBono    @%%@NL@%
  33756.                                                   Edward de Bono (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  33757.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  33758. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33759. %@NL@%
  33760. %@NL@%
  33761.      %@2@%Memory, the priestess,%@NL@%
  33762.      kills the present%@NL@%
  33763.      and offers its heart ot the shrine of the dead past.%@NL@%
  33764. %@CR:MEMORYTagore    @%%@NL@%
  33765.                                            Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)%@NL@%
  33766.                                                 Indian author, philosopher%@NL@%
  33767. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33768. %@NL@%
  33769. %@NL@%
  33770. %@2@%But the iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy,%@EH@%
  33771. and deals with the memory of men without distinction to merit of
  33772. perpetuity.%@NL@%
  33773. %@CR:MEMORYBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  33774.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  33775.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  33776. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33777. %@NL@%
  33778. %@NL@%
  33779. %@2@%Life is all memory, except for the one present moment that%@EH@%
  33780. goes by you so quickly you hardly catch it going.%@NL@%
  33781. %@CR:MEMORYWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  33782.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  33783.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  33784. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33785. %@NL@%
  33786. %@NL@%
  33787. %@2@%Many a man fails to become a thinker for the sole reason that%@EH@%
  33788. his memory is too good.%@NL@%
  33789. %@CR:MEMORYNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  33790.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  33791.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  33792. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33793. %@NL@%
  33794. %@NL@%
  33795.      %@2@%But each day brings its petty dust%@NL@%
  33796.      Our soon-chok'd souls to fill,%@NL@%
  33797.      And we forget because we must,%@NL@%
  33798.      And not because we will.%@NL@%
  33799. %@CR:MEMORYArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  33800.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  33801.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  33802. %@AS@%                                                                    Memory%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33803. %@NL@%
  33804. %@NL@%
  33805. %@NL@%
  33806. %@1@%%@AS@%Men%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33807. %@CR:MEN             @%%@NL@%
  33808. %@2@%See:%@QR:Men@%%@NL@%
  33809.      %@AB@%Men and Women%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a342c@%%@NL@%
  33810.      Promiscuity: %@AB@%Coward%@AE@%%@BO:          2070c3@%%@NL@%
  33811.      %@AB@%Women: and Men%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2bf30b@%%@NL@%
  33812. %@NL@%
  33813. %@2@%How can a Woman scruple entire Subjection, how can she forbear%@EH@%
  33814. to admire the worth and excellency of a Superior Sex, if she at
  33815. all considers it? Have not all the great Actions that have been
  33816. performed in the World been done by Men? Have not they founded
  33817. Empires and overturn'd them? Do not they make Laws and continually
  33818. repeal and amend them? Their vast Minds lay Kingdoms Waste, no
  33819. bounds or measures can be prescrib'd to their Desires  . . .  They
  33820. make Worlds and ruin them, form Systems of universal nature and
  33821. dispute eternally about them; their pen gives worth to the most
  33822. trifling Controversy . . . %@NL@%
  33823. %@CR:MEN   Astell    @%%@NL@%
  33824.                                                    Mary Astell (1666-1735)%@NL@%
  33825.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  33826. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33827. %@NL@%
  33828. %@NL@%
  33829. %@2@%One of the things being in politics has taught is that men%@EH@%
  33830. are not a reasoned or reasonable sex.%@NL@%
  33831. %@CR:MEN   Thatcher  @%%@NL@%
  33832.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  33833.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  33834. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33835. %@NL@%
  33836. %@NL@%
  33837. %@2@%The male sex still constitute in many ways the most obstinate%@EH@%
  33838. vested interest one can find.%@NL@%
  33839. %@CR:MEN   Longford  @%%@NL@%
  33840.                                                    Lord Longford (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  33841.                                                   British author, moralist%@NL@%
  33842. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33843. %@NL@%
  33844. %@NL@%
  33845. %@2@%Women think of being a man as a gift. It is a duty. Even making%@EH@%
  33846. love can be a duty. A man has always got to get it up, and love
  33847. isn't always enough.%@NL@%
  33848. %@CR:MEN   Mailer    @%%@NL@%
  33849.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  33850.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  33851. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33852. %@NL@%
  33853. %@NL@%
  33854. %@2@%A hard man's good to find - but you'll mostly find him asleep.%@NL@%
  33855. %@CR:MEN   West1     @%%@NL@%
  33856.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  33857.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  33858. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33859. %@NL@%
  33860. %@NL@%
  33861. %@2@%One hell of an outlay for a very small return with most of%@EH@%
  33862. them.%@NL@%
  33863. %@CR:MEN   Jackson2  @%%@NL@%
  33864.                                                   Glenda Jackson (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  33865.                                                       English film actress%@NL@%
  33866. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33867. %@NL@%
  33868. %@NL@%
  33869. %@2@%I require only three things in a man. He must be handsome,%@EH@%
  33870. ruthless, and stupid.%@NL@%
  33871. %@CR:MEN   Parker1   @%%@NL@%
  33872.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  33873.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  33874. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33875. %@NL@%
  33876. %@NL@%
  33877. %@2@%Women want mediocre men, and men are working hard to become%@EH@%
  33878. as mediocre as possible.%@NL@%
  33879. %@CR:MEN   Mead      @%%@NL@%
  33880.                                                  Margaret Mead (1901-1978)%@NL@%
  33881.                                                    American anthropologist%@NL@%
  33882. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33883. %@NL@%
  33884. %@NL@%
  33885. %@2@%There is a vast difference between the savage and the civilized%@EH@%
  33886. man, but it is never apparent to their wives until after breakfast.%@NL@%
  33887. %@CR:MEN   Rowland1  @%%@NL@%
  33888.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  33889.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  33890. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33891. %@NL@%
  33892. %@NL@%
  33893. %@2@%Men are those creatures with two legs and eight hands.%@NL@%
  33894. %@CR:MEN   Mansfield1@%%@NL@%
  33895.                                                Jayne Mansfield (1932-1967)%@NL@%
  33896.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  33897. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33898. %@NL@%
  33899. %@NL@%
  33900. %@2@%Don't accept rides from strange men - and remember that%@EH@%
  33901. all men are as strange as hell.%@NL@%
  33902. %@CR:MEN   Morgan    @%%@NL@%
  33903.                                                     Robin Morgan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  33904.                                                          American feminist%@NL@%
  33905. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33906. %@NL@%
  33907. %@NL@%
  33908. %@2@%A hairy body, and arms stiff with bristles, gives promise of%@EH@%
  33909. a manly soul.%@NL@%
  33910. %@CR:MEN   Juvenal   @%%@NL@%
  33911.                                                        Juvenal (c. 40-130)%@NL@%
  33912.                                                         Roman satiric poet%@NL@%
  33913. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33914. %@NL@%
  33915. %@NL@%
  33916. %@2@%Macho does not prove mucho.%@NL@%
  33917. %@CR:MEN   Gabor     @%%@NL@%
  33918.                                                    Zsa Zsa Gabor (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  33919.                                                     Hungarian film actress%@NL@%
  33920. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33921. %@NL@%
  33922. %@NL@%
  33923. %@2@%The more I see of men, the more I like dogs.%@NL@%
  33924. %@CR:MEN   Stael     @%%@NL@%
  33925.                                                Madame de Stael (1766-1817)%@NL@%
  33926.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  33927. %@AS@%                                                                       Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33928. %@NL@%
  33929. %@NL@%
  33930. %@1@%%@AS@%Men: and Women%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  33931. %@CR:ANDWOMEN        @%%@NL@%
  33932. %@2@%%@QR:Men: and Women@%With men he can be rational and unaffected, but when he has%@EH@%
  33933. ladies to please, every feature works.%@NL@%
  33934. %@CR:ANDWOMAusten    @%%@NL@%
  33935.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  33936.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  33937. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33938. %@NL@%
  33939. %@NL@%
  33940. %@2@%I must have women - there is nothing unbends the mind like%@EH@%
  33941. them.%@NL@%
  33942. %@CR:ANDWOMGay       @%%@NL@%
  33943.                                               Macheath, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33944.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  33945.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  33946. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33947. %@NL@%
  33948. %@NL@%
  33949. %@2@%The man who gets on best with women is the one who knows best%@EH@%
  33950. how to get on without them.%@NL@%
  33951. %@CR:ANDWOMBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  33952.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  33953.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  33954. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33955. %@NL@%
  33956. %@NL@%
  33957. %@2@%A man can be happy with any woman as long as he does not love%@EH@%
  33958. her.%@NL@%
  33959. %@CR:ANDWOMWilde     @%%@NL@%
  33960.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  33961.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  33962. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33963. %@NL@%
  33964. %@NL@%
  33965. %@2@%There are two things a real man likes - danger and play;%@EH@%
  33966. and he likes woman because she is the most dangerous of playthings.%@NL@%
  33967. %@CR:ANDWOMNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  33968.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  33969.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  33970. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33971. %@NL@%
  33972. %@NL@%
  33973. %@2@%All men are rapists and that's all they are. They rape us with%@EH@%
  33974. their eyes, their laws, their codes.%@NL@%
  33975. %@CR:ANDWOMFrench    @%%@NL@%
  33976.                                                   Marilyn French (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  33977.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  33978. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33979. %@NL@%
  33980. %@NL@%
  33981. %@2@%To be sure he's a "Man," the male must see to it that the%@EH@%
  33982. female be clearly a "Woman," the opposite of a "Man," that
  33983. is the female must act like a faggot.%@NL@%
  33984. %@CR:ANDWOMSolanas   @%%@NL@%
  33985.                                                Valerie Solanas (1940-1988)%@NL@%
  33986.                                                    American artist, writer%@NL@%
  33987. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33988. %@NL@%
  33989. %@NL@%
  33990. %@2@%No men who think really deeply about women retain a high opinion%@EH@%
  33991. of them; men either despise women or they have never thought seriously
  33992. about them.%@NL@%
  33993. %@CR:ANDWOMWeininger @%%@NL@%
  33994.                                                 Otto Weininger (1880-1903)%@NL@%
  33995.                                                       Viennese philosopher%@NL@%
  33996. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  33997. %@NL@%
  33998. %@NL@%
  33999. %@2@%Most men who run down women are only running down a certain%@EH@%
  34000. woman.%@NL@%
  34001. %@CR:ANDWOMdeGourmont@%%@NL@%
  34002.                                               Remy de Gourmont (1858-1915)%@NL@%
  34003.                                                    French critic, novelist%@NL@%
  34004. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34005. %@NL@%
  34006. %@NL@%
  34007. %@2@%Women love men for their defects; if men have enough of them%@EH@%
  34008. women will forgive them everything, even their gigantic intellects.%@NL@%
  34009. %@CR:ANDWOMWilde     @%%@NL@%
  34010.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  34011.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  34012. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34013. %@NL@%
  34014. %@NL@%
  34015. %@2@%Man is for woman a means; the end is always the child.%@NL@%
  34016. %@CR:ANDWOMNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  34017.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  34018.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  34019. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34020. %@NL@%
  34021. %@NL@%
  34022. %@2@%Men know that women are an overmatch for them, and therefore%@EH@%
  34023. they choose the weakest or the most ignorant. If they did not think
  34024. so, they never could be afraid of women knowing as much as themselves.%@NL@%
  34025. %@CR:ANDWOMJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  34026.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  34027.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  34028. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34029. %@NL@%
  34030. %@NL@%
  34031. %@2@%I feel sorry for men - they have more problems than women.%@EH@%
  34032. In the first place they have to compete with women.%@NL@%
  34033. %@CR:ANDWOMSagan     @%%@NL@%
  34034.                                                  Francoise Sagan (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  34035.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  34036. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34037. %@NL@%
  34038. %@NL@%
  34039. %@2@%I do not think women understand how repelled a man feels when%@EH@%
  34040. he sees a woman wholly absorbed in what she is thinking, unless
  34041. it is her child, or her husband, or her lover. It gives one gooseflesh.%@NL@%
  34042. %@CR:ANDWOMWest2     @%%@NL@%
  34043.                                                   Rebecca West (1892-1983)%@NL@%
  34044.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  34045. %@AS@%                                                            Men: and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34046. %@NL@%
  34047. %@NL@%
  34048. %@NL@%
  34049. %@1@%%@AS@%Men and Women%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34050. %@CR:MENANDWOMEN     @%%@NL@%
  34051. %@2@%See:%@QR:Men and Women@%%@NL@%
  34052.      Age: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:            dd8e@%%@NL@%
  34053.      Compliments: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           79abe@%%@NL@%
  34054.      Friendship: %@AB@%Lindbergh%@AE@%%@BO:           ff59d@%%@NL@%
  34055.      God: %@AB@%Conrad%@AE@%%@BO:          10ee11@%%@NL@%
  34056.      Love: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:          184600@%%@NL@%
  34057.      Love: %@AB@%de Stael%@AE@%%@BO:          18477e@%%@NL@%
  34058.      Love: %@AB@%Wyatt%@AE@%%@BO:          184496@%%@NL@%
  34059.      Virtue: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:          2a37c7@%%@NL@%
  34060. %@NL@%
  34061. %@2@%More and more it appears that, biologically, men are designed%@EH@%
  34062. for short, brutal lives and women for long miserable ones.%@NL@%
  34063. %@CR:MENANDRamey     @%%@NL@%
  34064.                                                              Estelle Ramey%@NL@%
  34065.                       professor of physiology, Georgetown University, 1985%@NL@%
  34066. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34067. %@NL@%
  34068. %@NL@%
  34069. %@2@%Men have a much better time of it than women. For one thing,%@EH@%
  34070. they marry later; for another thing, they die earlier.%@NL@%
  34071. %@CR:MENANDMencken   @%%@NL@%
  34072.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  34073.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  34074. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34075. %@NL@%
  34076. %@NL@%
  34077. %@2@%Woman submits to her fate; man makes his.%@NL@%
  34078. %@CR:MENANDGaboriau  @%%@NL@%
  34079.                                                 Emile Gaboriau (1835-1873)%@NL@%
  34080.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  34081. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34082. %@NL@%
  34083. %@NL@%
  34084. %@2@%Men make Gods, and women worship them.%@NL@%
  34085. %@CR:MENANDFrazer    @%%@NL@%
  34086.                                                James G. Frazer (1854-1941)%@NL@%
  34087.                                        Scottish classicist, anthropologist%@NL@%
  34088. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34089. %@NL@%
  34090. %@NL@%
  34091. %@2@%'Tis strange what a man may do, and a woman yet think him an%@EH@%
  34092. angel.%@NL@%
  34093. %@CR:MENANDHearst    @%%@NL@%
  34094.                                        William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951)%@NL@%
  34095.                                                 American newspaper magnate%@NL@%
  34096. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34097. %@NL@%
  34098. %@NL@%
  34099. %@2@%Sure men were born to lie, and women to believe them.%@NL@%
  34100. %@CR:MENANDGay       @%%@NL@%
  34101.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  34102.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  34103. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34104. %@NL@%
  34105. %@NL@%
  34106. %@2@%What passes for woman's intuition is often nothing more than%@EH@%
  34107. man's transparency.%@NL@%
  34108. %@CR:MENANDNathan    @%%@NL@%
  34109.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  34110.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  34111. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34112. %@NL@%
  34113. %@NL@%
  34114. %@2@%Once a woman is made man's equal, she becomes his superior.%@NL@%
  34115. %@CR:MENANDThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  34116.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  34117.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  34118. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34119. %@NL@%
  34120. %@NL@%
  34121. %@2@%You see an awful lot of smart guys with dumb women, but you%@EH@%
  34122. hardly ever see a smart woman with a dumb guy.%@NL@%
  34123. %@CR:MENANDJong      @%%@NL@%
  34124.                                                       Erica Jong (b. 1942)%@NL@%
  34125.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34126. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34127. %@NL@%
  34128. %@NL@%
  34129. %@2@%Women, when they have made a sheep of a man, always tell him%@EH@%
  34130. that he is a lion with a will of iron.%@NL@%
  34131. %@CR:MENANDBalzac    @%%@NL@%
  34132.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  34133.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  34134. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34135. %@NL@%
  34136. %@NL@%
  34137. %@2@%Men have as exaggerated an idea of their rights as women have%@EH@%
  34138. of their wrongs.%@NL@%
  34139. %@CR:MENANDHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  34140.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  34141.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  34142. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34143. %@NL@%
  34144. %@NL@%
  34145. %@2@%A man is as good as he has to be, and a woman as bad as she%@EH@%
  34146. dares.%@NL@%
  34147. %@CR:MENANDHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  34148.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  34149.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34150. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34151. %@NL@%
  34152. %@NL@%
  34153. %@2@%If men were as unselfish as women, women would very soon become%@EH@%
  34154. more selfish than men.%@NL@%
  34155. %@CR:MENANDCollins1  @%%@NL@%
  34156.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  34157.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  34158. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34159. %@NL@%
  34160. %@NL@%
  34161. %@2@%When men and women agree, it is only in their conclusions;%@EH@%
  34162. their reasons are always different.%@NL@%
  34163. %@CR:MENANDSantayana @%%@NL@%
  34164.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  34165.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  34166. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34167. %@NL@%
  34168. %@NL@%
  34169. %@2@%To be happy with a man you must understand him a lot and love%@EH@%
  34170. him a little. To be happy with a woman you must love her a lot
  34171. and not try to understand her at all.%@NL@%
  34172. %@CR:MENANDRowland1  @%%@NL@%
  34173.                                                  Helen Rowland (1875-1950)%@NL@%
  34174.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  34175. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34176. %@NL@%
  34177. %@NL@%
  34178. %@2@%The little rift between the sexes is astonishingly widened%@EH@%
  34179. by simply teaching one set of catchwords to the girls and another
  34180. to the boys.%@NL@%
  34181. %@CR:MENANDStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  34182.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  34183.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  34184. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34185. %@NL@%
  34186. %@NL@%
  34187. %@2@%What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine;%@EH@%
  34188. what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine.%@NL@%
  34189. %@CR:MENANDSontag    @%%@NL@%
  34190.                                                     Susan Sontag (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  34191.                                                          American essayist%@NL@%
  34192. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34193. %@NL@%
  34194. %@NL@%
  34195. %@2@%The great renewal of the world will perhaps consist in this,%@EH@%
  34196. that man and maid, freed from all false feeling and aversion, will
  34197. seek each other not as opposites, but as brother and sister, as
  34198. neighbors, and will come together as human beings.%@NL@%
  34199. %@CR:MENANDRilke     @%%@NL@%
  34200.                                             Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)%@NL@%
  34201.                                                                German poet%@NL@%
  34202. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34203. %@NL@%
  34204. %@NL@%
  34205. %@2@%Men and women, women and men. It will never work.%@NL@%
  34206. %@CR:MENANDJong      @%%@NL@%
  34207.                                                       Erica Jong (b. 1942)%@NL@%
  34208.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34209. %@AS@%                                                             Men and Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34210. %@NL@%
  34211. %@NL@%
  34212. %@NL@%
  34213. %@1@%%@AS@%Middle Age%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34214. %@CR:MIDDLEAGE       @%%@NL@%
  34215. %@2@%See:%@QR:Middle Age@%%@NL@%
  34216.      Age: %@AB@%Grattan%@AE@%%@BO:            d268@%%@NL@%
  34217.      Ideas: %@AB@%Whitehead%@AE@%%@BO:          14296a@%%@NL@%
  34218. %@NL@%
  34219. %@2@%Middle age is the time when a man is always thinking that in%@EH@%
  34220. a week or two he will feel as good as ever.%@NL@%
  34221. %@CR:MIDDLEMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  34222.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  34223.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  34224. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34225. %@NL@%
  34226. %@NL@%
  34227. %@2@% . . .  youth is the period in which a man can be hopeless. The%@EH@%
  34228. end of every episode is the end of the world. But the power of
  34229. hoping through everything, the knowledge that the soul survives
  34230. its adventures, that great inspiration comes to the middle-aged.%@NL@%
  34231. %@CR:MIDDLEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  34232.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  34233.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  34234. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34235. %@NL@%
  34236. %@NL@%
  34237. %@2@%From the middle of life onward, only he remains vitally alive%@EH@%
  34238. who is ready to %@AI@%die with life.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34239. %@CR:MIDDLEJung      @%%@NL@%
  34240.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  34241.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  34242. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34243. %@NL@%
  34244. %@NL@%
  34245. %@2@%My forties are the best time I have ever gone through.%@NL@%
  34246. %@CR:MIDDLETaylor3   @%%@NL@%
  34247.                                                 Elizabeth Taylor (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  34248.                                                Anglo-American film actress%@NL@%
  34249. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34250. %@NL@%
  34251. %@NL@%
  34252. %@2@%All one's life as a young woman one is on show, a focus of%@EH@%
  34253. attention, people notice you. You set yourself up to be noticed
  34254. and admired. And then, not expecting it, you become middle-aged
  34255. and anonymous. No one notices you. You achieve a wonderful freedom.
  34256. It is a positive thing. You can move about, unnoticed and invisible.%@NL@%
  34257. %@CR:MIDDLELessing   @%%@NL@%
  34258.                                                    Doris Lessing (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  34259.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  34260. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34261. %@NL@%
  34262. %@NL@%
  34263. %@2@%The really frightening thing about middle age is the knowledge%@EH@%
  34264. that you'll grow out of it.%@NL@%
  34265. %@CR:MIDDLEDay2      @%%@NL@%
  34266.                                                        Doris Day (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  34267.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  34268. %@AS@%                                                                Middle Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34269. %@NL@%
  34270. %@NL@%
  34271. %@NL@%
  34272. %@1@%%@AS@%Millionaires%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34273. %@CR:MILLIONAIRES    @%%@NL@%
  34274. %@2@%See:%@QR:Millionaires@%%@NL@%
  34275.      %@AB@%The Rich%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          22d33e@%%@NL@%
  34276. %@NL@%
  34277. %@2@%I am not going to be quite as reclusive as I have been because%@EH@%
  34278. it has apparently attracted so much attention that I have just
  34279. got to live a somewhat modified life in order not to be an oddity.%@NL@%
  34280. %@CR:MILLIOHughes1   @%%@NL@%
  34281.                                                  Howard Hughes (1905-1976)%@NL@%
  34282.                                        American businessman, film producer%@NL@%
  34283.                                                      last public statement%@NL@%
  34284. %@AS@%                                                              Millionaires%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34285. %@NL@%
  34286. %@NL@%
  34287. %@2@%It is impossible to think of Howard Hughes without seeing the%@EH@%
  34288. apparently bottomless gulf between what we say we want and what
  34289. we do want, between what we officially admire and secretly desire,
  34290. between, in the largest sense, the people we marry and the people
  34291. we love. In a nation which increasingly appears to prize social
  34292. virtues, Howard Hughes remains not merely antisocial but grandly,
  34293. brilliantly, surpassingly, asocial. He is the last private man,
  34294. the dream we no longer admit.%@NL@%
  34295. %@CR:MILLIODidion    @%%@NL@%
  34296.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  34297.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  34298. %@AS@%                                                              Millionaires%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34299. %@NL@%
  34300. %@NL@%
  34301. %@2@%No woman marries for money; they are all clever enough, before%@EH@%
  34302. marrying a millionaire, to fall in love with him first.%@NL@%
  34303. %@CR:MILLIOPavese    @%%@NL@%
  34304.                                                  Cesare Pavese (1908-1950)%@NL@%
  34305.                                                           Italian novelist%@NL@%
  34306. %@AS@%                                                              Millionaires%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34307. %@NL@%
  34308. %@NL@%
  34309. %@NL@%
  34310. %@1@%%@AS@%Minorities%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34311. %@CR:MINORITIES      @%%@NL@%
  34312. %@2@%See:%@QR:Minorities@%%@NL@%
  34313.      Cults: %@AB@%Altman%@AE@%%@BO:           932a0@%%@NL@%
  34314.      Heresy: %@AB@%Gibbon%@AE@%%@BO:          12743e@%%@NL@%
  34315. %@NL@%
  34316. %@2@%No democracy can long survive which does not accept as fundamental%@EH@%
  34317. to its very existence the recognition of the rights of minorities.%@NL@%
  34318. %@CR:MINORIRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  34319.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  34320.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  34321. %@AS@%                                                                Minorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34322. %@NL@%
  34323. %@NL@%
  34324. %@2@%All history is a record of the power of minorities, and of%@EH@%
  34325. minorities of one.%@NL@%
  34326. %@CR:MINORIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  34327.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  34328.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  34329. %@AS@%                                                                Minorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34330. %@NL@%
  34331. %@NL@%
  34332. %@2@%It is always the minorities that hold the key to progress.%@NL@%
  34333. %@CR:MINORIFosdick2  @%%@NL@%
  34334.                                                  R. B. Fosdick (1883-1969)%@NL@%
  34335.                                             American administrator, author%@NL@%
  34336. %@AS@%                                                                Minorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34337. %@NL@%
  34338. %@NL@%
  34339.      %@2@%How a minority,%@NL@%
  34340.      Reaching majority,%@NL@%
  34341.      Seizing authority,%@NL@%
  34342.      Hates a minority!%@NL@%
  34343. %@CR:MINORIRobbins   @%%@NL@%
  34344.                                             Leonard H. Robbins (1877-1947)%@NL@%
  34345.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34346. %@AS@%                                                                Minorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34347. %@NL@%
  34348. %@NL@%
  34349. %@NL@%
  34350. %@1@%%@AS@%Miracles%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34351. %@CR:MIRACLES        @%%@NL@%
  34352. %@2@%See:%@QR:Miracles@%%@NL@%
  34353.      Prayer: %@AB@%Turgenev%@AE@%%@BO:          1fab7c@%%@NL@%
  34354. %@NL@%
  34355. %@2@%For those who believe in God no explanation is needed; for%@EH@%
  34356. those who do not believe in God no explanation is possible.%@NL@%
  34357. %@CR:MIRACLLafarge   @%%@NL@%
  34358.                                              Father John Lafarge (b. 1880)%@NL@%
  34359.                                                    of the cures of Lourdes%@NL@%
  34360. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34361. %@NL@%
  34362. %@NL@%
  34363. %@2@%A miracle may be accurately defined, a transgression of a law%@EH@%
  34364. of nature by a particular volition of the Deity, or by the interposition
  34365. of some invisible agent.%@NL@%
  34366. %@CR:MIRACLHume      @%%@NL@%
  34367.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  34368.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  34369. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34370. %@NL@%
  34371. %@NL@%
  34372. %@2@%God is a character, a real and consistent being, or He is nothing.%@EH@%
  34373. If God did a miracle He would deny His own nature and the universe
  34374. would simply blow up, vanish, become nothing.%@NL@%
  34375. %@CR:MIRACLCary      @%%@NL@%
  34376.                                                     Joyce Cary (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  34377.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  34378. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34379. %@NL@%
  34380. %@NL@%
  34381. %@2@%Miracles are the swaddling-clothes of infant churches.%@NL@%
  34382. %@CR:MIRACLFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  34383.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  34384.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  34385. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34386. %@NL@%
  34387. %@NL@%
  34388. %@2@%If a man is a fool for believing in a Creator, then he is a%@EH@%
  34389. fool for believing in a miracle; but not otherwise.%@NL@%
  34390. %@CR:MIRACLChesterton@%%@NL@%
  34391.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  34392.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  34393. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34394. %@NL@%
  34395. %@NL@%
  34396. %@2@%What sort of God are we portraying and believing in if we insist%@EH@%
  34397. on what I will nickname "the divine laser beam" type of miracle
  34398. as the heart and basis of the Incarnation and the Resurrection?%@NL@%
  34399. %@CR:MIRACLJenkins   @%%@NL@%
  34400.                                                    David Jenkins (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  34401.                                               theologian, Bishop of Durham%@NL@%
  34402. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34403. %@NL@%
  34404. %@NL@%
  34405. %@2@%A miracle is an event which creates faith. That is the purpose%@EH@%
  34406. and nature of miracles. Frauds deceive. An event which creates
  34407. faith does not deceive; therefore it is not a fraud, but a miracle.%@NL@%
  34408. %@CR:MIRACLShaw      @%%@NL@%
  34409.                                                     Archbishop, %@AI@%Saint Joan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34410.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  34411.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  34412. %@AS@%                                                                  Miracles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34413. %@NL@%
  34414. %@NL@%
  34415. %@NL@%
  34416. %@1@%%@AS@%Missionaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34417. %@CR:MISSIONARIES    @%%@NL@%
  34418. %@2@%See:%@QR:Missionaries@%%@NL@%
  34419.      Christianity: %@AB@%Macdonald%@AE@%%@BO:           65b4e@%%@NL@%
  34420. %@NL@%
  34421. %@2@%Making the world safe for hypocrisy.%@NL@%
  34422. %@CR:MISSIOWolfe2    @%%@NL@%
  34423.                                                   Thomas Wolfe (1900-1938)%@NL@%
  34424.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34425. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34426. %@NL@%
  34427. %@NL@%
  34428. %@2@%The Order of Jesuits is a sword whose hilt is at Rome and whose%@EH@%
  34429. point is everywhere.%@NL@%
  34430. %@CR:MISSIORaynal    @%%@NL@%
  34431.                                          Abbe Guillaume Raynal (1713-1796)%@NL@%
  34432.                                              French historian, philosopher%@NL@%
  34433. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34434. %@NL@%
  34435. %@NL@%
  34436. %@2@%Let the heathen go to hell; help your neighbor.%@NL@%
  34437. %@CR:MISSIOHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  34438.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  34439.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  34440. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34441. %@NL@%
  34442. %@NL@%
  34443. %@2@%The Christian missionary may preach the gospel to the poor%@EH@%
  34444. naked heathen, but the spiritual heathen who populate Europe have
  34445. as yet heard nothing of Christianity.%@NL@%
  34446. %@CR:MISSIOJung      @%%@NL@%
  34447.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  34448.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  34449. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34450. %@NL@%
  34451. %@NL@%
  34452. %@2@%A man found in the South Sea Islands a tribe of savages so%@EH@%
  34453. meagre in intelligence that they could not lie. However, there
  34454. were neighboring islands where missionaries of several denominations
  34455. had settled. And there the savages were not sunk quite so low.%@NL@%
  34456. %@CR:MISSIOHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  34457.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  34458.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34459. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34460. %@NL@%
  34461. %@NL@%
  34462. %@2@%Civilised men arrived in the Pacific armed with alcohol, syphilis,%@EH@%
  34463. trousers, and the Bible.%@NL@%
  34464. %@CR:MISSIOEllis     @%%@NL@%
  34465.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  34466.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  34467. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34468. %@NL@%
  34469. %@NL@%
  34470.      %@2@%Go practise if you please%@NL@%
  34471.      With men and women: Leave a child alone%@NL@%
  34472.      For Christ's particular love's sake!%@NL@%
  34473. %@CR:MISSIOBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  34474.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  34475.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  34476. %@AS@%                                                              Missionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34477. %@NL@%
  34478. %@NL@%
  34479. %@NL@%
  34480. %@1@%%@AS@%Mitigation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34481. %@CR:MITIGATION      @%%@NL@%
  34482. %@2@%%@QR:Mitigation@%He reminds me of the man who murdered both his parents, and%@EH@%
  34483. then, when sentence was about to be pronounced, pleaded for mercy
  34484. on the grounds that he was an orphan.%@NL@%
  34485. %@CR:MITIGALincoln   @%%@NL@%
  34486.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  34487.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  34488. %@AS@%                                                                Mitigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34489. %@NL@%
  34490. %@NL@%
  34491. %@2@%Friar Barnadine: Thou hast committed -%@EH@%
  34492. Barabas: Fornication? But that was in another
  34493. country; and besides, the wench is dead.%@NL@%
  34494. %@CR:MITIGAMarlowe   @%%@NL@%
  34495.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  34496.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  34497. %@AS@%                                                                Mitigation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34498. %@NL@%
  34499. %@NL@%
  34500. %@NL@%
  34501. %@1@%%@AS@%Mobs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34502. %@CR:MOBS            @%%@NL@%
  34503. %@2@%%@QR:Mobs@%That beast with many heads, the staggering multitude.%@NL@%
  34504. %@CR:MOBS  Webster2  @%%@NL@%
  34505.                                                   John Webster (1580-1625)%@NL@%
  34506.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  34507. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34508. %@NL@%
  34509. %@NL@%
  34510. %@2@%The mob has many heads but no brains.%@NL@%
  34511. %@CR:MOBS  Webster2  @%%@NL@%
  34512.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  34513. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34514. %@NL@%
  34515. %@NL@%
  34516. %@2@%Each of you, individually, walks with the presence of a fox,%@EH@%
  34517. but collectively you are geese.%@NL@%
  34518. %@CR:MOBS  Solon     @%%@NL@%
  34519.                                                      Solon (c. 638-559 BC)%@NL@%
  34520.                                                         Athenian statesman%@NL@%
  34521. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34522. %@NL@%
  34523. %@NL@%
  34524. %@2@%The tyranny of the multitude is a multiplied tyranny.%@NL@%
  34525. %@CR:MOBS  Burke2    @%%@NL@%
  34526.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  34527.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  34528. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34529. %@NL@%
  34530. %@NL@%
  34531. %@2@%Nouns of number, or multitude, such as %@AI@%Mob, Parliament, Rabble,%@EH@%
  34532. %@AI@%House of Commons, Regiment, Court of King's Bench, Den of Thieves,%@AE@%
  34533. and the like.%@NL@%
  34534. %@CR:MOBS  Cobbett   @%%@NL@%
  34535.                                                William Cobbett (1762-1835)%@NL@%
  34536.                              English essayist, politician, agriculturalist%@NL@%
  34537. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34538. %@NL@%
  34539. %@NL@%
  34540. %@2@%Are we aware of our obligations to a mob? It is the mob that%@EH@%
  34541. labour in your fields and serve in your houses - that man your
  34542. navy, and recruit your army - that have enabled you to defy
  34543. the world, and can also defy you when neglect and calamity have
  34544. driven them to despair. You may call the people a mob; but do
  34545. not forget that a mob too often speaks the sentiments of the people.%@NL@%
  34546. %@CR:MOBS  Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  34547.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  34548.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  34549.                               speech to the House of Lords on the Luddites%@NL@%
  34550. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34551. %@NL@%
  34552. %@NL@%
  34553. %@2@%There is an accumulative cruelty in a number of men, though%@EH@%
  34554. none in particular are ill-natured.%@NL@%
  34555. %@CR:MOBS  Savile    @%%@NL@%
  34556.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  34557.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  34558. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34559. %@NL@%
  34560. %@NL@%
  34561. %@2@%I'm their leader, I've got to follow them.%@NL@%
  34562. %@CR:MOBS  LedruRolli@%%@NL@%
  34563.                                         Alexandre Ledru-Rollin (1807-1864)%@NL@%
  34564.                                           French politician, revolutionary%@NL@%
  34565.                                among the Paris mob at the barricades, 1848%@NL@%
  34566. %@AS@%                                                                      Mobs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34567. %@NL@%
  34568. %@NL@%
  34569. %@NL@%
  34570. %@1@%%@AS@%Moderation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34571. %@CR:MODERATION      @%%@NL@%
  34572. %@2@%See:%@QR:Moderation@%%@NL@%
  34573.      Drink: Abstinence: %@AB@%Saint Augustine%@AE@%%@BO:           ba679@%%@NL@%
  34574.      Excess: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           d6105@%%@NL@%
  34575.      Self-denial: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2463e1@%%@NL@%
  34576. %@NL@%
  34577. %@2@%Moderation is the silken string running through the pearl chain%@EH@%
  34578. of all virtues.%@NL@%
  34579. %@CR:MODERAHall2     @%%@NL@%
  34580.                                                    Joseph Hall (1574-1656)%@NL@%
  34581.                                                          Bishop of Norwich%@NL@%
  34582. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34583. %@NL@%
  34584. %@NL@%
  34585. %@2@%Moderation is a virtue only in those who are thought to have%@EH@%
  34586. an alternative.%@NL@%
  34587. %@CR:MODERAKissinger @%%@NL@%
  34588.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  34589.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  34590. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34591. %@NL@%
  34592. %@NL@%
  34593. %@2@%Tell a man whose house is on fire to give a moderate alarm;%@EH@%
  34594. tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hands of the ravisher;
  34595. tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire
  34596. into which it has fallen; but urge me not to use moderation in
  34597. a case like the present.%@NL@%
  34598. %@CR:MODERAGarrison  @%%@NL@%
  34599.                                                 W. L. Garrison (1805-1879)%@NL@%
  34600.                                                      American abolitionist%@NL@%
  34601.      launching his newspaper %@AI@%The Liberator%@AE@% in his campaign against slavery%@NL@%
  34602. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34603. %@NL@%
  34604. %@NL@%
  34605. %@2@%Any plan conceived in moderation must fail when the circumstances%@EH@%
  34606. are set in extremes.%@NL@%
  34607. %@CR:MODERAMetternich@%%@NL@%
  34608.                                              Prince Metternich (1773-1859)%@NL@%
  34609.                                                         Austrian statesman%@NL@%
  34610. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34611. %@NL@%
  34612. %@NL@%
  34613. %@2@%Moderation in people who are contented comes from the calm%@EH@%
  34614. that good fortune lends to their spirit.%@NL@%
  34615. %@CR:MODERALaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  34616.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  34617.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  34618. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34619. %@NL@%
  34620. %@NL@%
  34621. %@2@%My God, Mr Chairman, at this moment I stand astonished at my%@EH@%
  34622. own moderation.%@NL@%
  34623. %@CR:MODERAClive     @%%@NL@%
  34624.                                                   Robert Clive (1725-1774)%@NL@%
  34625.                                    English soldier, colonial administrator%@NL@%
  34626.                          defending himself against charges of embezzlement%@NL@%
  34627. %@AS@%                                                                Moderation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34628. %@NL@%
  34629. %@NL@%
  34630. %@NL@%
  34631. %@1@%%@AS@%Modern Times%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34632. %@CR:MODERNTIMES     @%%@NL@%
  34633. %@2@%See:%@QR:Modern Times@%%@NL@%
  34634.      Haste: %@AB@%Phaedrus%@AE@%%@BO:          122b0f@%%@NL@%
  34635. %@NL@%
  34636. %@2@%It takes a kind of shabby arrogance to survive in our time,%@EH@%
  34637. and a fairly romantic nature to want to.%@NL@%
  34638. %@CR:MODERNFriedenber@%%@NL@%
  34639.                                             Edgar Z. Friedenberg (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  34640.                                                       American sociologist%@NL@%
  34641. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34642. %@NL@%
  34643. %@NL@%
  34644.      %@2@%This strange disease of modern life.%@NL@%
  34645.      With its sick hurry, its divided aims.%@NL@%
  34646. %@CR:MODERNArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  34647.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  34648.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  34649. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34650. %@NL@%
  34651. %@NL@%
  34652. %@2@%No man lives without jostling and being jostled; in all ways%@EH@%
  34653. he has to elbow himself through the world, giving and receiving
  34654. offence.%@NL@%
  34655. %@CR:MODERNCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  34656.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  34657.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  34658. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34659. %@NL@%
  34660. %@NL@%
  34661. %@2@%Now here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to%@EH@%
  34662. keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you
  34663. must run at least twice as fast as that!%@NL@%
  34664. %@CR:MODERNCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  34665.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  34666.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  34667. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34668. %@NL@%
  34669. %@NL@%
  34670. %@2@%The horror of the Twentieth Century is the size of each event%@EH@%
  34671. and the paucity of its reverberation.%@NL@%
  34672. %@CR:MODERNMailer    @%%@NL@%
  34673.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  34674.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  34675. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34676. %@NL@%
  34677. %@NL@%
  34678. %@2@%The atom bombs are piling up in the factories, the police are%@EH@%
  34679. prowling through the cities, the lies are streaming from the loudspeakers,
  34680. but the earth is still going round the sun.%@NL@%
  34681. %@CR:MODERNOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  34682.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  34683.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  34684. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34685. %@NL@%
  34686. %@NL@%
  34687. %@2@%In these times you have to be an optimist to open your eyes%@EH@%
  34688. when you wake in the morning.%@NL@%
  34689. %@CR:MODERNSandburg  @%%@NL@%
  34690.                                                  Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  34691.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  34692. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34693. %@NL@%
  34694. %@NL@%
  34695.      %@2@%Let nothing be called natural%@NL@%
  34696.      In an age of bloody confusion,%@NL@%
  34697.      Ordered disorder, planned caprice,%@NL@%
  34698.      And dehumanized humanity, lest all things%@NL@%
  34699.      Be held unalterable!%@NL@%
  34700. %@CR:MODERNBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  34701.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  34702.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  34703. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34704. %@NL@%
  34705. %@NL@%
  34706. %@2@%The trouble with our age is that it is all signpost and no%@EH@%
  34707. destination.%@NL@%
  34708. %@CR:MODERNKronenberg@%%@NL@%
  34709.                                             Louis Kronenberger (1904-1980)%@NL@%
  34710.                                            American critic, editor, author%@NL@%
  34711. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34712. %@NL@%
  34713. %@NL@%
  34714. %@2@%In the nineteenth century the problem was that God is dead;%@EH@%
  34715. in the twentieth century the problem is that man is dead.%@NL@%
  34716. %@CR:MODERNFromm     @%%@NL@%
  34717.                                                    Erich Fromm (1900-1980)%@NL@%
  34718.                                                      American psychologist%@NL@%
  34719. %@AS@%                                                              Modern Times%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34720. %@NL@%
  34721. %@NL@%
  34722. %@NL@%
  34723. %@1@%%@AS@%Modesty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34724. %@CR:MODESTY         @%%@NL@%
  34725. %@2@%See:%@QR:Modesty@%%@NL@%
  34726.      The English: %@AB@%Flaubert%@AE@%%@BO:           ced79@%%@NL@%
  34727.      Self-image: %@AB@%Gilbert%@AE@%%@BO:          247e5d@%%@NL@%
  34728. %@NL@%
  34729. %@2@%Modesty: the gentle art of enhancing your charm by pretending%@EH@%
  34730. not to be aware of it.%@NL@%
  34731. %@CR:MODESTHerford   @%%@NL@%
  34732.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  34733.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  34734. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34735. %@NL@%
  34736. %@NL@%
  34737. %@2@%Modesty is the only sure bait when you angle for praise.%@NL@%
  34738. %@CR:MODESTChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  34739.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  34740.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  34741. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34742. %@NL@%
  34743. %@NL@%
  34744. %@2@%He is a modest little man with much to be modest about.%@NL@%
  34745. %@CR:MODESTChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  34746.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  34747.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  34748.                                                          of Clement Attlee%@NL@%
  34749. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34750. %@NL@%
  34751. %@NL@%
  34752. %@2@%Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from%@EH@%
  34753. giving wordy evidence of the fact.%@NL@%
  34754. %@CR:MODESTEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  34755.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  34756.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  34757. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34758. %@NL@%
  34759. %@NL@%
  34760. %@2@%The English instinctively admire any man who has no talent,%@EH@%
  34761. and is modest about it.%@NL@%
  34762. %@CR:MODESTAgate     @%%@NL@%
  34763.                                                    James Agate (1877-1947)%@NL@%
  34764.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  34765. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34766. %@NL@%
  34767. %@NL@%
  34768. %@2@%I have often wished I had time to cultivate modesty  . . .  But%@EH@%
  34769. I am too busy thinking about myself.%@NL@%
  34770. %@CR:MODESTSitwell1  @%%@NL@%
  34771.                                             Dame Edith Sitwell (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  34772.                                                       British writer, poet%@NL@%
  34773. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34774. %@NL@%
  34775. %@NL@%
  34776. %@2@%Ah! Madam,  . . .  you know every thing in the world but your%@EH@%
  34777. perfections, and you only know not those, because 'tis the top
  34778. of perfection not to know them.%@NL@%
  34779. %@CR:MODESTCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  34780.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  34781.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  34782. %@AS@%                                                                   Modesty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34783. %@NL@%
  34784. %@NL@%
  34785. %@NL@%
  34786. %@1@%%@AS@%Money%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34787. %@CR:MONEY           @%%@NL@%
  34788. %@2@%See:%@QR:Money@%%@NL@%
  34789.      Greed: %@AB@%Saint Paul%@AE@%%@BO:          11aa0a@%%@NL@%
  34790.      Intentions: %@AB@%Thatcher%@AE@%%@BO:          155b07@%%@NL@%
  34791.      Poverty: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1f690d@%%@NL@%
  34792. %@NL@%
  34793. %@2@%There are few sorrows, however poignant, in which a good income%@EH@%
  34794. is of no avail.%@NL@%
  34795. %@CR:MONEY Smith6    @%%@NL@%
  34796.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  34797.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  34798. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34799. %@NL@%
  34800. %@NL@%
  34801. %@2@%Ready money %@AI@%is%@AE@% Aladdin's lamp.%@NL@%
  34802. %@CR:MONEY Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  34803.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  34804.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  34805. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34806. %@NL@%
  34807. %@NL@%
  34808. %@2@%Money is the sinews of love, as of war.%@NL@%
  34809. %@CR:MONEY Farquhar  @%%@NL@%
  34810.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  34811.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  34812. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34813. %@NL@%
  34814. %@NL@%
  34815. %@2@%Money is a singular thing. It ranks with love as man's greatest%@EH@%
  34816. source of joy. And with death as his greatest source of anxiety.
  34817. Money differs from an automobile, a mistress or cancer in being
  34818. equally important to those who have it and those who do not.%@NL@%
  34819. %@CR:MONEY Galbraith @%%@NL@%
  34820.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  34821.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  34822. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34823. %@NL@%
  34824. %@NL@%
  34825. %@2@%If you would like to know the value of money, go and try to%@EH@%
  34826. borrow some.%@NL@%
  34827. %@CR:MONEY Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  34828.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  34829.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  34830. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34831. %@NL@%
  34832. %@NL@%
  34833. %@2@%The value of money is that with it we can tell any man to go%@EH@%
  34834. to the devil. It is the sixth sense which enables you to enjoy
  34835. the other five.%@NL@%
  34836. %@CR:MONEY Maugham   @%%@NL@%
  34837.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  34838.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  34839. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34840. %@NL@%
  34841. %@NL@%
  34842. %@2@%They who are of the opinion that money will do everything,%@EH@%
  34843. may very well be suspected to do everything for money.%@NL@%
  34844. %@CR:MONEY Savile    @%%@NL@%
  34845.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  34846.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  34847. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34848. %@NL@%
  34849. %@NL@%
  34850. %@2@%The want of money is the root of all evil.%@NL@%
  34851. %@CR:MONEY Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  34852.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  34853.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  34854. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34855. %@NL@%
  34856. %@NL@%
  34857. %@2@%We all need money, but there are degrees of desperation.%@NL@%
  34858. %@CR:MONEY Burgess1  @%%@NL@%
  34859.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  34860.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  34861. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34862. %@NL@%
  34863. %@NL@%
  34864. %@2@%Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons.%@NL@%
  34865. %@CR:MONEY Allen4    @%%@NL@%
  34866.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  34867.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  34868. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34869. %@NL@%
  34870. %@NL@%
  34871. %@2@%I don't like money, actually, but it quiets my nerves.%@NL@%
  34872. %@CR:MONEY Louis     @%%@NL@%
  34873.                                                      Joe Louis (1914-1981)%@NL@%
  34874.                                                             American boxer%@NL@%
  34875. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34876. %@NL@%
  34877. %@NL@%
  34878. %@2@%Making money ain't nothing exciting to me. You might be able%@EH@%
  34879. to buy a little better booze than the wino on the corner. But you
  34880. get sick just like the next cat and when you die you're just as
  34881. graveyard dead as he is.%@NL@%
  34882. %@CR:MONEY Armstrong @%%@NL@%
  34883.                                                Louis Armstrong (1900-1971)%@NL@%
  34884.                                                     American jazz musician%@NL@%
  34885. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34886. %@NL@%
  34887. %@NL@%
  34888. %@2@%Money doesn't talk, it swears.%@NL@%
  34889. %@CR:MONEY Dylan     @%%@NL@%
  34890.                                                        Bob Dylan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  34891.                                                American singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  34892. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34893. %@NL@%
  34894. %@NL@%
  34895. %@2@%Money dignifies what is frivolous if unpaid for.%@NL@%
  34896. %@CR:MONEY Woolf     @%%@NL@%
  34897.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  34898.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  34899. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34900. %@NL@%
  34901. %@NL@%
  34902. %@2@%Money is like muck, not good except it be spread.%@NL@%
  34903. %@CR:MONEY Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  34904.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  34905.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  34906. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34907. %@NL@%
  34908. %@NL@%
  34909. %@2@%There are few ways in which a man can be more innocently employed%@EH@%
  34910. than in getting money.%@NL@%
  34911. %@CR:MONEY Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  34912.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  34913.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  34914. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34915. %@NL@%
  34916. %@NL@%
  34917. %@2@%Men who make money rarely saunter; men who save money rarely%@EH@%
  34918. swagger.%@NL@%
  34919. %@CR:MONEY BulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  34920.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  34921.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  34922. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34923. %@NL@%
  34924. %@NL@%
  34925. %@2@%Money can't buy friends, but you can get a better class of%@EH@%
  34926. enemy.%@NL@%
  34927. %@CR:MONEY Milligan  @%%@NL@%
  34928.                                                   Spike Milligan (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  34929.                                          British comedian, humorous writer%@NL@%
  34930. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34931. %@NL@%
  34932. %@NL@%
  34933. %@2@%When I was young I used to think that money was the most important%@EH@%
  34934. thing in life; now that I am old, I know it is.%@NL@%
  34935. %@CR:MONEY Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  34936.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  34937.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  34938. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34939. %@NL@%
  34940. %@NL@%
  34941. %@2@%When it is a question of money, everybody is of the same religion.%@NL@%
  34942. %@CR:MONEY Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  34943.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  34944.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  34945. %@AS@%                                                                     Money%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34946. %@NL@%
  34947. %@NL@%
  34948. %@NL@%
  34949. %@1@%%@AS@%Monopolies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34950. %@CR:MONOPOLIES      @%%@NL@%
  34951. %@2@%%@QR:Monopolies@%Monopolies are like babies: nobody likes them until they have%@EH@%
  34952. got one of their own.%@NL@%
  34953. %@CR:MONOPOMancroft  @%%@NL@%
  34954.                                                  Lord Mancroft (1914-1987)%@NL@%
  34955.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  34956. %@AS@%                                                                Monopolies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34957. %@NL@%
  34958. %@NL@%
  34959. %@NL@%
  34960. %@1@%%@AS@%Marilyn Monroe%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34961. %@CR:MONROE          @%%@NL@%
  34962. %@2@%%@QR:Marilyn Monroe@%She was good at playing abstract confusion in the same way%@EH@%
  34963. that a midget is good at being short.%@NL@%
  34964. %@CR:MONROEJames1    @%%@NL@%
  34965.                                                      Clive James (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  34966.                                                  Australian writer, critic%@NL@%
  34967. %@AS@%                                                            Marilyn Monroe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34968. %@NL@%
  34969. %@NL@%
  34970. %@2@%Can't act  . . .  Voice like a tight squeak  . . .  Utterly unsure%@EH@%
  34971. of herself  . . .  Unable even to take refuge in her own insignificance.%@NL@%
  34972. %@CR:MONROEJames1    @%%@NL@%
  34973.                                                 Columbia Pictures comments%@NL@%
  34974. %@AS@%                                                            Marilyn Monroe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34975. %@NL@%
  34976. %@NL@%
  34977. %@2@%To put it bluntly, I seem to be a whole superstructure with%@EH@%
  34978. no foundation. But I'm working on the foundation.%@NL@%
  34979. %@CR:MONROEMonroe    @%%@NL@%
  34980.                                                 Marilyn Monroe (1926-1962)%@NL@%
  34981.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  34982. %@AS@%                                                            Marilyn Monroe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34983. %@NL@%
  34984. %@NL@%
  34985. %@2@%Marilyn was mean. Terribly mean. The meanest woman I ever met%@EH@%
  34986. around this town. I have never met anybody as mean as Marilyn Monroe
  34987. or as utterly fabulous on the screen, and that includes Garbo.%@NL@%
  34988. %@CR:MONROEWilder1   @%%@NL@%
  34989.                                                     Billy Wilder (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  34990.                                                   American writer-director%@NL@%
  34991. %@AS@%                                                            Marilyn Monroe%@AE@%%@NL@%
  34992. %@NL@%
  34993. %@NL@%
  34994. %@NL@%
  34995. %@1@%%@AS@%Monte Carlo%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  34996. %@CR:MONTECARLO      @%%@NL@%
  34997. %@2@%%@QR:Monte Carlo@%That little state like Hampstead Heath in the South of France.%@NL@%
  34998. %@CR:MONTECDocker    @%%@NL@%
  34999.                                                      Lady Docker (b. 1900)%@NL@%
  35000. %@AS@%                                                               Monte Carlo%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35001. %@NL@%
  35002. %@NL@%
  35003. %@NL@%
  35004. %@1@%%@AS@%Moral Indignation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35005. %@CR:MORALINDIGNATION@%%@NL@%
  35006. %@2@%%@QR:Moral Indignation@%Compound for sins they are inclined to%@NL@%
  35007.      By damning those they have no mind to.%@NL@%
  35008. %@CR:MORALIButler3   @%%@NL@%
  35009.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  35010.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35011. %@AS@%                                                         Moral Indignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35012. %@NL@%
  35013. %@NL@%
  35014. %@2@%Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo.%@NL@%
  35015. %@CR:MORALIWells     @%%@NL@%
  35016.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  35017.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  35018. %@AS@%                                                         Moral Indignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35019. %@NL@%
  35020. %@NL@%
  35021. %@2@%Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral, 48 percent%@EH@%
  35022. indignation and 50 percent envy.%@NL@%
  35023. %@CR:MORALIdeSica    @%%@NL@%
  35024.                                               Vittorio de Sica (1901-1974)%@NL@%
  35025.                                                           Italian director%@NL@%
  35026. %@AS@%                                                         Moral Indignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35027. %@NL@%
  35028. %@NL@%
  35029. %@NL@%
  35030. %@1@%%@AS@%Morale%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35031. %@CR:MORALE          @%%@NL@%
  35032. %@2@%%@QR:Morale@%Morale is when your hands and feet keep on working when your%@EH@%
  35033. head says it can't be done.%@NL@%
  35034. %@CR:MORALEMoreell   @%%@NL@%
  35035.                                             Admiral BenMoreell (1892-1978)%@NL@%
  35036.                                      American naval commander, businessman%@NL@%
  35037. %@AS@%                                                                    Morale%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35038. %@NL@%
  35039. %@NL@%
  35040. %@NL@%
  35041. %@1@%%@AS@%Moralists%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35042. %@CR:MORALISTS       @%%@NL@%
  35043. %@2@%See:%@QR:Moralists@%%@NL@%
  35044.      %@AB@%Puritans%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2140b6@%%@NL@%
  35045. %@NL@%
  35046. %@2@%The same people who can deny others everything are famous for%@EH@%
  35047. refusing themselves nothing.%@NL@%
  35048. %@CR:MORALIHunt      @%%@NL@%
  35049.                                                     Leigh Hunt (1784-1859)%@NL@%
  35050.                                             English poet, critic, essayist%@NL@%
  35051. %@AS@%                                                                 Moralists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35052. %@NL@%
  35053. %@NL@%
  35054. %@2@%When we start deceiving ourselves into thinking not that we%@EH@%
  35055. want something or need something, not that it is a pragmatic necessity
  35056. for us to have it, but that it is a %@AI@%moral imperative%@AE@% that we
  35057. have it, then is when we join the fashionable madmen, and then
  35058. is when the thin whine of hysteria is heard in the land, and then
  35059. is when we are in bad trouble.%@NL@%
  35060. %@CR:MORALIDidion    @%%@NL@%
  35061.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  35062.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  35063. %@AS@%                                                                 Moralists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35064. %@NL@%
  35065. %@NL@%
  35066. %@2@%We are told by moralists with the plainest faces that immorality%@EH@%
  35067. will spoil our looks.%@NL@%
  35068. %@CR:MORALISmith6    @%%@NL@%
  35069.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  35070.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  35071. %@AS@%                                                                 Moralists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35072. %@NL@%
  35073. %@NL@%
  35074. %@NL@%
  35075. %@1@%%@AS@%Morality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35076. %@CR:MORALITY        @%%@NL@%
  35077. %@2@%See:%@QR:Morality@%%@NL@%
  35078.      Health: %@AB@%Spencer%@AE@%%@BO:          124686@%%@NL@%
  35079.      Preaching: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          1fcd55@%%@NL@%
  35080.      Religion: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          223cc6@%; %@AB@%Arnold%@AE@%%@BO:          220414@%%@NL@%
  35081.      Scandal: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2387d4@%%@NL@%
  35082.      Taboo: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          27b1d9@%%@NL@%
  35083. %@NL@%
  35084. %@2@%Grub first, then morality.%@NL@%
  35085. %@CR:MORALIBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  35086.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  35087.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  35088. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35089. %@NL@%
  35090. %@NL@%
  35091. %@2@%Of moral purpose I see no trace in Nature. That is an article%@EH@%
  35092. of exclusively human manufacture - and very much to our credit.%@NL@%
  35093. %@CR:MORALIHuxley2   @%%@NL@%
  35094.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  35095.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  35096. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35097. %@NL@%
  35098. %@NL@%
  35099. %@2@%Morality comes with the sad wisdom of age, when the sense of%@EH@%
  35100. curiosity has withered.%@NL@%
  35101. %@CR:MORALIGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  35102.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  35103.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  35104. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35105. %@NL@%
  35106. %@NL@%
  35107. %@2@%Morality is the theory that every human act must be either%@EH@%
  35108. right or wrong and that ninety-nine percent of them are wrong.%@NL@%
  35109. %@CR:MORALIMencken   @%%@NL@%
  35110.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  35111.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  35112. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35113. %@NL@%
  35114. %@NL@%
  35115. %@2@%The nation's morals are like its teeth: the more decayed%@EH@%
  35116. they are the more it hurts to touch them.%@NL@%
  35117. %@CR:MORALIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  35118.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  35119.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  35120. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35121. %@NL@%
  35122. %@NL@%
  35123. %@2@%We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in%@EH@%
  35124. one of its periodical fits of morality.%@NL@%
  35125. %@CR:MORALIMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  35126.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  35127.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  35128. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35129. %@NL@%
  35130. %@NL@%
  35131. %@2@%An Englishman thinks he is moral when he is only uncomfortable.%@NL@%
  35132. %@CR:MORALIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  35133.                                                The Devil, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35134.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  35135.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  35136. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35137. %@NL@%
  35138. %@NL@%
  35139. %@2@%If thy morals make thee dreary, depend upon it they are wrong.%@NL@%
  35140. %@CR:MORALIStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  35141.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  35142.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  35143. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35144. %@NL@%
  35145. %@NL@%
  35146. %@2@%Morality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people we%@EH@%
  35147. personally dislike.%@NL@%
  35148. %@CR:MORALIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  35149.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  35150.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  35151. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35152. %@NL@%
  35153. %@NL@%
  35154. %@2@%Don't let us make imaginary evils, when you know we have so%@EH@%
  35155. many real ones to encounter.%@NL@%
  35156. %@CR:MORALIGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  35157.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  35158.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  35159. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35160. %@NL@%
  35161. %@NL@%
  35162. %@2@%About morals, I know only that what is moral is what you feel%@EH@%
  35163. good after and what is immoral is what you feel bad after.%@NL@%
  35164. %@CR:MORALIHemingway @%%@NL@%
  35165.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  35166.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  35167. %@AS@%                                                                  Morality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35168. %@NL@%
  35169. %@NL@%
  35170. %@NL@%
  35171. %@1@%%@AS@%Mother%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35172. %@CR:MOTHER          @%%@NL@%
  35173. %@2@%See:%@QR:Mother@%%@NL@%
  35174.      %@AB@%Parents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cb680@%%@NL@%
  35175. %@NL@%
  35176. %@2@%With animals you don't see the male caring for the offspring.%@EH@%
  35177. It's against nature. It is a woman's prerogative and duty, and
  35178. a privilege.%@NL@%
  35179. %@CR:MOTHERPrincessGr@%%@NL@%
  35180.                                       Princess Grace of Monaco (1928-1982)%@NL@%
  35181. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35182. %@NL@%
  35183. %@NL@%
  35184. %@2@%God could not be everywhere and therefore he made mothers.%@NL@%
  35185. %@CR:MOTHERPrincessGr@%%@NL@%
  35186.                                                             Jewish proverb%@NL@%
  35187. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35188. %@NL@%
  35189. %@NL@%
  35190. %@2@%The commonest fallacy among women is that simply having children%@EH@%
  35191. makes one a mother - which is as absurd as believing that having
  35192. a piano makes one a musician.%@NL@%
  35193. %@CR:MOTHERHarris    @%%@NL@%
  35194.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  35195.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  35196. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35197. %@NL@%
  35198. %@NL@%
  35199. %@2@%Often women have babies because they can't think of anything%@EH@%
  35200. better to do.%@NL@%
  35201. %@CR:MOTHERBeaumont  @%%@NL@%
  35202.                                          Lord Beaumontof Whitley (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  35203.                                    British prelate, politician, journalist%@NL@%
  35204. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35205. %@NL@%
  35206. %@NL@%
  35207. %@2@%If you bungle raising your children, I don't think whatever%@EH@%
  35208. else you do well matters very much.%@NL@%
  35209. %@CR:MOTHEROnassis   @%%@NL@%
  35210.                  Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Jacqueline  Kennedy (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  35211.                                                 American former First Lady%@NL@%
  35212. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35213. %@NL@%
  35214. %@NL@%
  35215. %@2@%A suburban mother's role is to deliver children obstetrically%@EH@%
  35216. once, and by car forever after.%@NL@%
  35217. %@CR:MOTHERdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  35218.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  35219.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  35220. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35221. %@NL@%
  35222. %@NL@%
  35223.      %@2@%He that would the daughter win%@NL@%
  35224.      Must with the mother first begin.%@NL@%
  35225. %@CR:MOTHERdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  35226.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  35227. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35228. %@NL@%
  35229. %@NL@%
  35230. %@2@%Perhaps the greatest social service that can be rendered by%@EH@%
  35231. anybody to the country and to mankind is to bring up a family.
  35232. But here again, because there is nothing to sell, there is a very
  35233. general disposition to regard a married woman's work as no work
  35234. at all, and to take it as a matter of course that she should not
  35235. be paid for it.%@NL@%
  35236. %@CR:MOTHERShaw      @%%@NL@%
  35237.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  35238.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  35239. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35240. %@NL@%
  35241. %@NL@%
  35242. %@2@%There is no slave out of heaven like a loving woman; and, of%@EH@%
  35243. all loving women, there is no such slave as a mother.%@NL@%
  35244. %@CR:MOTHERBeecher1  @%%@NL@%
  35245.                                             Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887)%@NL@%
  35246.                                         American clergyman, editor, writer%@NL@%
  35247. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35248. %@NL@%
  35249. %@NL@%
  35250. %@2@%Since nothing was too much to do for him, she laid on him the%@EH@%
  35251. intolerable burden of finding nothing too much to do for her.%@NL@%
  35252. %@CR:MOTHERCozzens   @%%@NL@%
  35253.                                            James Gould Cozzens (1903-1978)%@NL@%
  35254.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  35255. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35256. %@NL@%
  35257. %@NL@%
  35258. %@2@%There are times when parenthood seems nothing but feeding the%@EH@%
  35259. mouth that bites you.%@NL@%
  35260. %@CR:MOTHERdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  35261.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  35262.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  35263. %@AS@%                                                                    Mother%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35264. %@NL@%
  35265. %@NL@%
  35266. %@NL@%
  35267. %@1@%%@AS@%Motives%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35268. %@CR:MOTIVES         @%%@NL@%
  35269. %@2@%See:%@QR:Motives@%%@NL@%
  35270.      Humility: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          13b657@%%@NL@%
  35271.      Truth: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:          295c42@%%@NL@%
  35272. %@NL@%
  35273. %@2@%We should often be ashamed of our finest actions if the world%@EH@%
  35274. understood our motives.%@NL@%
  35275. %@CR:MOTIVELaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  35276.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  35277.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  35278. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35279. %@NL@%
  35280. %@NL@%
  35281. %@2@%He never does a proper thing without giving an improper reason%@EH@%
  35282. for it.%@NL@%
  35283. %@CR:MOTIVEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  35284.                                              Lady Britomart, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35285.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  35286.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  35287. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35288. %@NL@%
  35289. %@NL@%
  35290. %@2@%Great men will never do great mischief but for some great end.%@NL@%
  35291. %@CR:MOTIVEBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  35292.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  35293.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  35294. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35295. %@NL@%
  35296. %@NL@%
  35297. %@2@%Men are not only bad from good motives, but also often good%@EH@%
  35298. from bad motives.%@NL@%
  35299. %@CR:MOTIVEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  35300.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  35301.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  35302. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35303. %@NL@%
  35304. %@NL@%
  35305. %@2@%The motive for a deed usually changes during its performance:%@EH@%
  35306. at least, after the deed has been done, it seems quite different.%@NL@%
  35307. %@CR:MOTIVEHebbel    @%%@NL@%
  35308.                                               Friedrich Hebbel (1813-1863)%@NL@%
  35309.                                                           German dramatist%@NL@%
  35310. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35311. %@NL@%
  35312. %@NL@%
  35313. %@2@%No man does anything from a single motive.%@NL@%
  35314. %@CR:MOTIVEColeridge @%%@NL@%
  35315.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  35316.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35317. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35318. %@NL@%
  35319. %@NL@%
  35320. %@2@%Never ascribe to an opponent motives meaner than your own.%@NL@%
  35321. %@CR:MOTIVEBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  35322.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  35323.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  35324. %@AS@%                                                                   Motives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35325. %@NL@%
  35326. %@NL@%
  35327. %@NL@%
  35328. %@1@%%@AS@%Murder%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35329. %@CR:MURDER          @%%@NL@%
  35330. %@2@%See:%@QR:Murder@%%@NL@%
  35331.      %@AB@%Killing%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          165a39@%%@NL@%
  35332. %@NL@%
  35333. %@2@%Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much%@EH@%
  35334. blood in him?%@NL@%
  35335. %@CR:MURDERShakespear@%%@NL@%
  35336.                                                      Lady Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35337.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  35338.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  35339. %@AS@%                                                                    Murder%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35340. %@NL@%
  35341. %@NL@%
  35342. %@2@%If once a man indulge himself in murder, very soon he comes%@EH@%
  35343. to think little of robbing; and from robbing he next comes to drinking
  35344. and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination.%@NL@%
  35345. %@CR:MURDERdeQuincey @%%@NL@%
  35346.                                              Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859)%@NL@%
  35347.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  35348. %@AS@%                                                                    Murder%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35349. %@NL@%
  35350. %@NL@%
  35351. %@2@%Every murderer is probably somebody's old friend.%@NL@%
  35352. %@CR:MURDERChristie  @%%@NL@%
  35353.                                                Agatha Christie (1891-1976)%@NL@%
  35354.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  35355. %@AS@%                                                                    Murder%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35356. %@NL@%
  35357. %@NL@%
  35358. %@NL@%
  35359. %@1@%%@AS@%Music%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35360. %@CR:MUSIC           @%%@NL@%
  35361. %@2@%See:%@QR:Music@%%@NL@%
  35362.      Cinema: %@AB@%Stravinsky%@AE@%%@BO:           6bdbd@%%@NL@%
  35363.      Hermits: %@AB@%Joachim%@AE@%%@BO:          1288b7@%%@NL@%
  35364.      %@AB@%Opera%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c3b4a@%%@NL@%
  35365.      %@AB@%Pop%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1f1903@%%@NL@%
  35366.      %@AB@%Rock 'n' Roll%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          22f7f7@%%@NL@%
  35367.      %@AB@%Song%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          261d5c@%%@NL@%
  35368. %@NL@%
  35369. %@2@%It is the only sensual pleasure without vice.%@NL@%
  35370. %@CR:MUSIC Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  35371.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  35372.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  35373. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35374. %@NL@%
  35375. %@NL@%
  35376.      %@2@%Hearing often-times%@NL@%
  35377.      The still, sad music of humanity.%@NL@%
  35378. %@CR:MUSIC Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  35379.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  35380.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35381. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35382. %@NL@%
  35383. %@NL@%
  35384. %@2@%Is it not strange that sheep's guts should hale souls out of%@EH@%
  35385. men's bodies?%@NL@%
  35386. %@CR:MUSIC Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  35387.                                           Benedick, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35388.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  35389.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  35390. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35391. %@NL@%
  35392. %@NL@%
  35393.      %@2@%Hearing in the distance%@NL@%
  35394.      Two mandolins like creatures in the dark%@NL@%
  35395.      Creating the agony of ecstasy.%@NL@%
  35396. %@CR:MUSIC Barker1   @%%@NL@%
  35397.                                                    George Barker (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  35398.                                                       British author, poet%@NL@%
  35399. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35400. %@NL@%
  35401. %@NL@%
  35402.      %@2@%Swans sing before they die -'twere no bad thing%@NL@%
  35403.      Should certain persons die before they sing.%@NL@%
  35404. %@CR:MUSIC Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  35405.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  35406.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35407. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35408. %@NL@%
  35409. %@NL@%
  35410. %@2@%Difficult do you call it, Sir? I wish it were impossible.%@NL@%
  35411. %@CR:MUSIC Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  35412.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  35413.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  35414.                                                   of a violinist's playing%@NL@%
  35415. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35416. %@NL@%
  35417. %@NL@%
  35418. %@2@%When music fails to agree to the ear, to soothe the ear and%@EH@%
  35419. the heart and the senses, then it has missed its point.%@NL@%
  35420. %@CR:MUSIC Callas    @%%@NL@%
  35421.                                                   Maria Callas (1923-1977)%@NL@%
  35422.                                                Greek-American opera singer%@NL@%
  35423. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35424. %@NL@%
  35425. %@NL@%
  35426. %@2@%Classical music is the kind that we keep hoping will turn into%@EH@%
  35427. a tune.%@NL@%
  35428. %@CR:MUSIC Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  35429.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  35430.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  35431. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35432. %@NL@%
  35433. %@NL@%
  35434. %@2@%Music is the arithmetic of sounds as optics is the geometry%@EH@%
  35435. of light.%@NL@%
  35436. %@CR:MUSIC Debussy   @%%@NL@%
  35437.                                                 Claude Debussy (1862-1918)%@NL@%
  35438.                                                            French composer%@NL@%
  35439. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35440. %@NL@%
  35441. %@NL@%
  35442. %@2@%Good music resembles something. It resembles the composer.%@NL@%
  35443. %@CR:MUSIC Cocteau   @%%@NL@%
  35444.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  35445.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  35446. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35447. %@NL@%
  35448. %@NL@%
  35449. %@2@%The good composer is slowly discovered, the bad composer is%@EH@%
  35450. slowly found out.%@NL@%
  35451. %@CR:MUSIC Newman4   @%%@NL@%
  35452.                                              Sir Ernest Newman (1868-1959)%@NL@%
  35453.                                                       British musicologist%@NL@%
  35454. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35455. %@NL@%
  35456. %@NL@%
  35457. %@2@%I know only two tunes; one of them is "Yankee Doodle," and%@EH@%
  35458. the other isn't.%@NL@%
  35459. %@CR:MUSIC Grant2    @%%@NL@%
  35460.                                               Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885)%@NL@%
  35461.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  35462. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35463. %@NL@%
  35464. %@NL@%
  35465. %@2@%Canned music is like audible wallpaper.%@NL@%
  35466. %@CR:MUSIC Cooke     @%%@NL@%
  35467.                                                   Alistair Cooke (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  35468.                                            British journalist, broadcaster%@NL@%
  35469. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35470. %@NL@%
  35471. %@NL@%
  35472. %@2@%I do not see any good reason why the devil should have all%@EH@%
  35473. the good tunes.%@NL@%
  35474. %@CR:MUSIC Hill3     @%%@NL@%
  35475.                                                   Rowland Hill (1744-1833)%@NL@%
  35476.                                       English preacher, publisher of hymns%@NL@%
  35477. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35478. %@NL@%
  35479. %@NL@%
  35480. %@2@%Hell is full of musical amateurs: music is the brandy of the%@EH@%
  35481. damned.%@NL@%
  35482. %@CR:MUSIC Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  35483.                                                 Don Juan, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35484.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  35485.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  35486. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35487. %@NL@%
  35488. %@NL@%
  35489. %@2@%The English may not like music - but they absolutely love%@EH@%
  35490. the noise it makes.%@NL@%
  35491. %@CR:MUSIC Beecham   @%%@NL@%
  35492.                                             Sir Thomas Beecham (1879-1961)%@NL@%
  35493.                                                          British conductor%@NL@%
  35494. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35495. %@NL@%
  35496. %@NL@%
  35497. %@2@%There is something suspicious about music, gentlemen. I insist%@EH@%
  35498. that she is, by her nature, equivocal. I shall not be going too
  35499. far in saying at once that she is politically suspect.%@NL@%
  35500. %@CR:MUSIC Mann      @%%@NL@%
  35501.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  35502.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  35503. %@AS@%                                                                     Music%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35504. %@NL@%
  35505. %@NL@%
  35506. %@NL@%
  35507. %@1@%%@AS@%Myths%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35508. %@CR:MYTHS           @%%@NL@%
  35509. %@2@%%@QR:Myths@%The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie - deliberate,%@EH@%
  35510. contrived and dishonest - but the myth - persistent, persuasive
  35511. and unrealistic.%@NL@%
  35512. %@CR:MYTHS Kennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  35513.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  35514.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  35515. %@AS@%                                                                     Myths%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35516. %@NL@%
  35517. %@NL@%
  35518. %@2@%A myth is a fixed way of looking at the world which cannot%@EH@%
  35519. be destroyed because, looked at through the myth, all evidence
  35520. supports that myth.%@NL@%
  35521. %@CR:MYTHS deBono    @%%@NL@%
  35522.                                                   Edward de Bono (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  35523.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  35524. %@AS@%                                                                     Myths%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35525. %@NL@%
  35526. %@NL@%
  35527. %@2@%Contemporary man has rationalized the myths, but he has not%@EH@%
  35528. been able to destroy them.%@NL@%
  35529. %@CR:MYTHS Paz       @%%@NL@%
  35530.                                                      Octavio Paz (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  35531.                                                               Mexican poet%@NL@%
  35532. %@AS@%                                                                     Myths%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35533. %@NL@%
  35534. %@NL@%
  35535. %@NL@%
  35536. %@1@%%@AS@%Nagging%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35537. %@CR:NAGGING         @%%@NL@%
  35538. %@2@%%@QR:Nagging@%Nagging is the repetition of unpalatable truths.%@NL@%
  35539. %@CR:NAGGINSummerskil@%%@NL@%
  35540.                                        Edith, Lady Summerskill (1901-1980)%@NL@%
  35541.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  35542. %@AS@%                                                                   Nagging%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35543. %@NL@%
  35544. %@NL@%
  35545. %@NL@%
  35546. %@1@%%@AS@%Nationalism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35547. %@CR:NATIONALISM     @%%@NL@%
  35548. %@2@%See:%@QR:Nationalism@%%@NL@%
  35549.      Patriotism: %@AB@%Aldington%@AE@%%@BO:          1d16ee@%%@NL@%
  35550. %@NL@%
  35551. %@2@%Methinks I see in my mind a noble and puissant nation rousing%@EH@%
  35552. herself like a strong man after sleep, and shaking her invincible
  35553. locks. Methinks I see her as an eagle mewing her mighty youth,
  35554. and kindling her undazzled eyes at the full midday beam.%@NL@%
  35555. %@CR:NATIONMilton    @%%@NL@%
  35556.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  35557.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35558. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35559. %@NL@%
  35560. %@NL@%
  35561. %@2@%No man has a right to fix the boundary of the march of a nation;%@EH@%
  35562. no man has a right to say to his country - thus far shalt thou
  35563. go and no farther.%@NL@%
  35564. %@CR:NATIONParnell   @%%@NL@%
  35565.                                       Charales Stewart Parnell (1846-1891)%@NL@%
  35566.                                               Irish nationalist politician%@NL@%
  35567. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35568. %@NL@%
  35569. %@NL@%
  35570. %@2@%Germany will either be a world power or will not be at all.%@NL@%
  35571. %@CR:NATIONHitler    @%%@NL@%
  35572.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  35573.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  35574.                                                                 Mein Kampf%@NL@%
  35575. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35576. %@NL@%
  35577. %@NL@%
  35578. %@2@%It is humiliating to remain with our hands folded while others%@EH@%
  35579. write history. It matters little who wins. To make a people great
  35580. it is necessary to send them to battle even if you have to kick
  35581. their arses. That is what I shall do.%@NL@%
  35582. %@CR:NATIONMussolini @%%@NL@%
  35583.                                               Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)%@NL@%
  35584.                                                  Fascist dictator of Italy%@NL@%
  35585.                                                             April 11, 1940%@NL@%
  35586. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35587. %@NL@%
  35588. %@NL@%
  35589. %@2@%Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin.%@NL@%
  35590. %@CR:NATIONQaddafi   @%%@NL@%
  35591.                                          Colonel MuhammarQaddafi (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  35592.                                                              Libyan leader%@NL@%
  35593. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35594. %@NL@%
  35595. %@NL@%
  35596. %@2@%After fifteen years of work I have achieved, as a common German%@EH@%
  35597. soldier and merely with my fanatical will-power, the unity of the
  35598. German nation, and have freed it from the death sentence of Versailles.%@NL@%
  35599. %@CR:NATIONHitler    @%%@NL@%
  35600.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  35601.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  35602.                                                          December 21, 1941%@NL@%
  35603. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35604. %@NL@%
  35605. %@NL@%
  35606. %@2@%The crazy combative patriotism that plainly threatens to destroy%@EH@%
  35607. civilization is very largely begotten by the schoolmaster and the
  35608. schoolmistress in their history lessons. They take the growing
  35609. mind at a naturally barbaric phase and they inflame and fix its
  35610. barbarism.%@NL@%
  35611. %@CR:NATIONWells     @%%@NL@%
  35612.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  35613.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  35614. %@AS@%                                                               Nationalism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35615. %@NL@%
  35616. %@NL@%
  35617. %@NL@%
  35618. %@1@%%@AS@%Nature%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35619. %@CR:NATURE          @%%@NL@%
  35620. %@2@%See:%@QR:Nature@%%@NL@%
  35621.      Art: %@AB@%Whistler%@AE@%%@BO:           2f553@%%@NL@%
  35622.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Clark%@AE@%%@BO:           4393b@%%@NL@%
  35623.      Love: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:          184e23@%%@NL@%
  35624.      Morality: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          1b026d@%%@NL@%
  35625. %@NL@%
  35626. %@2@%Anyone who has got any pleasure at all from nature should try%@EH@%
  35627. to put something back. Life is like a superlative meal and the
  35628. world is the maitre d'hotel. What I am doing is the equivalent
  35629. of leaving a reasonable tip.%@NL@%
  35630. %@CR:NATUREDurrell1  @%%@NL@%
  35631.                                                   Gerald Durrell (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  35632.                                            British conservationist, author%@NL@%
  35633. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35634. %@NL@%
  35635. %@NL@%
  35636. %@2@%In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments - there%@EH@%
  35637. are consequences.%@NL@%
  35638. %@CR:NATUREIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  35639.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  35640.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  35641. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35642. %@NL@%
  35643. %@NL@%
  35644. %@2@%However much you knock at nature's door, she will never answer%@EH@%
  35645. you in comprehensible words.%@NL@%
  35646. %@CR:NATURETurgenev  @%%@NL@%
  35647.                                                  Ivan Turgenev (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  35648.                            Russian novelist, short story writer, dramatist%@NL@%
  35649. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35650. %@NL@%
  35651. %@NL@%
  35652.      %@2@%One impulse from a vernal wood%@NL@%
  35653.      May teach you more of man,%@NL@%
  35654.      Of moral evil and of good,%@NL@%
  35655.      Than all the ages can.%@NL@%
  35656. %@CR:NATUREWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  35657.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  35658.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  35659. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35660. %@NL@%
  35661. %@NL@%
  35662. %@2@%It is false dichotomy to think of nature %@AI@%and%@AE@% man. Mankind%@EH@%
  35663. is that factor %@AI@%in%@AE@% nature which exhibits in its most intense form
  35664. the plasticity of nature.%@NL@%
  35665. %@CR:NATUREWhitehead @%%@NL@%
  35666.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  35667.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  35668. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35669. %@NL@%
  35670. %@NL@%
  35671. %@2@%All things are artificial, for nature is the art of God.%@NL@%
  35672. %@CR:NATUREBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  35673.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  35674.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  35675. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35676. %@NL@%
  35677. %@NL@%
  35678. %@2@%To be natural is to be obvious, and to be obvious is to be%@EH@%
  35679. inartistic.%@NL@%
  35680. %@CR:NATUREWilde     @%%@NL@%
  35681.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  35682.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  35683. %@AS@%                                                                    Nature%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35684. %@NL@%
  35685. %@NL@%
  35686. %@NL@%
  35687. %@1@%%@AS@%The Navy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35688. %@CR:THENAVY         @%%@NL@%
  35689. %@2@%%@QR:The Navy@%The royal navy of England hath ever been its greatest defence%@EH@%
  35690. and ornament; it is its ancient and natural strength, the floating
  35691. bulwark of our island.%@NL@%
  35692. %@CR:THENAVBlackstone@%%@NL@%
  35693.                                         Sir William Blackstone (1723-1780)%@NL@%
  35694.                                                             English jurist%@NL@%
  35695. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35696. %@NL@%
  35697. %@NL@%
  35698. %@2@%In this country it's a good thing to shoot an admiral now and%@EH@%
  35699. then to encourage the others.%@NL@%
  35700. %@CR:THENAVVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  35701.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  35702.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  35703.                                                                 of England%@NL@%
  35704. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35705. %@NL@%
  35706. %@NL@%
  35707. %@2@%Don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but rum,%@EH@%
  35708. sodomy and the lash.%@NL@%
  35709. %@CR:THENAVChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  35710.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  35711.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  35712. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35713. %@NL@%
  35714. %@NL@%
  35715. %@2@%We sailors get money like horses, and spend it like asses.%@NL@%
  35716. %@CR:THENAVSmollett  @%%@NL@%
  35717.                                                Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)%@NL@%
  35718.                                                 Scottish novelist, surgeon%@NL@%
  35719. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35720. %@NL@%
  35721. %@NL@%
  35722. %@2@%He was begotten in the galley and born under a gun. Every hair%@EH@%
  35723. was a rope yarn, every finger a fish-hook, every tooth a marline-spike,
  35724. and his blood right good Stockholm tar.%@NL@%
  35725. %@CR:THENAVSmollett  @%%@NL@%
  35726.                                                              Naval epitaph%@NL@%
  35727. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35728. %@NL@%
  35729. %@NL@%
  35730. %@2@%I must have the gentleman to haul and draw with the mariner,%@EH@%
  35731. and the mariner with the gentleman  . . .  I would not know him,
  35732. that would refuse to set his hand to a rope, but I know there
  35733. is not any such here.%@NL@%
  35734. %@CR:THENAVDrake     @%%@NL@%
  35735.                                              Sir Francis Drake (1540-1596)%@NL@%
  35736.                                                          English navigator%@NL@%
  35737. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35738. %@NL@%
  35739. %@NL@%
  35740. %@2@%There were gentlemen and there were seamen in the navy of Charles%@EH@%
  35741. the Second. But the seamen were not gentlemen; and the gentlemen
  35742. were not seamen.%@NL@%
  35743. %@CR:THENAVMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  35744.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  35745.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  35746. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35747. %@NL@%
  35748. %@NL@%
  35749. %@2@%A ship of war, a wooden world fabricated by the frail hand%@EH@%
  35750. of man, the great bridge of the ocean, conveying to all habitable
  35751. places death, pox and drunkenness.%@NL@%
  35752. %@CR:THENAVWard3     @%%@NL@%
  35753.                                                       Ned Ward (1667-1731)%@NL@%
  35754.                                                    English humorous writer%@NL@%
  35755. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35756. %@NL@%
  35757. %@NL@%
  35758. %@2@%No man will be a sailor who has contrivance enough to get himself%@EH@%
  35759. into a jail; for being in a ship is being in a jail, with the chance
  35760. of being drowned  . . .  A man in a jail has more room, better food
  35761. and commonly better company.%@NL@%
  35762. %@CR:THENAVJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  35763.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  35764.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  35765. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35766. %@NL@%
  35767. %@NL@%
  35768. %@2@%The wonder is always new that any sane man can be a sailor%@NL@%
  35769. %@CR:THENAVEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  35770.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  35771.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  35772. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35773. %@NL@%
  35774. %@NL@%
  35775. %@2@%There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much%@EH@%
  35776. worth doing as simply messing about in boats.%@NL@%
  35777. %@CR:THENAVGrahame   @%%@NL@%
  35778.                                                Kenneth Grahame (1859-1932)%@NL@%
  35779.                               British essayist, writer of children's books%@NL@%
  35780. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35781. %@NL@%
  35782. %@NL@%
  35783. %@2@%We are as near to heaven by sea as by land.%@NL@%
  35784. %@CR:THENAVGilbert1  @%%@NL@%
  35785.                                           Sir Humphrey Gilbert (1539-1583)%@NL@%
  35786.                             English navigator %@AB@%(drowned at sea)%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35787. %@AS@%                                                                  The Navy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35788. %@NL@%
  35789. %@NL@%
  35790. %@NL@%
  35791. %@1@%%@AS@%Necessity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35792. %@CR:NECESSITY       @%%@NL@%
  35793. %@2@%See:%@QR:Necessity@%%@NL@%
  35794.      Status: %@AB@%Seneca%@AE@%%@BO:          26e039@%%@NL@%
  35795. %@NL@%
  35796. %@2@%Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom.%@EH@%
  35797. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.%@NL@%
  35798. %@CR:NECESSPitt2     @%%@NL@%
  35799.                                                   William Pitt (1759-1806)%@NL@%
  35800.                                         English politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  35801. %@AS@%                                                                 Necessity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35802. %@NL@%
  35803. %@NL@%
  35804. %@2@%Freedom is the recognition of necessity.%@NL@%
  35805. %@CR:NECESSEngels    @%%@NL@%
  35806.                                               Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)%@NL@%
  35807.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  35808. %@AS@%                                                                 Necessity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35809. %@NL@%
  35810. %@NL@%
  35811. %@2@%Whoever heard of a man of fortune in England talk of the necessaries%@EH@%
  35812. of life?  . . .  Whether we can afford it or no, we must have 
  35813. superfluities.%@NL@%
  35814. %@CR:NECESSGay       @%%@NL@%
  35815.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  35816.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  35817. %@AS@%                                                                 Necessity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35818. %@NL@%
  35819. %@NL@%
  35820. %@2@%We do what we must, and call it by the best names.%@NL@%
  35821. %@CR:NECESSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  35822.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  35823.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  35824. %@AS@%                                                                 Necessity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35825. %@NL@%
  35826. %@NL@%
  35827. %@2@%Foul water will quench fire.%@NL@%
  35828. %@CR:NECESSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  35829.                                               16th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  35830. %@AS@%                                                                 Necessity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35831. %@NL@%
  35832. %@NL@%
  35833. %@NL@%
  35834. %@1@%%@AS@%Neighbors%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35835. %@CR:NEIGHBORS       @%%@NL@%
  35836. %@2@%See:%@QR:Neighbors@%%@NL@%
  35837.      Preaching: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1fd3f7@%%@NL@%
  35838. %@NL@%
  35839. %@2@%We make our friends; we make our enemies; but God makes our%@EH@%
  35840. next-door neighbour.%@NL@%
  35841. %@CR:NEIGHBChesterton@%%@NL@%
  35842.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  35843.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  35844. %@AS@%                                                                 Neighbors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35845. %@NL@%
  35846. %@NL@%
  35847. %@2@%Love your neighbour, yet pull not down your hedge.%@NL@%
  35848. %@CR:NEIGHBHerbert2  @%%@NL@%
  35849.                                                 George Herbert (1593-1633)%@NL@%
  35850.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  35851. %@AS@%                                                                 Neighbors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35852. %@NL@%
  35853. %@NL@%
  35854. %@2@%Good fences make good neighbors.%@NL@%
  35855. %@CR:NEIGHBFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  35856.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  35857.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  35858. %@AS@%                                                                 Neighbors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35859. %@NL@%
  35860. %@NL@%
  35861. %@2@%For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbours,%@EH@%
  35862. and laugh at them in our turn?%@NL@%
  35863. %@CR:NEIGHBAusten    @%%@NL@%
  35864.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  35865.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  35866. %@AS@%                                                                 Neighbors%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35867. %@NL@%
  35868. %@NL@%
  35869. %@NL@%
  35870. %@1@%%@AS@%Neurosis%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35871. %@CR:NEUROSIS        @%%@NL@%
  35872. %@2@%See:%@QR:Neurosis@%%@NL@%
  35873.      %@AB@%Anxiety%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           21b7a@%%@NL@%
  35874. %@NL@%
  35875. %@2@%Oh the nerves, the nerves; the mysteries of this machine called%@EH@%
  35876. man! Oh the little that unhinges it: poor creatures that we are!%@NL@%
  35877. %@CR:NEUROSDickens   @%%@NL@%
  35878.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  35879.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  35880. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35881. %@NL@%
  35882. %@NL@%
  35883. %@2@%As every man is hunted by his own daemon, vexed by his own%@EH@%
  35884. disease, this checks all his activity.%@NL@%
  35885. %@CR:NEUROSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  35886.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  35887.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  35888. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35889. %@NL@%
  35890. %@NL@%
  35891. %@2@%The psychotic person knows that two and two make five and is%@EH@%
  35892. perfectly happy about it; the neurotic person knows that two and
  35893. two make four, but is terribly worried about it.%@NL@%
  35894. %@CR:NEUROSEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  35895.                                                         radio doctor, 1954%@NL@%
  35896. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35897. %@NL@%
  35898. %@NL@%
  35899. %@2@%Everything great in the world comes from neurotics. They alone%@EH@%
  35900. have founded our religions and composed our masterpieces.%@NL@%
  35901. %@CR:NEUROSProust    @%%@NL@%
  35902.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  35903.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  35904. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35905. %@NL@%
  35906. %@NL@%
  35907. %@2@%The true believer is in a high degree protected against the%@EH@%
  35908. danger of certain neurotic afflications; by accepting the universal
  35909. neurosis he is spared the task of forming a personal neurosis.%@NL@%
  35910. %@CR:NEUROSFreud     @%%@NL@%
  35911.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  35912.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  35913. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35914. %@NL@%
  35915. %@NL@%
  35916. %@2@%Neurosis is always a substitute for legitimate suffering.%@NL@%
  35917. %@CR:NEUROSJung      @%%@NL@%
  35918.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  35919.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  35920. %@AS@%                                                                  Neurosis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35921. %@NL@%
  35922. %@NL@%
  35923. %@NL@%
  35924. %@1@%%@AS@%The New World%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35925. %@CR:THENEWWORLD     @%%@NL@%
  35926. %@2@%%@QR:The New World@%The pious ones of Plymouth who, reaching the Rock, first fell%@EH@%
  35927. upon their own knees and then upon the aborigines.%@NL@%
  35928. %@CR:THENEWEvarts    @%%@NL@%
  35929.                                              William M. Evarts (1818-1901)%@NL@%
  35930.                                                         American statesman%@NL@%
  35931. %@AS@%                                                             The New World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35932. %@NL@%
  35933. %@NL@%
  35934. %@2@%The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic.%@EH@%
  35935. There will, perhaps, be a Thucydides at Boston, a Xenophon at New
  35936. York, and, in time, a Virgil at Mexico, and a Newton at Peru.
  35937. At last, some curious traveller from Lima will visit England and
  35938. give a description of the ruins of St Pauls, like the editions
  35939. of Balbec and Palmyra.%@NL@%
  35940. %@CR:THENEWWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  35941.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  35942.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  35943. %@AS@%                                                             The New World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35944. %@NL@%
  35945. %@NL@%
  35946. %@2@%Europe and the UK are yesterday's world. Tomorrow is in the%@EH@%
  35947. United States.%@NL@%
  35948. %@CR:THENEWRowland2  @%%@NL@%
  35949.                                             R. W.(Tiny)  Rowland (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  35950.                                                        British businessman%@NL@%
  35951. %@AS@%                                                             The New World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35952. %@NL@%
  35953. %@NL@%
  35954. %@NL@%
  35955. %@1@%%@AS@%New York%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  35956. %@CR:NEWYORK         @%%@NL@%
  35957. %@2@%%@QR:New York@%New York, the nation's thyroid gland.%@NL@%
  35958. %@CR:NEWYORMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  35959.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  35960.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  35961. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35962. %@NL@%
  35963. %@NL@%
  35964. %@2@%New York is a catastrophe - but a magnificent catastrophe.%@NL@%
  35965. %@CR:NEWYORLeCorbusie@%%@NL@%
  35966.                                                   Le Corbusier (1887-1965)%@NL@%
  35967.                                                           French architect%@NL@%
  35968. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35969. %@NL@%
  35970. %@NL@%
  35971. %@2@%One belongs to New York instantly. One belongs to it as much%@EH@%
  35972. in five minutes as in five years.%@NL@%
  35973. %@CR:NEWYORWolfe2    @%%@NL@%
  35974.                                                   Thomas Wolfe (1900-1938)%@NL@%
  35975.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  35976. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35977. %@NL@%
  35978. %@NL@%
  35979. %@2@%I miss the animal buoyancy of New York, the animal vitality.%@EH@%
  35980. I did not mind that it had no meaning and no depth.%@NL@%
  35981. %@CR:NEWYORNin       @%%@NL@%
  35982.                                                      Anais Nin (1903-1977)%@NL@%
  35983.                                                   American diarist, author%@NL@%
  35984. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35985. %@NL@%
  35986. %@NL@%
  35987. %@2@%If ever there was an aviary overstocked with jays it is that%@EH@%
  35988. Yaptown-on-the-Hudson, called New York.%@NL@%
  35989. %@CR:NEWYORHenry1    @%%@NL@%
  35990.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  35991.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  35992. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  35993. %@NL@%
  35994. %@NL@%
  35995. %@2@%I think that New York is not the cultural center of America,%@EH@%
  35996. but the business and administrative center of American culture.%@NL@%
  35997. %@CR:NEWYORBellow    @%%@NL@%
  35998.                                                      Saul Bellow (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  35999.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  36000. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36001. %@NL@%
  36002. %@NL@%
  36003. %@2@%[New York] is the place where all the aspirations of the%@EH@%
  36004. Western World meet to form one vast master aspiration, as powerful
  36005. as the suction of a steam dredge. It is the icing on the pie called
  36006. Christian civilization.%@NL@%
  36007. %@CR:NEWYORMencken   @%%@NL@%
  36008.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  36009.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  36010. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36011. %@NL@%
  36012. %@NL@%
  36013. %@2@%If it often said that New York is a city for only the very%@EH@%
  36014. rich and the very poor. It is less often said that New York is
  36015. also, at least for those of us who came there from somewhere else,
  36016. a city for only the very young.%@NL@%
  36017. %@CR:NEWYORDidion    @%%@NL@%
  36018.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  36019.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  36020. %@AS@%                                                                  New York%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36021. %@NL@%
  36022. %@NL@%
  36023. %@NL@%
  36024. %@1@%%@AS@%Newspapers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36025. %@CR:NEWSPAPERS      @%%@NL@%
  36026. %@2@%See:%@QR:Newspapers@%%@NL@%
  36027.      %@AB@%Editors%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c07f7@%%@NL@%
  36028.      %@AB@%Journalism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          160ea0@%%@NL@%
  36029.      %@AB@%The Press%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          200a93@%%@NL@%
  36030. %@NL@%
  36031. %@2@%They are so filthy and bestial that no honest man would admit%@EH@%
  36032. one into his house for a water-closet doormat.%@NL@%
  36033. %@CR:NEWSPADickens   @%%@NL@%
  36034.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  36035.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  36036. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36037. %@NL@%
  36038. %@NL@%
  36039. %@2@%If words were invented to conceal thought, newspapers are a%@EH@%
  36040. great improvement on a bad invention.%@NL@%
  36041. %@CR:NEWSPAThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  36042.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  36043.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  36044. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36045. %@NL@%
  36046. %@NL@%
  36047. %@2@%All successful newspapers are ceaselessly querulous and bellicose.%@EH@%
  36048. They never defend anyone or anything if they can help it; if the
  36049. job is forced upon them, they tackle it by denouncing someone
  36050. or something else.%@NL@%
  36051. %@CR:NEWSPAMencken   @%%@NL@%
  36052.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  36053.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  36054. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36055. %@NL@%
  36056. %@NL@%
  36057. %@2@%Possible? Is anything possible? Read the newspapers.%@NL@%
  36058. %@CR:NEWSPADukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  36059.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  36060.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  36061. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36062. %@NL@%
  36063. %@NL@%
  36064. %@2@%It is always the unreadable that occurs.%@NL@%
  36065. %@CR:NEWSPAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  36066.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  36067.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  36068. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36069. %@NL@%
  36070. %@NL@%
  36071. %@2@%We welcome almost any break in the monotony of things, and%@EH@%
  36072. a man has only to murder a series of wives in a new way to become
  36073. known to millions of people who have never heard of Homer.%@NL@%
  36074. %@CR:NEWSPALynd      @%%@NL@%
  36075.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  36076.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  36077. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36078. %@NL@%
  36079. %@NL@%
  36080. %@2@%Newspapers always excite curiosity. No one ever lays one down%@EH@%
  36081. without a feeling of disappointment.%@NL@%
  36082. %@CR:NEWSPALamb1     @%%@NL@%
  36083.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  36084.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  36085. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36086. %@NL@%
  36087. %@NL@%
  36088. %@2@%The mission of a modern newspaper is to comfort the afflicted%@EH@%
  36089. and afflict the comfortable.%@NL@%
  36090. %@CR:NEWSPALamb1     @%%@NL@%
  36091.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  36092. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36093. %@NL@%
  36094. %@NL@%
  36095. %@2@%It is part of the social mission of every great newspaper to%@EH@%
  36096. provide a refuge and a home for the largest possible number of
  36097. salaried eccentrics.%@NL@%
  36098. %@CR:NEWSPAThomson2  @%%@NL@%
  36099.                                           Lord Thomsonof Fleet (1894-1976)%@NL@%
  36100.                                               Canadian newspaper publisher%@NL@%
  36101. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36102. %@NL@%
  36103. %@NL@%
  36104. %@2@%By office boys for office boys.%@NL@%
  36105. %@CR:NEWSPAMarquisofS@%%@NL@%
  36106.                                           Marquis of Salisbury (1830-1903)%@NL@%
  36107.                            English Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  36108.                                                          of the %@AI@%Daily Mail%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36109. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36110. %@NL@%
  36111. %@NL@%
  36112. %@2@%Headlines twice the size of the events.%@NL@%
  36113. %@CR:NEWSPAGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  36114.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  36115.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  36116. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36117. %@NL@%
  36118. %@NL@%
  36119. %@2@%Journalism consists largely in saying "Lord Jones Dead" to%@EH@%
  36120. people who never knew that Lord Jones was alive.%@NL@%
  36121. %@CR:NEWSPAChesterton@%%@NL@%
  36122.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  36123.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  36124. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36125. %@NL@%
  36126. %@NL@%
  36127. %@2@%Half the world does not know how the other half lives, but%@EH@%
  36128. is trying to find out.%@NL@%
  36129. %@CR:NEWSPAHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  36130.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  36131.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  36132. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36133. %@NL@%
  36134. %@NL@%
  36135. %@2@%Whenever people are well-informed they can be trusted with%@EH@%
  36136. their own government.%@NL@%
  36137. %@CR:NEWSPAJefferson @%%@NL@%
  36138.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  36139.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  36140. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36141. %@NL@%
  36142. %@NL@%
  36143. %@2@%We live under a government of men and morning newspapers.%@NL@%
  36144. %@CR:NEWSPAPhillips  @%%@NL@%
  36145.                                               Wendell Phillips (1811-1884)%@NL@%
  36146.                                              American abolitionist, orator%@NL@%
  36147. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36148. %@NL@%
  36149. %@NL@%
  36150. %@2@%Neither in what it gives, nor in what it does not give, nor%@EH@%
  36151. in the mode of presentation, must the unclouded face of truth suffer
  36152. wrong. Comment is free but facts are sacred.%@NL@%
  36153. %@CR:NEWSPAScott1    @%%@NL@%
  36154.                                                    C. P. Scott (1846-1932)%@NL@%
  36155.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  36156. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36157. %@NL@%
  36158. %@NL@%
  36159. %@2@%In the case of news, we should always wait for the sacrament%@EH@%
  36160. of confirmation.%@NL@%
  36161. %@CR:NEWSPAVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  36162.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  36163.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  36164. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36165. %@NL@%
  36166. %@NL@%
  36167. %@2@%Reading someone else's newspaper is like sleeping with someone%@EH@%
  36168. else's wife. Nothing seems to be precisely in the right place,
  36169. and when you find what you are looking for, it is not clear then
  36170. how to respond to it.%@NL@%
  36171. %@CR:NEWSPABradbury  @%%@NL@%
  36172.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  36173.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  36174. %@AS@%                                                                Newspapers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36175. %@NL@%
  36176. %@NL@%
  36177. %@NL@%
  36178. %@1@%%@AS@%Nicaragua%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36179. %@CR:NICARAGUA       @%%@NL@%
  36180. %@2@%See:%@QR:Nicaragua@%%@NL@%
  36181.      Elections: %@AB@%Somoza%@AE@%%@BO:           c46c9@%%@NL@%
  36182. %@NL@%
  36183. %@2@%We are not going to tolerate these attacks from outlaw states%@EH@%
  36184. run by the strangest collection of misfits, looney tunes and squalid
  36185. criminals since the Third Reich.%@NL@%
  36186. %@CR:NICARAReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  36187.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  36188.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  36189. %@AS@%                                                                 Nicaragua%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36190. %@NL@%
  36191. %@NL@%
  36192. %@NL@%
  36193. %@1@%%@AS@%Night%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36194. %@CR:NIGHT           @%%@NL@%
  36195. %@2@%See:%@QR:Night@%%@NL@%
  36196.      Bed: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           3c5ed@%%@NL@%
  36197.      Sex: %@AB@%Herrick%@AE@%%@BO:          24d78c@%%@NL@%
  36198. %@NL@%
  36199.      %@2@%And the night shall be filled with music%@NL@%
  36200.      And the cares, that infest the day,%@NL@%
  36201.      Shall fold their tents, like the Arabs,%@NL@%
  36202.      And as silently steal away.%@NL@%
  36203. %@CR:NIGHT Longfellow@%%@NL@%
  36204.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  36205.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  36206. %@AS@%                                                                     Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36207. %@NL@%
  36208. %@NL@%
  36209. %@2@%When man reassembles his fragmentary self and grows with the%@EH@%
  36210. calm of a tree.%@NL@%
  36211. %@CR:NIGHT SaintExupe@%%@NL@%
  36212.                                       Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900-1944)%@NL@%
  36213.                                                     French aviator, writer%@NL@%
  36214. %@AS@%                                                                     Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36215. %@NL@%
  36216. %@NL@%
  36217.      %@2@%For the night%@NL@%
  36218.      Shows stars and women in a better light.%@NL@%
  36219. %@CR:NIGHT Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  36220.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  36221.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  36222. %@AS@%                                                                     Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36223. %@NL@%
  36224. %@NL@%
  36225. %@2@%In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o'clock%@EH@%
  36226. in the morning.%@NL@%
  36227. %@CR:NIGHT Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  36228.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  36229.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  36230. %@AS@%                                                                     Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36231. %@NL@%
  36232. %@NL@%
  36233. %@NL@%
  36234. %@1@%%@AS@%Nonviolence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36235. %@CR:NONVIOLENCE     @%%@NL@%
  36236. %@2@%%@QR:Nonviolence@%It is my hope that as the Negro plunges deeper into the quest%@EH@%
  36237. for freedom and justice he will plunge even deeper into the philosophy
  36238. of nonviolence. The Negro all over the South must come to the
  36239. point that he can say to his white brother: "We will match your
  36240. capacity to inflict suffering with our capacity to endure suffering.
  36241. We will meet your physical force with soul force. We will not hate
  36242. you, but we will not obey your evil laws. We will soon wear you
  36243. down by pure capacity to suffer."%@NL@%
  36244. %@CR:NONVIOKing3     @%%@NL@%
  36245.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  36246.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  36247. %@AS@%                                                               Nonviolence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36248. %@NL@%
  36249. %@NL@%
  36250. %@2@%It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts,%@EH@%
  36251. than to put on the cloak of nonviolence to cover impotence.%@NL@%
  36252. %@CR:NONVIOGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  36253.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  36254.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  36255. %@AS@%                                                               Nonviolence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36256. %@NL@%
  36257. %@NL@%
  36258. %@2@%The only thing that's been a worse flop than the organization%@EH@%
  36259. of nonviolence has been the organization of violence.%@NL@%
  36260. %@CR:NONVIOBaez      @%%@NL@%
  36261.                                                        Joan Baez (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  36262.                                                       American folk singer%@NL@%
  36263. %@AS@%                                                               Nonviolence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36264. %@NL@%
  36265. %@NL@%
  36266. %@2@%Passive resistance is an all-sided sword; it can be used anyhow;%@EH@%
  36267. it blesses him who uses it and him against whom it is used without
  36268. drawing a drop of blood; it produces far-reaching results. It
  36269. never rusts and cannot be stolen. Competition between passive resisters
  36270. does not exhaust them. The sword of passive resistance does not
  36271. require a scabbard and one cannot be forcibly dispossessed of
  36272. it.%@NL@%
  36273. %@CR:NONVIOGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  36274.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  36275.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  36276. %@AS@%                                                               Nonviolence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36277. %@NL@%
  36278. %@NL@%
  36279. %@NL@%
  36280. %@1@%%@AS@%Noses%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36281. %@CR:NOSES           @%%@NL@%
  36282. %@2@%%@QR:Noses@%A big nose is the mark of a man affable, good, courteous, witty,%@EH@%
  36283. liberal, brave, such as I am.%@NL@%
  36284. %@CR:NOSES Rostand1  @%%@NL@%
  36285.                                                 Edmond Rostand (1868-1918)%@NL@%
  36286.                                                    French poet, playwright%@NL@%
  36287. %@AS@%                                                                     Noses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36288. %@NL@%
  36289. %@NL@%
  36290. %@2@%Give me a man with a good allowance of nose  . . .  When I want%@EH@%
  36291. any good headwork done, I always choose a man, if suitable otherwise,
  36292. with a long nose.%@NL@%
  36293. %@CR:NOSES NapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  36294.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  36295.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  36296. %@AS@%                                                                     Noses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36297. %@NL@%
  36298. %@NL@%
  36299. %@2@%Thy nose is as the tower of Lebanon which looketh towards Damascus.%@NL@%
  36300. %@CR:NOSES BibleSongo@%%@NL@%
  36301.                                                     Bible, Song of Solomon%@NL@%
  36302. %@AS@%                                                                     Noses%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36303. %@NL@%
  36304. %@NL@%
  36305. %@NL@%
  36306. %@1@%%@AS@%Nostalgia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36307. %@CR:NOSTALGIA       @%%@NL@%
  36308. %@2@%See:%@QR:Nostalgia@%%@NL@%
  36309.      Happiness: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          120444@%%@NL@%
  36310. %@NL@%
  36311. %@2@%God gave us our memories so that we might have roses in December.%@NL@%
  36312. %@CR:NOSTALBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  36313.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  36314.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  36315. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36316. %@NL@%
  36317. %@NL@%
  36318.      %@2@%I wept as I remembered how often you and I%@NL@%
  36319.      Had tired the sun with talking and sent him down the sky.%@NL@%
  36320. %@CR:NOSTALCory      @%%@NL@%
  36321.                                                William J. Cory (1823-1892)%@NL@%
  36322.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  36323. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36324. %@NL@%
  36325. %@NL@%
  36326. %@2@%Reminiscence makes one feel so deliciously aged and sad.%@NL@%
  36327. %@CR:NOSTALShaw      @%%@NL@%
  36328.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  36329.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  36330. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36331. %@NL@%
  36332. %@NL@%
  36333.      %@2@%A feeling of sadness and longing%@NL@%
  36334.      That is not akin to pain,%@NL@%
  36335.      And resembles sorrow only%@NL@%
  36336.      As the mist resembles the rain.%@NL@%
  36337. %@CR:NOSTALLongfellow@%%@NL@%
  36338.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  36339.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  36340. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36341. %@NL@%
  36342. %@NL@%
  36343.      %@2@%The "good old times" - all times,%@NL@%
  36344.      When old, are good.%@NL@%
  36345. %@CR:NOSTALByron2    @%%@NL@%
  36346.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  36347.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  36348. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36349. %@NL@%
  36350. %@NL@%
  36351. %@2@%Oh! the good times when we were so unhappy.%@NL@%
  36352. %@CR:NOSTALDumas1    @%%@NL@%
  36353.                                                Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870)%@NL@%
  36354.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  36355. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36356. %@NL@%
  36357. %@NL@%
  36358. %@2@%Living in the past has one thing in its favor - it's cheaper.%@NL@%
  36359. %@CR:NOSTALDumas1    @%%@NL@%
  36360.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  36361. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36362. %@NL@%
  36363. %@NL@%
  36364.      %@2@%That is the land of lost content,%@NL@%
  36365.      I see it shining plain,%@NL@%
  36366.      The happy highways where I went%@NL@%
  36367.      And cannot come again.%@NL@%
  36368. %@CR:NOSTALHousman1  @%%@NL@%
  36369.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  36370.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  36371. %@AS@%                                                                 Nostalgia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36372. %@NL@%
  36373. %@NL@%
  36374. %@NL@%
  36375. %@1@%%@AS@%Novelty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36376. %@CR:NOVELTY         @%%@NL@%
  36377. %@2@%See:%@QR:Novelty@%%@NL@%
  36378.      Innovation: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          14f7b4@%; %@AB@%Miller%@AE@%%@BO:          14f99d@%%@NL@%
  36379.      Originality: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          1c8bea@%%@NL@%
  36380. %@NL@%
  36381. %@2@%Anything that calls itself new is doomed to a short life.%@NL@%
  36382. %@CR:NOVELTWolfe3    @%%@NL@%
  36383.                                                        Tom Wolfe (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  36384.                                                American author, journalist%@NL@%
  36385. %@AS@%                                                                   Novelty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36386. %@NL@%
  36387. %@NL@%
  36388. %@2@%It is only the modern that ever becomes old-fashioned.%@NL@%
  36389. %@CR:NOVELTWilde     @%%@NL@%
  36390.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  36391.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  36392. %@AS@%                                                                   Novelty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36393. %@NL@%
  36394. %@NL@%
  36395. %@NL@%
  36396. %@1@%%@AS@%The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36397. %@CR:THENUCLEARAGE   @%%@NL@%
  36398. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Nuclear Age@%%@NL@%
  36399.      The Arms Race: %@AB@%Forster%@AE@%%@BO:           29fe6@%; %@AB@%Mason%@AE@%%@BO:           29c0d@%; %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:           29457@%%@NL@%
  36400.      War: %@AB@%Raphael%@AE@%%@BO:          2ab8d8@%%@NL@%
  36401. %@NL@%
  36402. %@2@%The atom bomb was no "great decision"  . . .  It was merely%@EH@%
  36403. another powerful weapon in the arsenal of righteousness.%@NL@%
  36404. %@CR:THENUCTruman    @%%@NL@%
  36405.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  36406.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  36407. %@AS@%                                                           The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36408. %@NL@%
  36409. %@NL@%
  36410. %@2@%The release of atomic energy has changed everything except%@EH@%
  36411. our way of thinking and thus we are being driven unarmed toward
  36412. a catastrophe.%@NL@%
  36413. %@CR:THENUCEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  36414.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  36415.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  36416. %@AS@%                                                           The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36417. %@NL@%
  36418. %@NL@%
  36419. %@2@%The terror of the atom age is not the violence of the new power%@EH@%
  36420. but the speed of man's adjustment to it - the speed of his acceptance.%@NL@%
  36421. %@CR:THENUCWhite1    @%%@NL@%
  36422.                                                    E. B. White (1899-1985)%@NL@%
  36423.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  36424. %@AS@%                                                           The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36425. %@NL@%
  36426. %@NL@%
  36427. %@2@%No country without an atomic bomb could properly consider itself%@EH@%
  36428. independent.%@NL@%
  36429. %@CR:THENUCdeGaulle  @%%@NL@%
  36430.                                      General Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970)%@NL@%
  36431.                                                           French president%@NL@%
  36432.                                                                    in 1968%@NL@%
  36433. %@AS@%                                                           The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36434. %@NL@%
  36435. %@NL@%
  36436. %@2@%Hitherto man had to live with the idea of death as an individual;%@EH@%
  36437. from now onward mankind will have to live with the idea of its
  36438. death as a species.%@NL@%
  36439. %@CR:THENUCKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  36440.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  36441.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  36442. %@AS@%                                                           The Nuclear Age%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36443. %@NL@%
  36444. %@NL@%
  36445. %@NL@%
  36446. %@1@%%@AS@%Nudity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36447. %@CR:NUDITY          @%%@NL@%
  36448. %@2@%See:%@QR:Nudity@%%@NL@%
  36449.      Dress: %@AB@%Muhammad%@AE@%%@BO:           b671c@%; %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:           b6c18@%%@NL@%
  36450.      The House of Lords: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:          137877@%%@NL@%
  36451.      Paradise: %@AB@%Bible%@AE@%%@CF:PARADIBible     @%%@NL@%
  36452. %@NL@%
  36453. %@2@%Naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return%@EH@%
  36454. thither.%@NL@%
  36455. %@CR:NUDITYBibleJob  @%%@NL@%
  36456.                                                                 Bible, Job%@NL@%
  36457. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36458. %@NL@%
  36459. %@NL@%
  36460.      %@2@%We shift and bedeck and bedrape us,%@NL@%
  36461.      Thou art noble and nude and antique.%@NL@%
  36462. %@CR:NUDITYSwinburne @%%@NL@%
  36463.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  36464.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  36465. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36466. %@NL@%
  36467. %@NL@%
  36468. %@2@%Every young sculptor seems to think that he must give the world%@EH@%
  36469. some specimen of indecorous womanhood, and call it Eve, Venus,
  36470. a Nymph, or any name that may apologize for a lack of decent clothing.%@NL@%
  36471. %@CR:NUDITYHawthorne @%%@NL@%
  36472.                                            Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)%@NL@%
  36473.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  36474. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36475. %@NL@%
  36476. %@NL@%
  36477. %@2@%Nakedness reveals itself. Nudity is placed on display  . . . %@EH@%
  36478. The nude is condemned to never being naked. Nudity is a form of
  36479. dress.%@NL@%
  36480. %@CR:NUDITYBerger    @%%@NL@%
  36481.                                                      John Berger (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  36482.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  36483. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36484. %@NL@%
  36485. %@NL@%
  36486. %@2@%I have seen three emperors in their nakedness, and the sight%@EH@%
  36487. was not inspiring.%@NL@%
  36488. %@CR:NUDITYBismarck  @%%@NL@%
  36489.                                       Prince Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)%@NL@%
  36490.                                                         Prussian statesman%@NL@%
  36491. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36492. %@NL@%
  36493. %@NL@%
  36494. %@2@%There is an unseemly exposure of the mind, as well as of the%@EH@%
  36495. body.%@NL@%
  36496. %@CR:NUDITYHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  36497.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  36498.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  36499. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36500. %@NL@%
  36501. %@NL@%
  36502. %@2@%To see you naked is to recall the Earth.%@NL@%
  36503. %@CR:NUDITYLorca     @%%@NL@%
  36504.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  36505.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  36506. %@AS@%                                                                    Nudity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36507. %@NL@%
  36508. %@NL@%
  36509. %@NL@%
  36510. %@1@%%@AS@%Obedience%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36511. %@CR:OBEDIENCE       @%%@NL@%
  36512. %@2@%See:%@QR:Obedience@%%@NL@%
  36513.      Discretion: %@AB@%Newbolt%@AE@%%@BO:           aeb2e@%%@NL@%
  36514. %@NL@%
  36515. %@2@%When a gentleman hath learned to obey he will grow very much%@EH@%
  36516. fitter to command; his own memory will advise him not to command
  36517. too rigorous punishments.%@NL@%
  36518. %@CR:OBEDIESavile    @%%@NL@%
  36519.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  36520.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  36521. %@AS@%                                                                 Obedience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36522. %@NL@%
  36523. %@NL@%
  36524. %@2@%Those who know the least obey the best.%@NL@%
  36525. %@CR:OBEDIEFarquhar  @%%@NL@%
  36526.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  36527.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  36528. %@AS@%                                                                 Obedience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36529. %@NL@%
  36530. %@NL@%
  36531. %@2@%It is much safer to obey than to rule.%@NL@%
  36532. %@CR:OBEDIEKempis    @%%@NL@%
  36533.                                                Thomas a Kempis (1380-1471)%@NL@%
  36534.                                                        German monk, mystic%@NL@%
  36535. %@AS@%                                                                 Obedience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36536. %@NL@%
  36537. %@NL@%
  36538. %@NL@%
  36539. %@1@%%@AS@%Obesity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36540. %@CR:OBESITY         @%%@NL@%
  36541. %@2@%%@QR:Obesity@%Thou seest I have more flesh than another man, and therefore%@EH@%
  36542. more frailty.%@NL@%
  36543. %@CR:OBESITShakespear@%%@NL@%
  36544.                                             Falstaff, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36545.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  36546.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  36547. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36548. %@NL@%
  36549. %@NL@%
  36550. %@2@%A big man has no time really to do anything but just sit and%@EH@%
  36551. be big.%@NL@%
  36552. %@CR:OBESITFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  36553.                                            F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)%@NL@%
  36554.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  36555. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36556. %@NL@%
  36557. %@NL@%
  36558. %@2@%Imprisoned in every fat man, a thin one is wildly signalling%@EH@%
  36559. to be let out.%@NL@%
  36560. %@CR:OBESITConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  36561.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  36562.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  36563. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36564. %@NL@%
  36565. %@NL@%
  36566. %@2@%Outside every fat man there is an even fatter man trying to%@EH@%
  36567. close in.%@NL@%
  36568. %@CR:OBESITAmis      @%%@NL@%
  36569.                                                    Kingsley Amis (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  36570.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  36571. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36572. %@NL@%
  36573. %@NL@%
  36574. %@2@%He must have had a magnificent build before his stomach went%@EH@%
  36575. in for a career of its own.%@NL@%
  36576. %@CR:OBESITHalsey    @%%@NL@%
  36577.                                                  Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  36578.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  36579. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36580. %@NL@%
  36581. %@NL@%
  36582. %@2@%That dark day when a man decides he must wear his belt under%@EH@%
  36583. instead of over his cascading paunch.%@NL@%
  36584. %@CR:OBESITdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  36585.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  36586.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  36587. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36588. %@NL@%
  36589. %@NL@%
  36590.      %@2@%Let me have men about me that are fat;%@NL@%
  36591.      Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o' nights;%@NL@%
  36592.      Yond' Cassius has a lean and hungry look;%@NL@%
  36593.      He thinks too much; such men are dangerous.%@NL@%
  36594. %@CR:OBESITShakespear@%%@NL@%
  36595.                                                      Caesar, %@AI@%Julius Caesar%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36596.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  36597.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  36598. %@AS@%                                                                   Obesity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36599. %@NL@%
  36600. %@NL@%
  36601. %@NL@%
  36602. %@1@%%@AS@%Obstinacy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36603. %@CR:OBSTINACY       @%%@NL@%
  36604. %@2@%See:%@QR:Obstinacy@%%@NL@%
  36605.      Change: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           59205@%%@NL@%
  36606.      Opinion: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:          1c41c0@%%@NL@%
  36607. %@NL@%
  36608. %@2@%Obstinacy in a bad cause is but constancy in a good.%@NL@%
  36609. %@CR:OBSTINBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  36610.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  36611.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  36612. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36613. %@NL@%
  36614. %@NL@%
  36615. %@2@%They defend their errors as if they were defending their inheritance.%@NL@%
  36616. %@CR:OBSTINBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  36617.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  36618.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  36619. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36620. %@NL@%
  36621. %@NL@%
  36622. %@2@%For every why he had a wherefore.%@NL@%
  36623. %@CR:OBSTINButler3   @%%@NL@%
  36624.                                                  Samuel Butler (1612-1680)%@NL@%
  36625.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  36626. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36627. %@NL@%
  36628. %@NL@%
  36629. %@2@%He has a first-rate mind until he makes it up.%@NL@%
  36630. %@CR:OBSTINBonhamCart@%%@NL@%
  36631.                             Violet Bonham-Carter, Lady Asquith (1887-1969)%@NL@%
  36632.                                                 British Liberal politician%@NL@%
  36633.                                                     of Sir Stafford Cripps%@NL@%
  36634. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36635. %@NL@%
  36636. %@NL@%
  36637. %@2@%Like all weak men he laid an exaggerated stress on not changing%@EH@%
  36638. one's mind.%@NL@%
  36639. %@CR:OBSTINMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  36640.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  36641.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  36642. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36643. %@NL@%
  36644. %@NL@%
  36645. %@2@%I am firm. You are obstinate. He is a pigheaded fool.%@NL@%
  36646. %@CR:OBSTINWhitehorn @%%@NL@%
  36647.                                              Katharine Whitehorn (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  36648.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  36649. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36650. %@NL@%
  36651. %@NL@%
  36652. %@2@%None so deaf as those who won't hear.%@NL@%
  36653. %@CR:OBSTINWhitehorn @%%@NL@%
  36654.                                               16th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  36655. %@AS@%                                                                 Obstinacy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36656. %@NL@%
  36657. %@NL@%
  36658. %@NL@%
  36659. %@1@%%@AS@%The Office%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36660. %@CR:THEOFFICE       @%%@NL@%
  36661. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Office@%%@NL@%
  36662.      Stardom: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          26b3bb@%%@NL@%
  36663. %@NL@%
  36664. %@2@%A molehill man is a pseudo-busy executive who comes to work%@EH@%
  36665. at 9 am and finds a molehill on his desk. He has until 5 pm to
  36666. make this molehill into a mountain. An accomplished molehill man
  36667. will often have his mountain finished before lunch.%@NL@%
  36668. %@CR:THEOFFAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  36669.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  36670.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  36671. %@AS@%                                                                The Office%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36672. %@NL@%
  36673. %@NL@%
  36674. %@2@%You can run an office without a boss, but you can't run an%@EH@%
  36675. office without secretaries.%@NL@%
  36676. %@CR:THEOFFFonda     @%%@NL@%
  36677.                                                       Jane Fonda (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  36678.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  36679. %@AS@%                                                                The Office%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36680. %@NL@%
  36681. %@NL@%
  36682. %@2@%He [Robert Benchley] and I had an office so tiny that an%@EH@%
  36683. inch smaller and it would have been adultery.%@NL@%
  36684. %@CR:THEOFFParker1   @%%@NL@%
  36685.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  36686.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  36687. %@AS@%                                                                The Office%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36688. %@NL@%
  36689. %@NL@%
  36690. %@NL@%
  36691. %@1@%%@AS@%Opera%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36692. %@CR:OPERA           @%%@NL@%
  36693. %@2@%%@QR:Opera@%Nothing is capable of being well set to music that is not nonsense.%@NL@%
  36694. %@CR:OPERA Addison   @%%@NL@%
  36695.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  36696.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  36697. %@AS@%                                                                     Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36698. %@NL@%
  36699. %@NL@%
  36700. %@2@%Opera in English is, in the main, just about as sensible as%@EH@%
  36701. baseball in Italian.%@NL@%
  36702. %@CR:OPERA Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  36703.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  36704.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  36705. %@AS@%                                                                     Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36706. %@NL@%
  36707. %@NL@%
  36708. %@NL@%
  36709. %@1@%%@AS@%Opinion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36710. %@CR:OPINION         @%%@NL@%
  36711. %@2@%See:%@QR:Opinion@%%@NL@%
  36712.      Hospitality: %@AB@%Joubert%@AE@%%@BO:          1366d1@%%@NL@%
  36713.      Indifference: %@AB@%Lichtenberg%@AE@%%@BO:          14aaa2@%%@NL@%
  36714.      Psychiatric Wards: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          20d135@%%@NL@%
  36715. %@NL@%
  36716. %@2@%Opinion is holding something to be provisionally true which%@EH@%
  36717. you do not know to be false.%@NL@%
  36718. %@CR:OPINIOSaintBerna@%%@NL@%
  36719.                                                  Saint Bernard (1091-1153)%@NL@%
  36720.                                                  French churchman, scholar%@NL@%
  36721. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36722. %@NL@%
  36723. %@NL@%
  36724. %@2@%The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water,%@EH@%
  36725. and breeds reptiles of the mind.%@NL@%
  36726. %@CR:OPINIOBlake     @%%@NL@%
  36727.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  36728.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  36729. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36730. %@NL@%
  36731. %@NL@%
  36732. %@2@%The public buys its opinions as it buys its meat, or takes%@EH@%
  36733. in its milk, on the principle that it is cheaper to do this than
  36734. to keep a cow. So it is, but the milk is more likely to be watered.%@NL@%
  36735. %@CR:OPINIOButler4   @%%@NL@%
  36736.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  36737.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  36738. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36739. %@NL@%
  36740. %@NL@%
  36741. %@2@%It's dull (as well as draughty) to keep an open mind.%@NL@%
  36742. %@CR:OPINIOGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  36743.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  36744.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  36745. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36746. %@NL@%
  36747. %@NL@%
  36748. %@2@%He never chooses an opinion; he just wears whatever happens%@EH@%
  36749. to be in style.%@NL@%
  36750. %@CR:OPINIOTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  36751.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  36752.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  36753. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36754. %@NL@%
  36755. %@NL@%
  36756. %@2@%He thinks by infection, catching an opinion like a cold.%@NL@%
  36757. %@CR:OPINIORuskin    @%%@NL@%
  36758.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  36759.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  36760. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36761. %@NL@%
  36762. %@NL@%
  36763. %@2@%It's not that I don't have opinions, rather that I'm paid not%@EH@%
  36764. to think aloud.%@NL@%
  36765. %@CR:OPINIONavon     @%%@NL@%
  36766.                                                    Yitzhak Navon (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  36767.                                       Israeli politician, former president%@NL@%
  36768. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36769. %@NL@%
  36770. %@NL@%
  36771. %@2@%I never offered an opinion till I was sixty, and then it was%@EH@%
  36772. one which had been in our family for a century.%@NL@%
  36773. %@CR:OPINIODisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  36774.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  36775.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  36776. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36777. %@NL@%
  36778. %@NL@%
  36779. %@2@%If you must tell me your opinions, tell me what you believe%@EH@%
  36780. in. I have plenty of doubts of my own.%@NL@%
  36781. %@CR:OPINIOGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  36782.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  36783.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  36784. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36785. %@NL@%
  36786. %@NL@%
  36787. %@2@%Opinions have vested interests just as men have.%@NL@%
  36788. %@CR:OPINIOButler4   @%%@NL@%
  36789.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  36790.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  36791. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36792. %@NL@%
  36793. %@NL@%
  36794. %@2@%New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without%@EH@%
  36795. any other reason but because they are not already common.%@NL@%
  36796. %@CR:OPINIOLocke     @%%@NL@%
  36797.                                                     John Locke (1632-1704)%@NL@%
  36798.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  36799. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36800. %@NL@%
  36801. %@NL@%
  36802. %@2@%There is nothing a woman so dislikes as to have her old opinions%@EH@%
  36803. quoted to her, especially when they confute new ones.%@NL@%
  36804. %@CR:OPINIOHinkson   @%%@NL@%
  36805.                                        Katharine Tynan Hinkson (1861-1931)%@NL@%
  36806.                                                       Irish poet, novelist%@NL@%
  36807. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36808. %@NL@%
  36809. %@NL@%
  36810. %@2@%I've always felt that a person's intelligence is directly reflected%@EH@%
  36811. by the number of conflicting points of view he can entertain simultaneously
  36812. on the same topic.%@NL@%
  36813. %@CR:OPINIOAlther    @%%@NL@%
  36814.                                                      Lisa Alther (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  36815.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  36816. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36817. %@NL@%
  36818. %@NL@%
  36819. %@2@%It is clear that thought is not free if the profession of certain%@EH@%
  36820. opinions makes it impossible to earn a living.%@NL@%
  36821. %@CR:OPINIORussell1  @%%@NL@%
  36822.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  36823.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  36824. %@AS@%                                                                   Opinion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36825. %@NL@%
  36826. %@NL@%
  36827. %@NL@%
  36828. %@1@%%@AS@%Opportunity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36829. %@CR:OPPORTUNITY     @%%@NL@%
  36830. %@2@%See:%@QR:Opportunity@%%@NL@%
  36831.      Temptation: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          284d33@%%@NL@%
  36832. %@NL@%
  36833. %@2@%How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes deeds ill%@EH@%
  36834. done!%@NL@%
  36835. %@CR:OPPORTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  36836.                                                       King John, %@AI@%King John%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36837.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  36838.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  36839. %@AS@%                                                               Opportunity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36840. %@NL@%
  36841. %@NL@%
  36842. %@2@%Opportunity is the great bawd.%@NL@%
  36843. %@CR:OPPORTFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  36844.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  36845.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  36846. %@AS@%                                                               Opportunity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36847. %@NL@%
  36848. %@NL@%
  36849. %@2@%Next to knowing when to seize an opportunity, the most important%@EH@%
  36850. thing in life is to know when to forego an advantage.%@NL@%
  36851. %@CR:OPPORTDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  36852.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  36853.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  36854. %@AS@%                                                               Opportunity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36855. %@NL@%
  36856. %@NL@%
  36857. %@2@%I despise making the most of one's time. Half of the pleasures%@EH@%
  36858. of life consist of the opportunities one has neglected.%@NL@%
  36859. %@CR:OPPORTHolmes2   @%%@NL@%
  36860.                                   Justice Oliver WendellHolmes (1841-1935)%@NL@%
  36861.                                                            American jurist%@NL@%
  36862. %@AS@%                                                               Opportunity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36863. %@NL@%
  36864. %@NL@%
  36865. %@NL@%
  36866. %@1@%%@AS@%Opposites%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36867. %@CR:OPPOSITES       @%%@NL@%
  36868. %@2@%%@QR:Opposites@%Without Contraries is no progression. Attraction and Repulsion,%@EH@%
  36869. Reason and Energy, Love and Hate, are necessary to Human existence.%@NL@%
  36870. %@CR:OPPOSIBlake     @%%@NL@%
  36871.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  36872.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  36873. %@AS@%                                                                 Opposites%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36874. %@NL@%
  36875. %@NL@%
  36876. %@NL@%
  36877. %@1@%%@AS@%Opposition%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36878. %@CR:OPPOSITION      @%%@NL@%
  36879. %@2@%See:%@QR:Opposition@%%@NL@%
  36880.      Protest: %@AB@%Kennedy%@AE@%%@BO:          20c037@%%@NL@%
  36881. %@NL@%
  36882. %@2@%Do not choose to be wrong for the sake of being different.%@NL@%
  36883. %@CR:OPPOSISamuel1   @%%@NL@%
  36884.                                                    Lord Samuel (1870-1963)%@NL@%
  36885.                                                          British statesman%@NL@%
  36886. %@AS@%                                                                Opposition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36887. %@NL@%
  36888. %@NL@%
  36889. %@2@%No Government can long be secure without a formidable Opposition.%@NL@%
  36890. %@CR:OPPOSIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  36891.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  36892.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  36893. %@AS@%                                                                Opposition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36894. %@NL@%
  36895. %@NL@%
  36896. %@2@%Since we cannot match it let us take our revenge by abusing%@EH@%
  36897. it.%@NL@%
  36898. %@CR:OPPOSIMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  36899.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  36900.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  36901. %@AS@%                                                                Opposition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36902. %@NL@%
  36903. %@NL@%
  36904. %@NL@%
  36905. %@1@%%@AS@%Oppression%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36906. %@CR:OPPRESSION      @%%@NL@%
  36907. %@2@%See:%@QR:Oppression@%%@NL@%
  36908.      %@AB@%Despotism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           a6ccb@%%@NL@%
  36909.      Liberals: %@AB@%Tolstoy%@AE@%%@BO:          173eaa@%%@NL@%
  36910.      Liberty: %@AB@%Cromwell%@AE@%%@BO:          1750a9@%%@NL@%
  36911.      Madness: %@AB@%Szasz%@AE@%%@BO:          18e792@%%@NL@%
  36912.      Persecution: %@AB@%Penn%@AE@%%@BO:          1d5bc9@%%@NL@%
  36913.      %@AB@%Repression%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          22564e@%%@NL@%
  36914. %@NL@%
  36915. %@2@%You can't hold a man down without staying down with him.%@NL@%
  36916. %@CR:OPPRESWashington@%%@NL@%
  36917.                                           Booker T. Washington (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  36918.                                                American educator, reformer%@NL@%
  36919. %@AS@%                                                                Oppression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36920. %@NL@%
  36921. %@NL@%
  36922. %@2@%The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the%@EH@%
  36923. mind of the oppressed.%@NL@%
  36924. %@CR:OPPRESBiko      @%%@NL@%
  36925.                                                     Steve Biko (1946-1977)%@NL@%
  36926.                                             South African political leader%@NL@%
  36927. %@AS@%                                                                Oppression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36928. %@NL@%
  36929. %@NL@%
  36930. %@2@%This is the negation of God erected into a system of Government.%@NL@%
  36931. %@CR:OPPRESGladstone @%%@NL@%
  36932.                                        William Ewald Gladstone (1809-1898)%@NL@%
  36933.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  36934. %@AS@%                                                                Oppression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36935. %@NL@%
  36936. %@NL@%
  36937. %@NL@%
  36938. %@1@%%@AS@%Optimism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  36939. %@CR:OPTIMISM        @%%@NL@%
  36940. %@2@%See:%@QR:Optimism@%%@NL@%
  36941.      The Economy: %@AB@%Kennedy%@AE@%%@BO:           bf843@%%@NL@%
  36942.      Middle Age: %@AB@%Marquis%@AE@%%@BO:          1a5647@%%@NL@%
  36943.      Modern Times: %@AB@%Sandburg%@AE@%%@BO:          1ab3ae@%%@NL@%
  36944.      Pessimism: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          1d8135@%%@NL@%
  36945.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Cassandra%@AE@%%@BO:          209eba@%%@NL@%
  36946. %@NL@%
  36947. %@2@%In the midst of winter, I finally learned that there was in%@EH@%
  36948. me an invincible summer.%@NL@%
  36949. %@CR:OPTIMICamus1    @%%@NL@%
  36950.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  36951.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  36952. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36953. %@NL@%
  36954. %@NL@%
  36955. %@2@%A cheerful resignation is always heroic, but no phase of life%@EH@%
  36956. is so pathetic as a forced optimism.%@NL@%
  36957. %@CR:OPTIMIHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  36958.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  36959.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  36960. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36961. %@NL@%
  36962. %@NL@%
  36963. %@2@%An optimist is a fellow who believes what's going to be will%@EH@%
  36964. be postponed.%@NL@%
  36965. %@CR:OPTIMIHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  36966.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  36967.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  36968. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36969. %@NL@%
  36970. %@NL@%
  36971. %@2@%An optimist is a guy who has never had much experience.%@NL@%
  36972. %@CR:OPTIMIMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  36973.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  36974.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  36975. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36976. %@NL@%
  36977. %@NL@%
  36978. %@2@%These are not dark days; these are great days - the greatest%@EH@%
  36979. days our country has ever lived.%@NL@%
  36980. %@CR:OPTIMIChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  36981.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  36982.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  36983. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36984. %@NL@%
  36985. %@NL@%
  36986.      %@2@%Oh, yet we trust that somehow good%@NL@%
  36987.      Shall be the final goal of ill!%@NL@%
  36988. %@CR:OPTIMITennyson  @%%@NL@%
  36989.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  36990.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  36991. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  36992. %@NL@%
  36993. %@NL@%
  36994. %@2@%Optimism is a kind of heart stimulant - the digitalis of%@EH@%
  36995. failure.%@NL@%
  36996. %@CR:OPTIMIHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  36997.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  36998.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  36999. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37000. %@NL@%
  37001. %@NL@%
  37002. %@2@%Optimism: the world is the best of all possible worlds, and%@EH@%
  37003. everything in it is a necessary evil.%@NL@%
  37004. %@CR:OPTIMIBradley   @%%@NL@%
  37005.                                                  F. H. Bradley (1846-1924)%@NL@%
  37006.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  37007. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37008. %@NL@%
  37009. %@NL@%
  37010. %@2@%The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible%@EH@%
  37011. worlds; and the pessimist fears this is true.%@NL@%
  37012. %@CR:OPTIMICabell    @%%@NL@%
  37013.                                            James Branch Cabell (1879-1958)%@NL@%
  37014.                                                American novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  37015. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37016. %@NL@%
  37017. %@NL@%
  37018. %@2@%Pessimism of the intellect; optimism of the will.%@NL@%
  37019. %@CR:OPTIMIGramsci   @%%@NL@%
  37020.                                                Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937)%@NL@%
  37021.                                                 Italian political theorist%@NL@%
  37022. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37023. %@NL@%
  37024. %@NL@%
  37025. %@2@%Optimism. The doctrine or belief that everything is beautiful,%@EH@%
  37026. including what is ugly.%@NL@%
  37027. %@CR:OPTIMIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  37028.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  37029.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  37030. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37031. %@NL@%
  37032. %@NL@%
  37033. %@2@%Ah, well, there is just this world and then the next, and then%@EH@%
  37034. all our troubles will be over.%@NL@%
  37035. %@CR:OPTIMIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  37036.                                                                   old lady%@NL@%
  37037.                                                    %@AI@%quoted by L. O. Asquith%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37038. %@AS@%                                                                  Optimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37039. %@NL@%
  37040. %@NL@%
  37041. %@NL@%
  37042. %@1@%%@AS@%Orgasm%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37043. %@CR:ORGASM          @%%@NL@%
  37044. %@2@%See:%@QR:Orgasm@%%@NL@%
  37045.      Genius: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          108ebb@%%@NL@%
  37046. %@NL@%
  37047. %@2@%I may not be a great actress but I've become the greatest at%@EH@%
  37048. screen orgasms. Ten seconds of heavy breathing, roll your head
  37049. from side to side, simulate a slight asthma attack and die a little.%@NL@%
  37050. %@CR:ORGASMBergen    @%%@NL@%
  37051.                                                   Candice Bergen (b. 1946)%@NL@%
  37052.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  37053. %@AS@%                                                                    Orgasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37054. %@NL@%
  37055. %@NL@%
  37056.      %@2@%When the ecstatic body grips%@NL@%
  37057.      Its heaven, with little sobbing cries.%@NL@%
  37058. %@CR:ORGASMDodds1    @%%@NL@%
  37059.                                                    E. R. Dodds (1893-1979)%@NL@%
  37060.                                                  British classical scholar%@NL@%
  37061. %@AS@%                                                                    Orgasm%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37062. %@NL@%
  37063. %@NL@%
  37064. %@NL@%
  37065. %@1@%%@AS@%Orgies%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37066. %@CR:ORGIES          @%%@NL@%
  37067. %@2@%%@QR:Orgies@%If God had meant us to have group sex, I guess he'd have given%@EH@%
  37068. us all more organs.%@NL@%
  37069. %@CR:ORGIESBradbury  @%%@NL@%
  37070.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  37071.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37072. %@AS@%                                                                    Orgies%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37073. %@NL@%
  37074. %@NL@%
  37075. %@NL@%
  37076. %@1@%%@AS@%Originality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37077. %@CR:ORIGINALITY     @%%@NL@%
  37078. %@2@%See:%@QR:Originality@%%@NL@%
  37079.      Innovation: %@AB@%Colby%@AE@%%@BO:          14f5e3@%%@NL@%
  37080. %@NL@%
  37081. %@2@%As soon as you can say what you think, and not what some other%@EH@%
  37082. person has thought for you, you are on the way to being a remarkable
  37083. man.%@NL@%
  37084. %@CR:ORIGINBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  37085.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  37086.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  37087. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37088. %@NL@%
  37089. %@NL@%
  37090. %@2@%Originality consists in thinking for yourself, and not in thinking%@EH@%
  37091. unlike other people.%@NL@%
  37092. %@CR:ORIGINStephen1  @%%@NL@%
  37093.                                           J. Fitzjames Stephen (1829-1894)%@NL@%
  37094.                                                     English jurist, writer%@NL@%
  37095. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37096. %@NL@%
  37097. %@NL@%
  37098. %@2@%The more intelligent a man is, the more originality he discovers%@EH@%
  37099. in men. Ordinary people see no difference between men.%@NL@%
  37100. %@CR:ORIGINPascal    @%%@NL@%
  37101.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  37102.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  37103. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37104. %@NL@%
  37105. %@NL@%
  37106. %@2@%A man with a new idea is a crank until the idea succeeds.%@NL@%
  37107. %@CR:ORIGINTwain     @%%@NL@%
  37108.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  37109.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  37110. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37111. %@NL@%
  37112. %@NL@%
  37113. %@2@%Originality is a thing we constantly clamour for, and constantly%@EH@%
  37114. quarrel with.%@NL@%
  37115. %@CR:ORIGINCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  37116.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  37117.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  37118. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37119. %@NL@%
  37120. %@NL@%
  37121. %@2@%Originality is undetected plagiarism.%@NL@%
  37122. %@CR:ORIGINInge      @%%@NL@%
  37123.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  37124.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  37125. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37126. %@NL@%
  37127. %@NL@%
  37128. %@2@%Why can't somebody give us a list of things that everybody%@EH@%
  37129. thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody
  37130. says and nobody thinks.%@NL@%
  37131. %@CR:ORIGINHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  37132.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  37133.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  37134. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37135. %@NL@%
  37136. %@NL@%
  37137. %@2@%Damn those who said our good things before us.%@NL@%
  37138. %@CR:ORIGINDonatus   @%%@NL@%
  37139.                                            Aelius Donatus (b. 4th century)%@NL@%
  37140.                                                           Roman grammarian%@NL@%
  37141. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37142. %@NL@%
  37143. %@NL@%
  37144. %@2@%Everything has been said and we come more than seven thousand%@EH@%
  37145. years of human thought too late.%@NL@%
  37146. %@CR:ORIGINlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  37147.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  37148.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  37149. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37150. %@NL@%
  37151. %@NL@%
  37152. %@2@%A thought is often original, though you have uttered it a hundred%@EH@%
  37153. times.%@NL@%
  37154. %@CR:ORIGINHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  37155.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  37156.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  37157. %@AS@%                                                               Originality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37158. %@NL@%
  37159. %@NL@%
  37160. %@NL@%
  37161. %@1@%%@AS@%Oxford%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37162. %@CR:OXFORD          @%%@NL@%
  37163. %@2@%%@QR:Oxford@%Home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,%@EH@%
  37164. and impossible loyalties!%@NL@%
  37165. %@CR:OXFORDArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  37166.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  37167.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  37168. %@AS@%                                                                    Oxford%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37169. %@NL@%
  37170. %@NL@%
  37171. %@2@%The ancient seat of pedantry, where they manufacture prigs%@EH@%
  37172. as fast as butchers in Chicago handle hogs.%@NL@%
  37173. %@CR:OXFORDCunningham@%%@NL@%
  37174.                                       R. B. Cunningham-Grahame (1852-1936)%@NL@%
  37175.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37176. %@AS@%                                                                    Oxford%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37177. %@NL@%
  37178. %@NL@%
  37179.      %@2@%And when night%@NL@%
  37180.      Darkens the streets, then wander forth the sons%@NL@%
  37181.      Of Belial, flown with insolence and wine.%@NL@%
  37182. %@CR:OXFORDMilton    @%%@NL@%
  37183.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  37184.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  37185. %@AS@%                                                                    Oxford%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37186. %@NL@%
  37187. %@NL@%
  37188. %@2@%I was a modest, good-humoured boy. It is Oxford that has made%@EH@%
  37189. me insufferable.%@NL@%
  37190. %@CR:OXFORDBeerbohm  @%%@NL@%
  37191.                                               Sir Max Beerbohm (1872-1956)%@NL@%
  37192.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37193. %@AS@%                                                                    Oxford%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37194. %@NL@%
  37195. %@NL@%
  37196. %@2@%I had always imagined that Cliche was a suburb of Paris,%@EH@%
  37197. until I discovered it to be a street in Oxford.%@NL@%
  37198. %@CR:OXFORDGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  37199.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  37200.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  37201. %@AS@%                                                                    Oxford%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37202. %@NL@%
  37203. %@NL@%
  37204. %@NL@%
  37205. %@1@%%@AS@%Oxford and Cambridge%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37206. %@CR:OXFORDANDCAMBRID@%%@NL@%
  37207. %@2@%%@QR:Oxford and Cambridge@%The King to Oxford sent a troop of horse,%@NL@%
  37208.      For Tories own no argument but force:%@NL@%
  37209.      With equal skill to Cambridge books he sent,%@NL@%
  37210.      For Whigs admit no force but argument.%@NL@%
  37211. %@CR:OXFORDBrowne2   @%%@NL@%
  37212.                                             Sir William Browne (1692-1774)%@NL@%
  37213.                                                             English doctor%@NL@%
  37214. %@AS@%                                                      Oxford and Cambridge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37215. %@NL@%
  37216. %@NL@%
  37217. %@NL@%
  37218. %@1@%%@AS@%Pain%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37219. %@CR:PAIN            @%%@NL@%
  37220. %@2@%%@QR:Pain@%For we are born in other's pain,%@NL@%
  37221.      And perish in our own.%@NL@%
  37222. %@CR:PAIN  Thompson1 @%%@NL@%
  37223.                                               Francis Thompson (1859-1907)%@NL@%
  37224.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  37225. %@AS@%                                                                      Pain%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37226. %@NL@%
  37227. %@NL@%
  37228. %@2@%Pain with the thousand teeth.%@NL@%
  37229. %@CR:PAIN  Watson    @%%@NL@%
  37230.                                             Sir William Watson (1858-1935)%@NL@%
  37231.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  37232. %@AS@%                                                                      Pain%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37233. %@NL@%
  37234. %@NL@%
  37235. %@NL@%
  37236. %@1@%%@AS@%Paradise%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37237. %@CR:PARADISE        @%%@NL@%
  37238. %@2@%%@QR:Paradise@%And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not%@EH@%
  37239. ashamed.%@NL@%
  37240. %@CR:PARADIBibleGenes@%%@NL@%
  37241.                                                             Bible, Genesis%@NL@%
  37242. %@AS@%                                                                  Paradise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37243. %@NL@%
  37244. %@NL@%
  37245.      %@2@%Here with a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough,%@NL@%
  37246.      A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse -  and Thou%@NL@%
  37247.      Beside me singing in the%@NL@%
  37248.      Wilderness -%@NL@%
  37249.      And Wilderness is Paradise enow.%@NL@%
  37250. %@CR:PARADIFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  37251.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37252.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  37253. %@AS@%                                                                  Paradise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37254. %@NL@%
  37255. %@NL@%
  37256. %@2@%We, who have already borne on the road to Paradise the lives%@EH@%
  37257. of the best among us, want a difficult, erect, implacable Paradise;
  37258. a Paradise where one can never rest and which has, beside the
  37259. threshold of the gates, angels with swords.%@NL@%
  37260. %@CR:PARADIPrimodeRiv@%%@NL@%
  37261.                                          J. A. Primo de Rivera (1903-1936)%@NL@%
  37262.                                               Spanish Falangist politician%@NL@%
  37263. %@AS@%                                                                  Paradise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37264. %@NL@%
  37265. %@NL@%
  37266. %@2@%Everyone who has ever built anywhere a "new heaven" first%@EH@%
  37267. found the power thereto in his own hell.%@NL@%
  37268. %@CR:PARADINietzsche @%%@NL@%
  37269.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  37270.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  37271. %@AS@%                                                                  Paradise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37272. %@NL@%
  37273. %@NL@%
  37274. %@NL@%
  37275. %@1@%%@AS@%Paranoia%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37276. %@CR:PARANOIA        @%%@NL@%
  37277. %@2@%See:%@QR:Paranoia@%%@NL@%
  37278.      %@AB@%Anxiety%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           21b7a@%%@NL@%
  37279.      Laughter: %@AB@%Farquhar%@AE@%%@BO:          16b834@%%@NL@%
  37280.      Sensitivity: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          24aee2@%%@NL@%
  37281. %@NL@%
  37282. %@2@%Depart from your enemies, yea, and beware of your friends.%@NL@%
  37283. %@CR:PARANOApocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  37284.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  37285. %@AS@%                                                                  Paranoia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37286. %@NL@%
  37287. %@NL@%
  37288. %@2@%Even a paranoid can have enemies.%@NL@%
  37289. %@CR:PARANOKissinger @%%@NL@%
  37290.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  37291.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  37292. %@AS@%                                                                  Paranoia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37293. %@NL@%
  37294. %@NL@%
  37295. %@2@%A paranoid is a man who knows a little of what's going on.%@NL@%
  37296. %@CR:PARANOBurroughs @%%@NL@%
  37297.                                             William S. Burroughs (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  37298.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  37299. %@AS@%                                                                  Paranoia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37300. %@NL@%
  37301. %@NL@%
  37302. %@NL@%
  37303. %@1@%%@AS@%Parasites%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37304. %@CR:PARASITES       @%%@NL@%
  37305. %@2@%%@QR:Parasites@%Man is the only animal that esteems itself rich in proportion%@EH@%
  37306. to the number and voracity of its parasites.%@NL@%
  37307. %@CR:PARASIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  37308.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  37309.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  37310. %@AS@%                                                                 Parasites%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37311. %@NL@%
  37312. %@NL@%
  37313.      %@2@%Fool that I was! upon my eagle wings%@NL@%
  37314.      I bore this wren, till I was tired of soaring%@NL@%
  37315.      And now he mounts above me.%@NL@%
  37316. %@CR:PARASIDryden    @%%@NL@%
  37317.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  37318.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  37319. %@AS@%                                                                 Parasites%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37320. %@NL@%
  37321. %@NL@%
  37322.      %@2@%Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite 'em,%@NL@%
  37323.      And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum.%@NL@%
  37324. %@CR:PARASIDeMorgan  @%%@NL@%
  37325.                                             Augustus De Morgan (1806-1871)%@NL@%
  37326.                                                      English mathematician%@NL@%
  37327. %@AS@%                                                                 Parasites%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37328. %@NL@%
  37329. %@NL@%
  37330. %@NL@%
  37331. %@1@%%@AS@%Parents%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37332. %@CR:PARENTS         @%%@NL@%
  37333. %@2@%See:%@QR:Parents@%%@NL@%
  37334.      Children: %@AB@%Billings%@AE@%%@BO:           611f3@%; %@AB@%Confucius%@AE@%%@BO:           6252a@%%@NL@%
  37335.      %@AB@%Father%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           e910f@%%@NL@%
  37336.      %@AB@%Mother%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1b1266@%%@NL@%
  37337. %@NL@%
  37338.      %@2@%They fuck you up, your Mum and Dad.%@NL@%
  37339.      They may not mean to, but they do.%@NL@%
  37340.      And give you all the faults they had%@NL@%
  37341.      And add some extra, just for you.%@NL@%
  37342. %@CR:PARENTLarkin    @%%@NL@%
  37343.                                                  Philip Larkin (1922-1986)%@NL@%
  37344.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  37345. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37346. %@NL@%
  37347. %@NL@%
  37348. %@2@%Parents are people who bear children, bore teenagers, and board%@EH@%
  37349. newlyweds.%@NL@%
  37350. %@CR:PARENTLarkin    @%%@NL@%
  37351.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  37352. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37353. %@NL@%
  37354. %@NL@%
  37355. %@2@%Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge%@EH@%
  37356. them. Rarely, if ever, do they forgive them.%@NL@%
  37357. %@CR:PARENTWilde     @%%@NL@%
  37358.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  37359.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  37360. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37361. %@NL@%
  37362. %@NL@%
  37363. %@2@%If you must hold yourself up to your children as an object%@EH@%
  37364. lesson (which is not necessary), hold yourself up as a warning
  37365. and not as an example.%@NL@%
  37366. %@CR:PARENTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  37367.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  37368.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  37369. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37370. %@NL@%
  37371. %@NL@%
  37372. %@2@%Go directly - see what she's doing, and tell her she mustn't.%@NL@%
  37373. %@CR:PARENTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  37374.                                                               %@AI@%Punch, %@AE@%1872)%@NL@%
  37375. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37376. %@NL@%
  37377. %@NL@%
  37378. %@2@%The suspicious parent makes an artful child.%@NL@%
  37379. %@CR:PARENTHaliburton@%%@NL@%
  37380.                                           Thomas C. Haliburton (1796-1865)%@NL@%
  37381.                                               Canadian jurist and humorist%@NL@%
  37382. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37383. %@NL@%
  37384. %@NL@%
  37385. %@2@%Reasoning with a child is fine, if you can reach the child's%@EH@%
  37386. reason without destroying your own.%@NL@%
  37387. %@CR:PARENTBrown4    @%%@NL@%
  37388.                                               John Mason Brown (1900-1969)%@NL@%
  37389.                                                  American essayist, critic%@NL@%
  37390. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37391. %@NL@%
  37392. %@NL@%
  37393. %@2@%I wish either my father or my mother, or indeed both of them,%@EH@%
  37394. as they were in duty both equally bound to it, had minded what
  37395. they were about when they begot me.%@NL@%
  37396. %@CR:PARENTSterne    @%%@NL@%
  37397.                                                Laurence Sterne (1713-1768)%@NL@%
  37398.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  37399. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37400. %@NL@%
  37401. %@NL@%
  37402.      %@2@%How can I teach, how can I save,%@NL@%
  37403.      This child whose features are my own,%@NL@%
  37404.      Whose feet run down the ways where%@NL@%
  37405.      I have walked?%@NL@%
  37406. %@CR:PARENTRoberts   @%%@NL@%
  37407.                                                Michael Roberts (1902-1948)%@NL@%
  37408.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37409. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37410. %@NL@%
  37411. %@NL@%
  37412. %@2@%Respect the child. Be not too much his parent. Trespass not%@EH@%
  37413. on his solitude.%@NL@%
  37414. %@CR:PARENTEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  37415.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  37416.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  37417. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37418. %@NL@%
  37419. %@NL@%
  37420.      %@2@%How selfhood begins with a walking away,%@NL@%
  37421.      And love is proved in the letting go.%@NL@%
  37422. %@CR:PARENTDayLewis  @%%@NL@%
  37423.                                                   C. Day-Lewis (1904-1972)%@NL@%
  37424.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  37425. %@AS@%                                                                   Parents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37426. %@NL@%
  37427. %@NL@%
  37428. %@NL@%
  37429. %@1@%%@AS@%Paris%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37430. %@CR:PARIS           @%%@NL@%
  37431. %@2@%See:%@QR:Paris@%%@NL@%
  37432.      Tourism: %@AB@%Allen%@AE@%%@BO:          28e7b7@%%@NL@%
  37433. %@NL@%
  37434. %@2@%The cafe of Europe.%@NL@%
  37435. %@CR:PARIS Galiani   @%%@NL@%
  37436.                                             Ferdinando Galiani (1728-1787)%@NL@%
  37437.                                                          Italian economist%@NL@%
  37438. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37439. %@NL@%
  37440. %@NL@%
  37441. %@2@%When Paris sneezes, Europe catches cold.%@NL@%
  37442. %@CR:PARIS Metternich@%%@NL@%
  37443.                                              Prince Metternich (1773-1859)%@NL@%
  37444.                                                         Austrian statesman%@NL@%
  37445. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37446. %@NL@%
  37447. %@NL@%
  37448. %@2@%The French woman says, "I am a woman and a Parisienne, and%@EH@%
  37449. nothing foreign to me appears altogether human."%@NL@%
  37450. %@CR:PARIS Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  37451.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  37452.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  37453. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37454. %@NL@%
  37455. %@NL@%
  37456. %@2@%As an artist, a man has no home in Europe save Paris.%@NL@%
  37457. %@CR:PARIS Nietzsche @%%@NL@%
  37458.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  37459.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  37460. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37461. %@NL@%
  37462. %@NL@%
  37463.      %@2@%Trade is art, and art's philosophy,%@NL@%
  37464.      In Paris.%@NL@%
  37465. %@CR:PARIS Browning1 @%%@NL@%
  37466.                                     Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)%@NL@%
  37467.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  37468. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37469. %@NL@%
  37470. %@NL@%
  37471. %@2@%If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man,%@EH@%
  37472. then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you,
  37473. for Paris is a moveable feast.%@NL@%
  37474. %@CR:PARIS Hemingway @%%@NL@%
  37475.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  37476.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  37477. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37478. %@NL@%
  37479. %@NL@%
  37480. %@2@%In Paris they simply stared when I spoke to them in French;%@EH@%
  37481. I never did succeed in making those idiots understand their own
  37482. language.%@NL@%
  37483. %@CR:PARIS Twain     @%%@NL@%
  37484.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  37485.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  37486. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37487. %@NL@%
  37488. %@NL@%
  37489. %@2@%When good Americans die they go to Paris.%@NL@%
  37490. %@CR:PARIS Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  37491.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  37492.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  37493. %@AS@%                                                                     Paris%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37494. %@NL@%
  37495. %@NL@%
  37496. %@NL@%
  37497. %@1@%%@AS@%Parliament%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37498. %@CR:PARLIAMENT      @%%@NL@%
  37499. %@2@%See:%@QR:Parliament@%%@NL@%
  37500.      %@AB@%The House of Lords%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          136ba5@%%@NL@%
  37501. %@NL@%
  37502. %@2@%To anyone with politics in his blood, this place is like a%@EH@%
  37503. pub to a drunkard.%@NL@%
  37504. %@CR:PARLIALloydGeorg@%%@NL@%
  37505.                                             David Lloyd George (1863-1945)%@NL@%
  37506.                                   Welsh Liberal politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  37507.                                                    of the House of Commons%@NL@%
  37508. %@AS@%                                                                Parliament%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37509. %@NL@%
  37510. %@NL@%
  37511. %@2@%You behold a range of exhausted volcanoes.%@NL@%
  37512. %@CR:PARLIADisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  37513.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  37514.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  37515.                                                         of the Front Bench%@NL@%
  37516. %@AS@%                                                                Parliament%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37517. %@NL@%
  37518. %@NL@%
  37519. %@2@%The Commons, faithful to their system, remained in a wise and%@EH@%
  37520. masterly inactivity.%@NL@%
  37521. %@CR:PARLIAMackintosh@%%@NL@%
  37522.                                           Sir James Mackintosh (1765-1832)%@NL@%
  37523.                                                       Scottish philosopher%@NL@%
  37524. %@AS@%                                                                Parliament%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37525. %@NL@%
  37526. %@NL@%
  37527. %@2@%Parliament is not a %@AI@%congress%@AE@% of ambassadors from different%@EH@%
  37528. and hostile interests; which interests each must maintain, as an
  37529. agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates; but parliament
  37530. is a %@AI@%deliberative%@AE@% assembly of %@AI@%one%@AE@% nation, with %@AI@%one%@AE@% interest,
  37531. that of the whole; where, not local purposes, not local prejudices
  37532. ought to guide, but the general good, resulting from the general
  37533. reason of the whole. You choose a member indeed; but when you have
  37534. chosen him, he is not a member of Bristol, but he is a member
  37535. of %@AI@%parliament.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37536. %@CR:PARLIABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  37537.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  37538.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  37539. %@AS@%                                                                Parliament%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37540. %@NL@%
  37541. %@NL@%
  37542. %@2@%This place is the longest running farce in the West End.%@NL@%
  37543. %@CR:PARLIASmith3    @%%@NL@%
  37544.                                                      Cyril Smith (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  37545.                                                 British Liberal politician%@NL@%
  37546. %@AS@%                                                                Parliament%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37547. %@NL@%
  37548. %@NL@%
  37549. %@NL@%
  37550. %@1@%%@AS@%Partnership%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37551. %@CR:PARTNERSHIP     @%%@NL@%
  37552. %@2@%%@QR:Partnership@%And so we plow along, as the fly said to the ox.%@NL@%
  37553. %@CR:PARTNELongfellow@%%@NL@%
  37554.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  37555.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  37556. %@AS@%                                                               Partnership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37557. %@NL@%
  37558. %@NL@%
  37559. %@2@%Mr Morgan buys his partners; I grow my own.%@NL@%
  37560. %@CR:PARTNECarnegie  @%%@NL@%
  37561.                                                Andrew Carnegie (1835-1918)%@NL@%
  37562.                                     American industrialist, philanthropist%@NL@%
  37563. %@AS@%                                                               Partnership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37564. %@NL@%
  37565. %@NL@%
  37566. %@2@%When two men in a business always agree one of them is unnecessary.%@NL@%
  37567. %@CR:PARTNEWrigley   @%%@NL@%
  37568.                                            William Wrigley Jr. (1861-1932)%@NL@%
  37569.                                                       American businessman%@NL@%
  37570. %@AS@%                                                               Partnership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37571. %@NL@%
  37572. %@NL@%
  37573. %@2@%Every sin is the result of a collaboration.%@NL@%
  37574. %@CR:PARTNECrane     @%%@NL@%
  37575.                                                  Stephen Crane (1871-1900)%@NL@%
  37576.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  37577. %@AS@%                                                               Partnership%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37578. %@NL@%
  37579. %@NL@%
  37580. %@NL@%
  37581. %@1@%%@AS@%Passion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37582. %@CR:PASSION         @%%@NL@%
  37583. %@2@%%@QR:Passion@%If we resist our passions, it is more because of their weakness%@EH@%
  37584. than because of our strength.%@NL@%
  37585. %@CR:PASSIOLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  37586.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  37587.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  37588. %@AS@%                                                                   Passion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37589. %@NL@%
  37590. %@NL@%
  37591. %@2@%Some people lose control of their sluice gates of passion.%@NL@%
  37592. %@CR:PASSIOLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  37593.                                               %@AI@%Worker's Daily%@AE@%, Beijing 1981%@NL@%
  37594. %@AS@%                                                                   Passion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37595. %@NL@%
  37596. %@NL@%
  37597. %@2@%Passion, though a bad regulator, is a powerful spring.%@NL@%
  37598. %@CR:PASSIOEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  37599.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  37600.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  37601. %@AS@%                                                                   Passion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37602. %@NL@%
  37603. %@NL@%
  37604. %@2@%The Passions are the only orators which always persuade.%@NL@%
  37605. %@CR:PASSIOLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  37606.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  37607.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  37608. %@AS@%                                                                   Passion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37609. %@NL@%
  37610. %@NL@%
  37611. %@2@%It seemed to me pretty plain, that they had more of love than%@EH@%
  37612. matrimony in them.%@NL@%
  37613. %@CR:PASSIOGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  37614.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  37615.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  37616. %@AS@%                                                                   Passion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37617. %@NL@%
  37618. %@NL@%
  37619. %@NL@%
  37620. %@1@%%@AS@%The Past%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37621. %@CR:THEPAST         @%%@NL@%
  37622. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Past@%%@NL@%
  37623.      Regret: %@AB@%Wilder%@AE@%%@BO:          21fbf5@%%@NL@%
  37624. %@NL@%
  37625. %@2@%The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.%@NL@%
  37626. %@CR:THEPASHartley   @%%@NL@%
  37627.                                                  L. P. Hartley (1895-1972)%@NL@%
  37628.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37629. %@AS@%                                                                  The Past%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37630. %@NL@%
  37631. %@NL@%
  37632. %@2@%Each has his past shut in him like the leaves of a book known%@EH@%
  37633. to him by heart and his friends can only read the title.%@NL@%
  37634. %@CR:THEPASWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  37635.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  37636.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  37637. %@AS@%                                                                  The Past%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37638. %@NL@%
  37639. %@NL@%
  37640. %@2@%We are well advised to keep on nodding terms with the people%@EH@%
  37641. we used to be, whether we find them attractive company or not  . . . 
  37642. We forget all too soon the things we thought we could never forget.%@NL@%
  37643. %@CR:THEPASDidion    @%%@NL@%
  37644.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  37645.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  37646. %@AS@%                                                                  The Past%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37647. %@NL@%
  37648. %@NL@%
  37649. %@2@%The only thing I regret about my past is the length of it.%@EH@%
  37650. If I had to live my life again, I'd make the same mistakes, only
  37651. sooner.%@NL@%
  37652. %@CR:THEPASBankhead  @%%@NL@%
  37653.                                              Tallulah Bankhead (1902-1968)%@NL@%
  37654.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  37655. %@AS@%                                                                  The Past%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37656. %@NL@%
  37657. %@NL@%
  37658. %@NL@%
  37659. %@1@%%@AS@%Paternity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37660. %@CR:PATERNITY       @%%@NL@%
  37661. %@2@%See:%@QR:Paternity@%%@NL@%
  37662.      %@AB@%Father%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           e910f@%%@NL@%
  37663.      %@AB@%Parents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cb680@%%@NL@%
  37664. %@NL@%
  37665. %@2@%There was a young man in Rome that was very like Augustus Caesar;%@EH@%
  37666. Augustus took knowledge of it and sent for the man, and asked him
  37667. "Was your mother never at Rome?" He answered "No Sir; but my
  37668. father was."%@NL@%
  37669. %@CR:PATERNBacon     @%%@NL@%
  37670.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  37671.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  37672. %@AS@%                                                                 Paternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37673. %@NL@%
  37674. %@NL@%
  37675. %@2@%Maternity is a matter of fact; paternity is a matter of opinion.%@NL@%
  37676. %@CR:PATERNBacon     @%%@NL@%
  37677.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  37678. %@AS@%                                                                 Paternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37679. %@NL@%
  37680. %@NL@%
  37681. %@2@%He that bulls the cow must keep the calf.%@NL@%
  37682. %@CR:PATERNBacon     @%%@NL@%
  37683.                                                       16th-century proverb%@NL@%
  37684. %@AS@%                                                                 Paternity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37685. %@NL@%
  37686. %@NL@%
  37687. %@NL@%
  37688. %@1@%%@AS@%Patience%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37689. %@CR:PATIENCE        @%%@NL@%
  37690. %@2@%%@QR:Patience@%With close-lipp'd Patience for our only friend,%@NL@%
  37691.      Sad Patience, too near neighbour to Despair.%@NL@%
  37692. %@CR:PATIENArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  37693.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  37694.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  37695. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37696. %@NL@%
  37697. %@NL@%
  37698. %@2@%Patience, the beggar's virtue.%@NL@%
  37699. %@CR:PATIENMassinger @%%@NL@%
  37700.                                               Philip Massinger (1583-1640)%@NL@%
  37701.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  37702. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37703. %@NL@%
  37704. %@NL@%
  37705. %@2@%Patience, that blending of moral courage with physical timidity.%@NL@%
  37706. %@CR:PATIENHardy     @%%@NL@%
  37707.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  37708.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  37709. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37710. %@NL@%
  37711. %@NL@%
  37712. %@2@%Patience is the virtue of an ass, that trots beneath his burden,%@EH@%
  37713. and is quiet.%@NL@%
  37714. %@CR:PATIENLansdowne @%%@NL@%
  37715.                                                 Lord Lansdowne (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  37716.                                                    English poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  37717. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37718. %@NL@%
  37719. %@NL@%
  37720. %@2@%I'm extraordinarily patient provided I get my own way in the%@EH@%
  37721. end.%@NL@%
  37722. %@CR:PATIENThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  37723.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  37724.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  37725. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37726. %@NL@%
  37727. %@NL@%
  37728. %@2@%Beware the fury of a patient man.%@NL@%
  37729. %@CR:PATIENDryden    @%%@NL@%
  37730.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  37731.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  37732. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37733. %@NL@%
  37734. %@NL@%
  37735. %@2@%Never cut what you can untie.%@NL@%
  37736. %@CR:PATIENJoubert   @%%@NL@%
  37737.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  37738.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  37739. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37740. %@NL@%
  37741. %@NL@%
  37742.      %@2@%That which in mean men we entitle patience%@NL@%
  37743.      Is pale cold cowardice in noble breasts.%@NL@%
  37744. %@CR:PATIENShakespear@%%@NL@%
  37745.                                    Duchess of Gloucester, %@AI@%King Richard III%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37746.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  37747.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  37748. %@AS@%                                                                  Patience%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37749. %@NL@%
  37750. %@NL@%
  37751. %@NL@%
  37752. %@1@%%@AS@%Patriotism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37753. %@CR:PATRIOTISM      @%%@NL@%
  37754. %@2@%See:%@QR:Patriotism@%%@NL@%
  37755.      The English: %@AB@%Walpole%@AE@%%@BO:           cc135@%%@NL@%
  37756.      Internationalism: %@AB@%Canning%@AE@%%@BO:          156b1d@%%@NL@%
  37757. %@NL@%
  37758. %@2@%Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior%@EH@%
  37759. to all others because you were born in it.%@NL@%
  37760. %@CR:PATRIOShaw      @%%@NL@%
  37761.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  37762.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  37763. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37764. %@NL@%
  37765. %@NL@%
  37766. %@2@%My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you - ask%@EH@%
  37767. what you can do for your country.%@NL@%
  37768. %@CR:PATRIOKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  37769.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  37770.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  37771. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37772. %@NL@%
  37773. %@NL@%
  37774. %@2@%I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.%@NL@%
  37775. %@CR:PATRIOHale      @%%@NL@%
  37776.                                                    Nathan Hale (1755-1776)%@NL@%
  37777.                                             American Revolutionary soldier%@NL@%
  37778.                          speech before being executedas spy by the British%@NL@%
  37779. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37780. %@NL@%
  37781. %@NL@%
  37782. %@2@%The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis,%@EH@%
  37783. shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it
  37784. NOW deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.%@NL@%
  37785. %@CR:PATRIOPaine     @%%@NL@%
  37786.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  37787.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  37788. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37789. %@NL@%
  37790. %@NL@%
  37791. %@2@%A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country%@EH@%
  37792. is good enough to be given a square deal afterwards.%@NL@%
  37793. %@CR:PATRIORoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  37794.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  37795.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  37796. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37797. %@NL@%
  37798. %@NL@%
  37799. %@2@%Our country right or wrong. When right, to be kept right; when%@EH@%
  37800. wrong, to be put right.%@NL@%
  37801. %@CR:PATRIOSchurz    @%%@NL@%
  37802.                                                    Carl Schurz (1829-1906)%@NL@%
  37803.                          German orator, later American general and senator%@NL@%
  37804. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37805. %@NL@%
  37806. %@NL@%
  37807. %@2@%"My country, right or wrong" is a thing that no patriot would%@EH@%
  37808. think of saying except in a desperate case. It is like saying "My
  37809. mother, drunk or sober."%@NL@%
  37810. %@CR:PATRIOChesterton@%%@NL@%
  37811.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  37812.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  37813. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37814. %@NL@%
  37815. %@NL@%
  37816. %@2@%Patriotism has become a mere national self-assertion, a sentimentality%@EH@%
  37817. of flag-cheering with no constructive duties.%@NL@%
  37818. %@CR:PATRIOWells     @%%@NL@%
  37819.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  37820.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  37821. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37822. %@NL@%
  37823. %@NL@%
  37824. %@2@%Patriotism is a lively sense of collective responsibility.%@EH@%
  37825. Nationalism is a silly cock crowing on its own dunghill.%@NL@%
  37826. %@CR:PATRIOAldington @%%@NL@%
  37827.                                              Richard Aldington (1892-1962)%@NL@%
  37828.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  37829. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37830. %@NL@%
  37831. %@NL@%
  37832. %@2@%Never was patriot yet, but was a fool.%@NL@%
  37833. %@CR:PATRIODryden    @%%@NL@%
  37834.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  37835.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  37836. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37837. %@NL@%
  37838. %@NL@%
  37839. %@2@%To me, it seems a dreadful indignity to have a soul controlled%@EH@%
  37840. by geography.%@NL@%
  37841. %@CR:PATRIOSantayana @%%@NL@%
  37842.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  37843.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  37844. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37845. %@NL@%
  37846. %@NL@%
  37847. %@2@%Where liberty dwells there is my country.%@NL@%
  37848. %@CR:PATRIOPaine     @%%@NL@%
  37849.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  37850.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  37851.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  37852. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37853. %@NL@%
  37854. %@NL@%
  37855. %@2@%Our country is wherever we are well off.%@NL@%
  37856. %@CR:PATRIOMilton    @%%@NL@%
  37857.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  37858.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  37859. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37860. %@NL@%
  37861. %@NL@%
  37862. %@2@%Whenever you hear a man speak of his love for his country,%@EH@%
  37863. it is a sign that he expects to be paid for it.%@NL@%
  37864. %@CR:PATRIOMencken   @%%@NL@%
  37865.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  37866.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  37867. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37868. %@NL@%
  37869. %@NL@%
  37870. %@2@%Patriotism is the refuge of a scoundrel.%@NL@%
  37871. %@CR:PATRIOJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  37872.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  37873.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  37874. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37875. %@NL@%
  37876. %@NL@%
  37877. %@2@%In Dr. Johnson's famous dictionary patriotism is defined as%@EH@%
  37878. the last resort of a scoundrel. With all due respect to an enlightened
  37879. but inferior lexicographer I beg to submit that it is the first.%@NL@%
  37880. %@CR:PATRIOBierce    @%%@NL@%
  37881.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  37882.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  37883. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37884. %@NL@%
  37885. %@NL@%
  37886.      %@2@%True patriots we; for be it understood.%@NL@%
  37887.      We left our country for our country's good.%@NL@%
  37888. %@CR:PATRIOBarrington@%%@NL@%
  37889.                                              George Barrington (1755-1810)%@NL@%
  37890.                           celebrated pickpocket, transported to Botany Bay%@NL@%
  37891. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37892. %@NL@%
  37893. %@NL@%
  37894. %@2@%The proper means of increasing the love we bear our native%@EH@%
  37895. country is to reside some time in a foreign one.%@NL@%
  37896. %@CR:PATRIOShenstone @%%@NL@%
  37897.                                              William Shenstone (1714-1763)%@NL@%
  37898.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  37899. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37900. %@NL@%
  37901. %@NL@%
  37902. %@2@%It has never happened to me that I've had to choose between%@EH@%
  37903. betraying a friend and betraying my country, but if it ever does
  37904. so happen I hope I have the guts to betray my country.%@NL@%
  37905. %@CR:PATRIOForster   @%%@NL@%
  37906.                                                  E. M. Forster (1879-1970)%@NL@%
  37907.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  37908. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37909. %@NL@%
  37910. %@NL@%
  37911. %@2@%I love my country better than my family, but I love human nature%@EH@%
  37912. better than my country.%@NL@%
  37913. %@CR:PATRIOFenelon   @%%@NL@%
  37914.                                               Francois Fenelon (1651-1715)%@NL@%
  37915.                                                     French prelate, writer%@NL@%
  37916. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37917. %@NL@%
  37918. %@NL@%
  37919. %@2@%God has given you your country as cradle, and humanity as mother;%@EH@%
  37920. you cannot rightly love your brethren of the cradle if you love
  37921. not the common mother.%@NL@%
  37922. %@CR:PATRIOMazzini   @%%@NL@%
  37923.                                               Giuseppi Mazzini (1805-1872)%@NL@%
  37924.                                                 Italian nationalist leader%@NL@%
  37925. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37926. %@NL@%
  37927. %@NL@%
  37928. %@2@%I realise that patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred%@EH@%
  37929. or bitterness towards anyone.%@NL@%
  37930. %@CR:PATRIOCavell    @%%@NL@%
  37931.                                                   Edith Cavell (1865-1915)%@NL@%
  37932.                                                               English name%@NL@%
  37933. %@AS@%                                                                Patriotism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37934. %@NL@%
  37935. %@NL@%
  37936. %@NL@%
  37937. %@1@%%@AS@%Patronage%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37938. %@CR:PATRONAGE       @%%@NL@%
  37939. %@2@%%@QR:Patronage@%Patron - Commonly a wretch who supports with insolence,%@EH@%
  37940. and is paid with flattery.%@NL@%
  37941. %@CR:PATRONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  37942.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  37943.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  37944. %@AS@%                                                                 Patronage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37945. %@NL@%
  37946. %@NL@%
  37947. %@2@%If it were not for the intellectual snobs who pay - in solid%@EH@%
  37948. cash - the tribute which philistinism owes to culture, the arts
  37949. would perish with their starving practitioners. Let us thank heaven
  37950. for hypocrisy.%@NL@%
  37951. %@CR:PATRONHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  37952.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  37953.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  37954. %@AS@%                                                                 Patronage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37955. %@NL@%
  37956. %@NL@%
  37957. %@2@%Is not a patron, my lord, one who looks with unconcern on a%@EH@%
  37958. man struggling for life in the water, and when he has reached ground,
  37959. encumbers him with help?%@NL@%
  37960. %@CR:PATRONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  37961.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  37962.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  37963. %@AS@%                                                                 Patronage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37964. %@NL@%
  37965. %@NL@%
  37966. %@2@%Every time I bestow a vacant office I make a hundred discontented%@EH@%
  37967. persons and one ingrate.%@NL@%
  37968. %@CR:PATRONLouisXIV  @%%@NL@%
  37969.                                       King Louis XIV of France (1638-1715)%@NL@%
  37970. %@AS@%                                                                 Patronage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37971. %@NL@%
  37972. %@NL@%
  37973. %@2@%The notice which you have been pleased to take of my labours,%@EH@%
  37974. had it been early, had been kind; but it has been delayed till
  37975. I am indifferent, and cannot enjoy it; till I am solitary, and
  37976. cannot impart it; till I am known, and do not want it.%@NL@%
  37977. %@CR:PATRONJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  37978.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  37979.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  37980.                                                       to Lord Chesterfield%@NL@%
  37981. %@AS@%                                                                 Patronage%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37982. %@NL@%
  37983. %@NL@%
  37984. %@NL@%
  37985. %@1@%%@AS@%Payment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  37986. %@CR:PAYMENT         @%%@NL@%
  37987. %@2@%See:%@QR:Payment@%%@NL@%
  37988.      Bills: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           4024c@%%@NL@%
  37989. %@NL@%
  37990. %@2@%Give the laborer his wage before his perspiration be dry.%@NL@%
  37991. %@CR:PAYMENMuhammad  @%%@NL@%
  37992.                                                      Muhammad (c. 570-632)%@NL@%
  37993.                                                           founder of Islam%@NL@%
  37994. %@AS@%                                                                   Payment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  37995. %@NL@%
  37996. %@NL@%
  37997. %@2@%Cash nexus is not the sole nexus of man with man.%@NL@%
  37998. %@CR:PAYMENMorris2   @%%@NL@%
  37999.                                                 William Morris (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  38000.                                            English artist, writer, printer%@NL@%
  38001. %@AS@%                                                                   Payment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38002. %@NL@%
  38003. %@NL@%
  38004. %@NL@%
  38005. %@1@%%@AS@%Peace%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38006. %@CR:PEACE           @%%@NL@%
  38007. %@2@%See:%@QR:Peace@%%@NL@%
  38008.      %@AB@%Appeasement%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           24455@%%@NL@%
  38009.      The Arms Race: %@AB@%Vegetius%@AE@%%@BO:           28d3b@%%@NL@%
  38010.      Fascism: %@AB@%Mussolini%@AE@%%@BO:           e79dc@%%@NL@%
  38011.      War: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:          2abd9d@%; %@AB@%Saint Augustine%@AE@%%@BO:          2aaf25@%%@NL@%
  38012. %@NL@%
  38013. %@2@%If you would preserve peace, then prepare for peace.%@NL@%
  38014. %@CR:PEACE Enfantin  @%%@NL@%
  38015.                                            Barthelemy Enfantin (1776-1864)%@NL@%
  38016.                                            French economist, industrialist%@NL@%
  38017. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38018. %@NL@%
  38019. %@NL@%
  38020. %@2@%Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of%@EH@%
  38021. men that the defenses of peace must be constructed.%@NL@%
  38022. %@CR:PEACE Enfantin  @%%@NL@%
  38023.                                                        UNESCO constitution%@NL@%
  38024. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38025. %@NL@%
  38026. %@NL@%
  38027. %@2@%Peace hath her victories, no less renowned than War.%@NL@%
  38028. %@CR:PEACE Milton    @%%@NL@%
  38029.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  38030.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38031. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38032. %@NL@%
  38033. %@NL@%
  38034. %@2@%You may either win your peace or buy it: win it, by resistance%@EH@%
  38035. to evil; buy it, by compromise with evil.%@NL@%
  38036. %@CR:PEACE Ruskin    @%%@NL@%
  38037.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  38038.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  38039. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38040. %@NL@%
  38041. %@NL@%
  38042. %@2@%As I have counselled you to be slow in taking on a war, so%@EH@%
  38043. advise I you to be slow in peacemaking. Before ye agree look that
  38044. the ground of your wars be satisfied in your peace, and that ye
  38045. see a good surety for you and your people: otherways, an honourable
  38046. and just war is more tolerable than a dishonourable and disadvantageous
  38047. peace.%@NL@%
  38048. %@CR:PEACE JamesI    @%%@NL@%
  38049.                                        King James I of England (1566-1625)%@NL@%
  38050. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38051. %@NL@%
  38052. %@NL@%
  38053. %@2@%Peace and tranquillity! I should think so! Every bird of prey%@EH@%
  38054. wants it to consume its booty in comfort.%@NL@%
  38055. %@CR:PEACE Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  38056.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  38057.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  38058. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38059. %@NL@%
  38060. %@NL@%
  38061. %@2@%They make a wilderness and call it peace.%@NL@%
  38062. %@CR:PEACE Tacitus   @%%@NL@%
  38063.                                                     Tacitus (c. 55-c. 120)%@NL@%
  38064.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  38065. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38066. %@NL@%
  38067. %@NL@%
  38068. %@2@%You discharge your olive-branch as if from a catapult.%@NL@%
  38069. %@CR:PEACE Newman1   @%%@NL@%
  38070.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  38071.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  38072. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38073. %@NL@%
  38074. %@NL@%
  38075. %@2@%When we say "War is over if you want it," we mean that if%@EH@%
  38076. everyone demanded peace instead of another TV set, we'd have peace.%@NL@%
  38077. %@CR:PEACE Lennon    @%%@NL@%
  38078.                                                    John Lennon (1940-1980)%@NL@%
  38079.                                            English rock singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  38080. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38081. %@NL@%
  38082. %@NL@%
  38083. %@2@%Mankind has grown strong in eternal struggles and it will only%@EH@%
  38084. perish through eternal peace.%@NL@%
  38085. %@CR:PEACE Hitler    @%%@NL@%
  38086.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  38087.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  38088. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38089. %@NL@%
  38090. %@NL@%
  38091. %@2@%The United States can declare peace upon the world, and win%@EH@%
  38092. it.%@NL@%
  38093. %@CR:PEACE Culbertson@%%@NL@%
  38094.                                                 Ely Culbertson (1891-1955)%@NL@%
  38095.                                                   American bridge champion%@NL@%
  38096. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38097. %@NL@%
  38098. %@NL@%
  38099. %@2@%They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears%@EH@%
  38100. into pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
  38101. neither shall they learn war any more.%@NL@%
  38102. %@CR:PEACE BibleIsaia@%%@NL@%
  38103.                                                              Bible, Isaiah%@NL@%
  38104. %@AS@%                                                                     Peace%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38105. %@NL@%
  38106. %@NL@%
  38107. %@NL@%
  38108. %@1@%%@AS@%Perfection%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38109. %@CR:PERFECTION      @%%@NL@%
  38110. %@2@%See:%@QR:Perfection@%%@NL@%
  38111.      Modesty: %@AB@%Congreve%@AE@%%@BO:          1ac544@%%@NL@%
  38112.      Skepticism: %@AB@%Ayer%@AE@%%@BO:          255a8e@%%@NL@%
  38113. %@NL@%
  38114.      %@2@%Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null,%@NL@%
  38115.      Dead perfection, no more.%@NL@%
  38116. %@CR:PERFECTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  38117.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  38118.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38119. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38120. %@NL@%
  38121. %@NL@%
  38122. %@2@%So much perfection argues rottenness somewhere.%@NL@%
  38123. %@CR:PERFECWebb1     @%%@NL@%
  38124.                                                  Beatrice Webb (1858-1943)%@NL@%
  38125.                                                   British Fabian Socialist%@NL@%
  38126.                                                       of Sir Oswald Mosley%@NL@%
  38127. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38128. %@NL@%
  38129. %@NL@%
  38130. %@2@%He has not a single redeeming defect.%@NL@%
  38131. %@CR:PERFECDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  38132.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  38133.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  38134. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38135. %@NL@%
  38136. %@NL@%
  38137. %@2@%The indefatigable pursuit of an unattainable Perfection even%@EH@%
  38138. though it consist in nothing more than in the pounding of an old
  38139. piano, is what alone gives a meaning to our lives on this unavailing
  38140. star.%@NL@%
  38141. %@CR:PERFECSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  38142.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  38143.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  38144. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38145. %@NL@%
  38146. %@NL@%
  38147. %@2@%Striving to better, oft we mar what's well.%@NL@%
  38148. %@CR:PERFECShakespear@%%@NL@%
  38149.                                                          Albany, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38150.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  38151.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  38152. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38153. %@NL@%
  38154. %@NL@%
  38155. %@2@%No barber shaves so close but another finds his work.%@NL@%
  38156. %@CR:PERFECShakespear@%%@NL@%
  38157.                                                            English proverb%@NL@%
  38158. %@AS@%                                                                Perfection%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38159. %@NL@%
  38160. %@NL@%
  38161. %@NL@%
  38162. %@1@%%@AS@%Persecution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38163. %@CR:PERSECUTION     @%%@NL@%
  38164. %@2@%%@QR:Persecution@%Martyrs and persecutors are the same type of man. As to which%@EH@%
  38165. is the persecutor and which the martyr, this is only a question
  38166. of transient power.%@NL@%
  38167. %@CR:PERSECHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  38168.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  38169.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  38170. %@AS@%                                                               Persecution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38171. %@NL@%
  38172. %@NL@%
  38173. %@2@%Whoever is right, the persecutor must be wrong.%@NL@%
  38174. %@CR:PERSECPenn      @%%@NL@%
  38175.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  38176.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  38177. %@AS@%                                                               Persecution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38178. %@NL@%
  38179. %@NL@%
  38180. %@2@%The way of this world is to praise dead saints and persecute%@EH@%
  38181. living ones.%@NL@%
  38182. %@CR:PERSECHowe2     @%%@NL@%
  38183.                                                 Nathaniel Howe (1764-1837)%@NL@%
  38184.                                                         American clergyman%@NL@%
  38185. %@AS@%                                                               Persecution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38186. %@NL@%
  38187. %@NL@%
  38188. %@2@%If they come for me in the morning, they will come for you%@EH@%
  38189. at night.%@NL@%
  38190. %@CR:PERSECDavis1    @%%@NL@%
  38191.                                                     Angela Davis (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  38192.                                                           American radical%@NL@%
  38193. %@AS@%                                                               Persecution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38194. %@NL@%
  38195. %@NL@%
  38196. %@NL@%
  38197. %@1@%%@AS@%Perseverance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38198. %@CR:PERSEVERANCE    @%%@NL@%
  38199. %@2@%See:%@QR:Perseverance@%%@NL@%
  38200.      %@AB@%Obstinacy%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c2a5b@%%@NL@%
  38201. %@NL@%
  38202. %@2@%The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.%@NL@%
  38203. %@CR:PERSEVThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  38204.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  38205.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  38206. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38207. %@NL@%
  38208. %@NL@%
  38209.      %@2@%Under the bludgeonings of chance%@NL@%
  38210.      My head is bloody, but unbowed.%@NL@%
  38211. %@CR:PERSEVHenley    @%%@NL@%
  38212.                                          William Ernest Henley (1849-1903)%@NL@%
  38213.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  38214. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38215. %@NL@%
  38216. %@NL@%
  38217. %@2@%God Almighty hates a quitter.%@NL@%
  38218. %@CR:PERSEVFessenden @%%@NL@%
  38219.                                               Samuel Fessenden (1847-1908)%@NL@%
  38220.                                                American lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  38221. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38222. %@NL@%
  38223. %@NL@%
  38224.      %@2@%The troubles of our proud and angry dust%@NL@%
  38225.      Are from eternity, and shall not fail.%@NL@%
  38226.      Bear them we can, and if we can we must.%@NL@%
  38227.      Shoulder the sky, my lad, and drink your ale.%@NL@%
  38228. %@CR:PERSEVHousman1  @%%@NL@%
  38229.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  38230.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  38231. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38232. %@NL@%
  38233. %@NL@%
  38234. %@2@%An arch never sleeps.%@NL@%
  38235. %@CR:PERSEVHousman1  @%%@NL@%
  38236.                                                              Indian saying%@NL@%
  38237. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38238. %@NL@%
  38239. %@NL@%
  38240.      %@2@%Neither evil tongues,%@NL@%
  38241.      Rash judgements, nor the sneers of selfish men,%@NL@%
  38242.      Nor greetings where no kindness is, nor all%@NL@%
  38243.      The dreary intercourse of daily life,%@NL@%
  38244.      Shall e'er prevail against us.%@NL@%
  38245. %@CR:PERSEVWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  38246.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  38247.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38248. %@AS@%                                                              Perseverance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38249. %@NL@%
  38250. %@NL@%
  38251. %@NL@%
  38252. %@1@%%@AS@%Persuasion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38253. %@CR:PERSUASION      @%%@NL@%
  38254. %@2@%See:%@QR:Persuasion@%%@NL@%
  38255.      Faith: %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:           dfc62@%%@NL@%
  38256.      Passion: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce7b4@%%@NL@%
  38257.      Speeches: %@AB@%Macaulay%@AE@%%@BO:          267238@%%@NL@%
  38258. %@NL@%
  38259. %@2@%We are not won by arguments that we can analyse but by tone%@EH@%
  38260. and temper, by the manner which is the man himself.%@NL@%
  38261. %@CR:PERSUAButler4   @%%@NL@%
  38262.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  38263.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  38264. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38265. %@NL@%
  38266. %@NL@%
  38267. %@2@%He that winna be ruled by the rudder maun be ruled by the rock.%@NL@%
  38268. %@CR:PERSUAButler4   @%%@NL@%
  38269.                                                           Scottish proverb%@NL@%
  38270. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38271. %@NL@%
  38272. %@NL@%
  38273. %@2@%The best way to convince a fool that he is wrong is to let%@EH@%
  38274. him have his own way.%@NL@%
  38275. %@CR:PERSUABillings  @%%@NL@%
  38276.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  38277.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  38278. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38279. %@NL@%
  38280. %@NL@%
  38281. %@2@%There are two levers for moving men - interest and fear.%@NL@%
  38282. %@CR:PERSUANapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  38283.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  38284.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  38285. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38286. %@NL@%
  38287. %@NL@%
  38288. %@2@%It was said that Mr Gladstone could persuade most people of%@EH@%
  38289. most things, and himself of anything.%@NL@%
  38290. %@CR:PERSUAInge      @%%@NL@%
  38291.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  38292.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  38293. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38294. %@NL@%
  38295. %@NL@%
  38296. %@2@%There is a holy, mistaken zeal in politics, as well as religion.%@EH@%
  38297. By persuading others we convince ourselves.%@NL@%
  38298. %@CR:PERSUAJunius    @%%@NL@%
  38299.                                                   Junius (b. 18th century)%@NL@%
  38300.                                     pseudonym of a writer never identified%@NL@%
  38301. %@AS@%                                                                Persuasion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38302. %@NL@%
  38303. %@NL@%
  38304. %@NL@%
  38305. %@1@%%@AS@%Perversion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38306. %@CR:PERVERSION      @%%@NL@%
  38307. %@2@%See:%@QR:Perversion@%%@NL@%
  38308.      Chastity: %@AB@%de Gourmont%@AE@%%@BO:           5dfdf@%%@NL@%
  38309. %@NL@%
  38310. %@2@%Commit%@EH@%
  38311. The oldest sins the newest kind of ways.%@NL@%
  38312. %@CR:PERVERShakespear@%%@NL@%
  38313.                                           King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry IV part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38314.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  38315.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  38316. %@AS@%                                                                Perversion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38317. %@NL@%
  38318. %@NL@%
  38319. %@2@%The human knee is a joint and not an entertainment.%@NL@%
  38320. %@CR:PERVERHammond2  @%%@NL@%
  38321.                                                  Percy Hammond (1873-1936)%@NL@%
  38322.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  38323. %@AS@%                                                                Perversion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38324. %@NL@%
  38325. %@NL@%
  38326. %@NL@%
  38327. %@1@%%@AS@%Pessimism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38328. %@CR:PESSIMISM       @%%@NL@%
  38329. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pessimism@%%@NL@%
  38330.      Optimism: %@AB@%Cabell%@AE@%%@BO:          1c7a01@%; %@AB@%Gramsci%@AE@%%@BO:          1c7b69@%%@NL@%
  38331. %@NL@%
  38332. %@2@%One has to have the courage of one's pessimism.%@NL@%
  38333. %@CR:PESSIMMcEwan    @%%@NL@%
  38334.                                                       Ian McEwan (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  38335.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  38336. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38337. %@NL@%
  38338. %@NL@%
  38339. %@2@%It is wisdom in prosperity, when all is as thou wouldst have%@EH@%
  38340. it, to fear and suspect the worst.%@NL@%
  38341. %@CR:PESSIMErasmus   @%%@NL@%
  38342.                                                        Erasmus (1466-1536)%@NL@%
  38343.                                                             Dutch humanist%@NL@%
  38344. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38345. %@NL@%
  38346. %@NL@%
  38347. %@2@%She not only expects the worst, but makes the worst of when%@EH@%
  38348. it happens.%@NL@%
  38349. %@CR:PESSIMArlen     @%%@NL@%
  38350.                                                  Michael Arlen (1895-1956)%@NL@%
  38351.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  38352. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38353. %@NL@%
  38354. %@NL@%
  38355. %@2@%My pessimism goes to the point of suspecting the sincerity%@EH@%
  38356. of the pessimists.%@NL@%
  38357. %@CR:PESSIMRostand2  @%%@NL@%
  38358.                                                   Jean Rostand (1894-1977)%@NL@%
  38359.                                                   French biologist, writer%@NL@%
  38360. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38361. %@NL@%
  38362. %@NL@%
  38363. %@2@%Do you know what a pessimist is? A man who thinks everybody%@EH@%
  38364. as nasty as himself, and hates them for it.%@NL@%
  38365. %@CR:PESSIMShaw      @%%@NL@%
  38366.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  38367.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  38368. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38369. %@NL@%
  38370. %@NL@%
  38371. %@2@%A pessimist is one who has been intimately acquainted with%@EH@%
  38372. an optimist.%@NL@%
  38373. %@CR:PESSIMHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  38374.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  38375.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  38376. %@AS@%                                                                 Pessimism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38377. %@NL@%
  38378. %@NL@%
  38379. %@NL@%
  38380. %@1@%%@AS@%Philanthropy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38381. %@CR:PHILANTHROPY    @%%@NL@%
  38382. %@2@%%@QR:Philanthropy@%To fish for honour with a silver hook.%@NL@%
  38383. %@CR:PHILANBreton    @%%@NL@%
  38384.                                                Nicholas Breton (1545-1626)%@NL@%
  38385.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38386. %@AS@%                                                              Philanthropy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38387. %@NL@%
  38388. %@NL@%
  38389. %@2@%To enjoy a good reputation, give publicly, and steal privately.%@NL@%
  38390. %@CR:PHILANBillings  @%%@NL@%
  38391.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  38392.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  38393. %@AS@%                                                              Philanthropy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38394. %@NL@%
  38395. %@NL@%
  38396. %@2@%Philanthropist. A rich (and usually bald) old gentleman who%@EH@%
  38397. has trained himself to grin while his conscience is picking his
  38398. pocket.%@NL@%
  38399. %@CR:PHILANBierce    @%%@NL@%
  38400.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  38401.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  38402. %@AS@%                                                              Philanthropy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38403. %@NL@%
  38404. %@NL@%
  38405. %@2@%Philanthropy is the refuge of people who wish to annoy their%@EH@%
  38406. fellow creatures.%@NL@%
  38407. %@CR:PHILANWilde     @%%@NL@%
  38408.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  38409.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  38410. %@AS@%                                                              Philanthropy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38411. %@NL@%
  38412. %@NL@%
  38413. %@NL@%
  38414. %@1@%%@AS@%Philosophy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38415. %@CR:PHILOSOPHY      @%%@NL@%
  38416. %@2@%See:%@QR:Philosophy@%%@NL@%
  38417.      Doubt: %@AB@%Diderot%@AE@%%@BO:           b45b8@%%@NL@%
  38418.      Faith: %@AB@%Browne%@AE@%%@BO:           df14d@%%@NL@%
  38419.      History: %@AB@%Viscount St. John%@AE@%%@BO:          12d59d@%%@NL@%
  38420.      Leisure: %@AB@%Hobbes%@AE@%%@BO:          172f44@%%@NL@%
  38421.      Poets: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:          1e3bde@%%@NL@%
  38422.      Revolution: %@AB@%Marx%@AE@%%@BO:          22b0d2@%%@NL@%
  38423. %@NL@%
  38424. %@2@%Unintelligible answers to insoluble problems.%@NL@%
  38425. %@CR:PHILOSAdams2    @%%@NL@%
  38426.                                                 Henry B. Adams (1838-1918)%@NL@%
  38427.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  38428. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38429. %@NL@%
  38430. %@NL@%
  38431. %@2@%When he who hears doesn't know what he who speaks means, and%@EH@%
  38432. when he who speaks doesn't know what he himself means - that
  38433. is philosophy.%@NL@%
  38434. %@CR:PHILOSVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  38435.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  38436.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  38437. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38438. %@NL@%
  38439. %@NL@%
  38440. %@2@%It's easy to answer the ultimate questions - it saves you%@EH@%
  38441. bothering with the immediate ones.%@NL@%
  38442. %@CR:PHILOSOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  38443.                                          George, %@AI@%Epitaph for George Dillon%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38444.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  38445.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  38446. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38447. %@NL@%
  38448. %@NL@%
  38449. %@2@%I shall gladly obey His call; yet I would also feel grateful%@EH@%
  38450. if He would grant me a little longer time with you, and if I could
  38451. be permitted to solve a question on the origin of the soul.%@NL@%
  38452. %@CR:PHILOSSaintAnsel@%%@NL@%
  38453.                                                   Saint Anselm (1034-1109)%@NL@%
  38454.                                              Italian churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  38455. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38456. %@NL@%
  38457. %@NL@%
  38458. %@2@%Metaphysics is the finding of bad reasons for what we believe%@EH@%
  38459. upon instinct; but to find these reasons is no less an instinct.%@NL@%
  38460. %@CR:PHILOSBradley   @%%@NL@%
  38461.                                                  F. H. Bradley (1846-1924)%@NL@%
  38462.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  38463. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38464. %@NL@%
  38465. %@NL@%
  38466. %@2@%Metaphysics I detested. The science appeared to me an elaborate,%@EH@%
  38467. diabolical invention for mystifying what was clear, and confounding
  38468. what was intelligible.%@NL@%
  38469. %@CR:PHILOSAytoun    @%%@NL@%
  38470.                                                   W. E. Aytoun (1813-1865)%@NL@%
  38471.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  38472. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38473. %@NL@%
  38474. %@NL@%
  38475. %@2@%Philosophy consists largely of one philosopher arguing that%@EH@%
  38476. all others are jackasses. He usually proves it, and I should add
  38477. that he also usually proves that he is one himself.%@NL@%
  38478. %@CR:PHILOSMencken   @%%@NL@%
  38479.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  38480.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  38481. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38482. %@NL@%
  38483. %@NL@%
  38484. %@2@%There is only one thing that a philosopher can be relied on%@EH@%
  38485. to do, and that is, to contradict other philosophers.%@NL@%
  38486. %@CR:PHILOSJames4    @%%@NL@%
  38487.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  38488.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  38489. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38490. %@NL@%
  38491. %@NL@%
  38492. %@2@%As for the philosophers, they make imaginary laws for imaginary%@EH@%
  38493. commonwealths.%@NL@%
  38494. %@CR:PHILOSBacon     @%%@NL@%
  38495.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  38496.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  38497. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38498. %@NL@%
  38499. %@NL@%
  38500. %@2@%A blind man in a dark room looking for a black hat which is%@EH@%
  38501. not there.%@NL@%
  38502. %@CR:PHILOSBacon     @%%@NL@%
  38503.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  38504. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38505. %@NL@%
  38506. %@NL@%
  38507. %@2@%All are lunatics, but he who can analyze his delusions is called%@EH@%
  38508. a philosopher.%@NL@%
  38509. %@CR:PHILOSBierce    @%%@NL@%
  38510.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  38511.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  38512. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38513. %@NL@%
  38514. %@NL@%
  38515. %@2@%There is nothing so absurd but some philosopher has said it.%@NL@%
  38516. %@CR:PHILOSCicero    @%%@NL@%
  38517.                                                         Cicero (106-43 BC)%@NL@%
  38518.                                                  Roman orator, philosopher%@NL@%
  38519. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38520. %@NL@%
  38521. %@NL@%
  38522. %@2@%I have tried too in my time to be a philosopher but, I don't%@EH@%
  38523. know how, cheerfulness was always breaking in.%@NL@%
  38524. %@CR:PHILOSEdwards   @%%@NL@%
  38525.                                                 Oliver Edwards (1711-1791)%@NL@%
  38526.                                                             English lawyer%@NL@%
  38527. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38528. %@NL@%
  38529. %@NL@%
  38530. %@2@%Bishop Berkeley destroyed this world in one volume octavo;%@EH@%
  38531. and nothing remained, after his time, but mind; which experienced
  38532. a similar fate from the hand of Mr. Hume in 1737.%@NL@%
  38533. %@CR:PHILOSSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  38534.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  38535.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  38536. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38537. %@NL@%
  38538. %@NL@%
  38539. %@2@%Any philosophy that can be put "in a nutshell" belongs there.%@NL@%
  38540. %@CR:PHILOSHarris    @%%@NL@%
  38541.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  38542.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  38543. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38544. %@NL@%
  38545. %@NL@%
  38546. %@2@%Philosophies are devices for making it possible to do, coolly,%@EH@%
  38547. continuously, and with a good conscience, things which otherwise
  38548. one could do only in the heat of passion, spasmodically, and under
  38549. the threat of subsequent remorse.%@NL@%
  38550. %@CR:PHILOSHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  38551.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  38552.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  38553. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38554. %@NL@%
  38555. %@NL@%
  38556. %@2@%Philosophy stands in the same relation to the study of the%@EH@%
  38557. actual world as masturbation to sexual love.%@NL@%
  38558. %@CR:PHILOSMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  38559.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  38560.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  38561. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38562. %@NL@%
  38563. %@NL@%
  38564. %@2@%The flour is the important thing, not the mill; the fruits%@EH@%
  38565. of philosophy, not the philosophy itself. When we ask what time
  38566. it is we don't want to know how watches are constructed.%@NL@%
  38567. %@CR:PHILOSLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  38568.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  38569.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  38570. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38571. %@NL@%
  38572. %@NL@%
  38573.      %@2@%For there was never yet philosopher%@NL@%
  38574.      That could endure the toothache patiently.%@NL@%
  38575. %@CR:PHILOSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  38576.                                            Leonato, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38577.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  38578.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  38579. %@AS@%                                                                Philosophy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38580. %@NL@%
  38581. %@NL@%
  38582. %@NL@%
  38583. %@1@%%@AS@%Photography%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38584. %@CR:PHOTOGRAPHY     @%%@NL@%
  38585. %@2@%See:%@QR:Photography@%%@NL@%
  38586.      The Press: %@AB@%Newman%@AE@%%@BO:          20199d@%%@NL@%
  38587. %@NL@%
  38588. %@2@%A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells%@EH@%
  38589. you the less you know.%@NL@%
  38590. %@CR:PHOTOGArbus     @%%@NL@%
  38591.                                                    Diane Arbus (1923-1971)%@NL@%
  38592.                                                      American photographer%@NL@%
  38593. %@AS@%                                                               Photography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38594. %@NL@%
  38595. %@NL@%
  38596. %@2@%The magic of photography is metaphysical. What you see in the%@EH@%
  38597. photograph isn't what you saw at the time. The real skill of photography
  38598. is organised visual lying.%@NL@%
  38599. %@CR:PHOTOGDonovan   @%%@NL@%
  38600.                                                  Terence Donovan (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  38601.                                                       British photographer%@NL@%
  38602. %@AS@%                                                               Photography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38603. %@NL@%
  38604. %@NL@%
  38605. %@2@%It takes a lot of imagination to be a good photographer. You%@EH@%
  38606. need less imagination to be a painter, because you can invent things.
  38607. But in photography everything is so ordinary; it takes a lot of
  38608. looking before you learn to see the ordinary.%@NL@%
  38609. %@CR:PHOTOGBailey1   @%%@NL@%
  38610.                                                     David Bailey (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  38611.                                                       British photographer%@NL@%
  38612. %@AS@%                                                               Photography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38613. %@NL@%
  38614. %@NL@%
  38615. %@2@%The virtue of the camera is not the power it has to transform%@EH@%
  38616. the photographer into an artist, but the impulse it gives him to
  38617. keep on looking.%@NL@%
  38618. %@CR:PHOTOGAtkinson2 @%%@NL@%
  38619.                                                  Brooks Atkinson (b. 1894)%@NL@%
  38620.                                                  American critic, essayist%@NL@%
  38621. %@AS@%                                                               Photography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38622. %@NL@%
  38623. %@NL@%
  38624. %@2@%While there is perhaps a province in which the photograph can%@EH@%
  38625. tell us nothing more than what we see with our own eyes, there
  38626. is another in which it proves to us how little our eyes permit
  38627. us to see.%@NL@%
  38628. %@CR:PHOTOGLange1    @%%@NL@%
  38629.                                                 Dorothea Lange (1895-1965)%@NL@%
  38630.                                                      American photographer%@NL@%
  38631. %@AS@%                                                               Photography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38632. %@NL@%
  38633. %@NL@%
  38634. %@NL@%
  38635. %@1@%%@AS@%Piety%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38636. %@CR:PIETY           @%%@NL@%
  38637. %@2@%%@QR:Piety@%Nothing is more repulsive than a furtively prurient spirituality;%@EH@%
  38638. it is just as unsavory as gross sensuality.%@NL@%
  38639. %@CR:PIETY Jung      @%%@NL@%
  38640.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  38641.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  38642. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38643. %@NL@%
  38644. %@NL@%
  38645.      %@2@%Their sighin', cantin', grace-proud faces,%@NL@%
  38646.      Their three-mile prayers, and half-mile graces%@NL@%
  38647. %@CR:PIETY Burns     @%%@NL@%
  38648.                                                   Robert Burns (1759-1796)%@NL@%
  38649.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  38650. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38651. %@NL@%
  38652. %@NL@%
  38653. %@2@%A wicked fellow is the most pious when he takes to it. He'll%@EH@%
  38654. beat you all in piety.%@NL@%
  38655. %@CR:PIETY Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  38656.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  38657.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  38658. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38659. %@NL@%
  38660. %@NL@%
  38661. %@2@%Piety is the tinfoil of pretense.%@NL@%
  38662. %@CR:PIETY Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  38663.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  38664.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  38665. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38666. %@NL@%
  38667. %@NL@%
  38668. %@2@%Bernard always had a few prayers in the hall and some whiskey%@EH@%
  38669. afterwards as he was rather pious.%@NL@%
  38670. %@CR:PIETY Ashford   @%%@NL@%
  38671.                                                  Daisy Ashford (1881-1972)%@NL@%
  38672.                   British writer of %@AB@%The Young Visiters,%@AE@% aged 9%@NL@%
  38673. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38674. %@NL@%
  38675. %@NL@%
  38676. %@2@%How holy people look when they are sea-sick!%@NL@%
  38677. %@CR:PIETY Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  38678.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  38679.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  38680. %@AS@%                                                                     Piety%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38681. %@NL@%
  38682. %@NL@%
  38683. %@NL@%
  38684. %@1@%%@AS@%Pity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38685. %@CR:PITY            @%%@NL@%
  38686. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pity@%%@NL@%
  38687.      Love: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:          184600@%%@NL@%
  38688.      Lovers: %@AB@%Brien%@AE@%%@BO:          1864be@%%@NL@%
  38689. %@NL@%
  38690. %@2@%When a man suffers himself, it is called misery; when he suffers%@EH@%
  38691. in the suffering of another, it is called pity.%@NL@%
  38692. %@CR:PITY  SaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  38693.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  38694.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  38695. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38696. %@NL@%
  38697. %@NL@%
  38698. %@2@%Pity costs nothing, and ain't worth nothing.%@NL@%
  38699. %@CR:PITY  Billings  @%%@NL@%
  38700.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  38701.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  38702. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38703. %@NL@%
  38704. %@NL@%
  38705. %@2@%Pity is treason.%@NL@%
  38706. %@CR:PITY  Robespierr@%%@NL@%
  38707.                                         Maximilien Robespierre (1785-1794)%@NL@%
  38708.                                                French revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  38709. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38710. %@NL@%
  38711. %@NL@%
  38712. %@2@%If a madman were to come into this room with a stick in his%@EH@%
  38713. hand, no doubt we should pity the state of his mind; but our primary
  38714. consideration would be to take care of ourselves. We should knock
  38715. him down first, and pity him afterwards.%@NL@%
  38716. %@CR:PITY  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  38717.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  38718.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  38719. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38720. %@NL@%
  38721. %@NL@%
  38722. %@2@%The wretched have no compassion.%@NL@%
  38723. %@CR:PITY  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  38724.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  38725.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  38726. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38727. %@NL@%
  38728. %@NL@%
  38729. %@2@%One cannot weep for the entire world, it is beyond human strength.%@EH@%
  38730. One must choose.%@NL@%
  38731. %@CR:PITY  Anouilh   @%%@NL@%
  38732.                                                   Jean Anouilh (1910-1987)%@NL@%
  38733.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  38734. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38735. %@NL@%
  38736. %@NL@%
  38737. %@2@%Those who do not complain are never pitied.%@NL@%
  38738. %@CR:PITY  Austen    @%%@NL@%
  38739.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  38740.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  38741. %@AS@%                                                                      Pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38742. %@NL@%
  38743. %@NL@%
  38744. %@NL@%
  38745. %@1@%%@AS@%Plagiarism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38746. %@CR:PLAGIARISM      @%%@NL@%
  38747. %@2@%See:%@QR:Plagiarism@%%@NL@%
  38748.      Originality: %@AB@%Inge%@AE@%%@BO:          1c8ed1@%%@NL@%
  38749.      Quotations: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          21609b@%%@NL@%
  38750. %@NL@%
  38751. %@2@%Taking something from one man and making it worse is plagiarism.%@NL@%
  38752. %@CR:PLAGIAMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  38753.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  38754.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  38755. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38756. %@NL@%
  38757. %@NL@%
  38758. %@2@%It is a mean thief, or a successful author, that plunders the%@EH@%
  38759. dead.%@NL@%
  38760. %@CR:PLAGIAOMalley   @%%@NL@%
  38761.                                                Austin O'Malley (1858-1932)%@NL@%
  38762.                                                   American oculist, writer%@NL@%
  38763. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38764. %@NL@%
  38765. %@NL@%
  38766. %@2@%Most writers steal a good thing when they can.%@NL@%
  38767. %@CR:PLAGIAProctor   @%%@NL@%
  38768.                                           Bryan Waller Proctor (1787-1874)%@NL@%
  38769.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38770. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38771. %@NL@%
  38772. %@NL@%
  38773. %@2@%He invades authors like a monarch, and what would be theft%@EH@%
  38774. in other poets is only victory in him.%@NL@%
  38775. %@CR:PLAGIADryden    @%%@NL@%
  38776.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  38777.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  38778.                                                              of Ben Jonson%@NL@%
  38779. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38780. %@NL@%
  38781. %@NL@%
  38782. %@2@%When you take stuff from one writer, it's plagiarism; but when%@EH@%
  38783. you take it from many writers, it's research.%@NL@%
  38784. %@CR:PLAGIAMizner2   @%%@NL@%
  38785.                                                  Wilson Mizner (1876-1933)%@NL@%
  38786.                                                    American dramatist, wit%@NL@%
  38787. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38788. %@NL@%
  38789. %@NL@%
  38790. %@2@%Whatever is well said by another, is mine.%@NL@%
  38791. %@CR:PLAGIASeneca    @%%@NL@%
  38792.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  38793.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  38794. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38795. %@NL@%
  38796. %@NL@%
  38797. %@2@%It's a wise crack that knows its own father.%@NL@%
  38798. %@CR:PLAGIAClapper   @%%@NL@%
  38799.                                                Raymond Clapper (1892-1944)%@NL@%
  38800.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  38801. %@AS@%                                                                Plagiarism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38802. %@NL@%
  38803. %@NL@%
  38804. %@NL@%
  38805. %@1@%%@AS@%Planning%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38806. %@CR:PLANNING        @%%@NL@%
  38807. %@2@%%@QR:Planning@%When schemes are laid in advance, it is surprising how often%@EH@%
  38808. the circumstances fit in with them.%@NL@%
  38809. %@CR:PLANNIOsler     @%%@NL@%
  38810.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  38811.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  38812. %@AS@%                                                                  Planning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38813. %@NL@%
  38814. %@NL@%
  38815. %@2@%It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the%@EH@%
  38816. chain of destiny can be handled at a time.%@NL@%
  38817. %@CR:PLANNIChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  38818.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  38819.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  38820. %@AS@%                                                                  Planning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38821. %@NL@%
  38822. %@NL@%
  38823. %@2@%We are always getting ready to live, but never living.%@NL@%
  38824. %@CR:PLANNIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  38825.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  38826.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  38827. %@AS@%                                                                  Planning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38828. %@NL@%
  38829. %@NL@%
  38830. %@NL@%
  38831. %@1@%%@AS@%Platitudes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38832. %@CR:PLATITUDES      @%%@NL@%
  38833. %@2@%See:%@QR:Platitudes@%%@NL@%
  38834.      Banality: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           39bd5@%%@NL@%
  38835.      Literature: %@AB@%Wilder%@AE@%%@BO:          17992f@%%@NL@%
  38836.      Proverbs: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          20cf93@%%@NL@%
  38837. %@NL@%
  38838. %@2@%In spite of his practical ability, some of his experience had%@EH@%
  38839. petrified into maxims and quotations.%@NL@%
  38840. %@CR:PLATITEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  38841.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  38842.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  38843. %@AS@%                                                                Platitudes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38844. %@NL@%
  38845. %@NL@%
  38846. %@2@%In modern life nothing produces such an effect as a good platitude.%@EH@%
  38847. It makes the whole world kin.%@NL@%
  38848. %@CR:PLATITWilde     @%%@NL@%
  38849.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  38850.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  38851. %@AS@%                                                                Platitudes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38852. %@NL@%
  38853. %@NL@%
  38854. %@2@%The Republicans stroke platitudes until they purr like epigrams.%@NL@%
  38855. %@CR:PLATITStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  38856.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  38857.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  38858. %@AS@%                                                                Platitudes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38859. %@NL@%
  38860. %@NL@%
  38861. %@2@%A platitude is a truth we are tired of hearing.%@NL@%
  38862. %@CR:PLATITNicholson2@%%@NL@%
  38863.                                            Sir Godfrey Nicholson (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  38864.                               British businessman, Conservative politician%@NL@%
  38865. %@AS@%                                                                Platitudes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38866. %@NL@%
  38867. %@NL@%
  38868. %@2@%All generalizations are dangerous, even this one.%@NL@%
  38869. %@CR:PLATITDumas2    @%%@NL@%
  38870.                                                Alexandre Dumas (1824-1895)%@NL@%
  38871.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  38872. %@AS@%                                                                Platitudes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38873. %@NL@%
  38874. %@NL@%
  38875. %@NL@%
  38876. %@1@%%@AS@%Play%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38877. %@CR:PLAY            @%%@NL@%
  38878. %@2@%See:%@QR:Play@%%@NL@%
  38879.      %@AB@%Cards%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           51e8a@%%@NL@%
  38880.      %@AB@%Gambling%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          102929@%%@NL@%
  38881.      %@AB@%Golf%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          111532@%%@NL@%
  38882.      %@AB@%Pleasure%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1df25c@%%@NL@%
  38883.      %@AB@%Sport%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          269118@%%@NL@%
  38884. %@NL@%
  38885. %@2@%It should be noted that children's games are not merely games;%@EH@%
  38886. one should regard them as their most serious activities.%@NL@%
  38887. %@CR:PLAY  Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  38888.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  38889.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  38890. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38891. %@NL@%
  38892. %@NL@%
  38893. %@2@%Life isn't all beer and skittles; but beer and skittles, or%@EH@%
  38894. something better of the same sort, must form a good part of every
  38895. Englishman's education.%@NL@%
  38896. %@CR:PLAY  Hughes2   @%%@NL@%
  38897.                                                  Thomas Hughes (1822-1896)%@NL@%
  38898.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  38899. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38900. %@NL@%
  38901. %@NL@%
  38902.      %@2@%If all the year were playing holidays,%@NL@%
  38903.      To sport would be as tedious as to work.%@NL@%
  38904. %@CR:PLAY  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  38905.                                           Prince Hal, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38906.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  38907.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  38908. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38909. %@NL@%
  38910. %@NL@%
  38911. %@2@%Men trifle with their business and their politics; but never%@EH@%
  38912. trifle with their games. It brings truth home to them. They cannot
  38913. pretend that they made a magnificent drive when they foozled it.
  38914. The Englishman is at his best on the links, and at his worst in
  38915. the Cabinet.%@NL@%
  38916. %@CR:PLAY  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  38917.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  38918.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  38919. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38920. %@NL@%
  38921. %@NL@%
  38922. %@2@%Public money is scarcely ever so well employed as in securing%@EH@%
  38923. bits of waste ground and keeping them as open spaces.%@NL@%
  38924. %@CR:PLAY  Helps     @%%@NL@%
  38925.                                               Sir Arthur Helps (1813-1875)%@NL@%
  38926.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  38927. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38928. %@NL@%
  38929. %@NL@%
  38930. %@2@%Amusement is the happiness of those who cannot think.%@NL@%
  38931. %@CR:PLAY  Pope      @%%@NL@%
  38932.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  38933.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  38934. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38935. %@NL@%
  38936. %@NL@%
  38937. %@2@%One half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the%@EH@%
  38938. other.%@NL@%
  38939. %@CR:PLAY  Austen    @%%@NL@%
  38940.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  38941.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  38942. %@AS@%                                                                      Play%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38943. %@NL@%
  38944. %@NL@%
  38945. %@NL@%
  38946. %@1@%%@AS@%Pleasure%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  38947. %@CR:PLEASURE        @%%@NL@%
  38948. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pleasure@%%@NL@%
  38949.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           43e51@%%@NL@%
  38950.      Hypocrisy: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          14086d@%%@NL@%
  38951.      Play: %@AB@%Austen%@AE@%%@BO:          1df104@%; %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          1de9c1@%%@NL@%
  38952. %@NL@%
  38953. %@2@%A man hath no better thing under the sun than to eat and to%@EH@%
  38954. drink and to be merry.%@NL@%
  38955. %@CR:PLEASUBibleEccle@%%@NL@%
  38956.                                                        Bible, Ecclesiastes%@NL@%
  38957. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38958. %@NL@%
  38959. %@NL@%
  38960.      %@2@%Ah, make the most of what we yet may spend,%@NL@%
  38961.      Before we too unto the Dust descend.%@NL@%
  38962. %@CR:PLEASUFitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  38963.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38964.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  38965. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38966. %@NL@%
  38967. %@NL@%
  38968. %@2@%The truth is, I do indulge myself a little the more in pleasure,%@EH@%
  38969. knowing that this is the proper age of my life to do it; and, out
  38970. of my observation that most men that do thrive in the world do
  38971. forget to take pleasure during the time that they are getting their
  38972. estate, but reserve that till they have got one, and then it is
  38973. too late for them to enjoy it.%@NL@%
  38974. %@CR:PLEASUPepys     @%%@NL@%
  38975.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  38976.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  38977.                                                                    aged 33%@NL@%
  38978. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38979. %@NL@%
  38980. %@NL@%
  38981. %@2@%If I had no duties, and no reference to futurity, I would spend%@EH@%
  38982. my life in driving briskly in a post-chaise with a pretty woman.%@NL@%
  38983. %@CR:PLEASUJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  38984.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  38985.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  38986. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38987. %@NL@%
  38988. %@NL@%
  38989. %@2@%All the things I really like to do are either immoral, illegal,%@EH@%
  38990. or fattening.%@NL@%
  38991. %@CR:PLEASUWoollcott @%%@NL@%
  38992.                                            Alexander Woollcott (1887-1943)%@NL@%
  38993.                                                 American columnist, critic%@NL@%
  38994. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  38995. %@NL@%
  38996. %@NL@%
  38997. %@2@%Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.%@NL@%
  38998. %@CR:PLEASUBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  38999.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  39000. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39001. %@NL@%
  39002. %@NL@%
  39003. %@2@%Scratching is one of nature's sweetest gratifications, and%@EH@%
  39004. the one nearest at hand.%@NL@%
  39005. %@CR:PLEASUMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  39006.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  39007.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  39008. %@AS@%                                                                  Pleasure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39009. %@NL@%
  39010. %@NL@%
  39011. %@NL@%
  39012. %@1@%%@AS@%Poetry%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  39013. %@CR:POETRY          @%%@NL@%
  39014. %@2@%%@QR:Poetry@%Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it%@EH@%
  39015. takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity.%@NL@%
  39016. %@CR:POETRYWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  39017.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  39018.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39019. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39020. %@NL@%
  39021. %@NL@%
  39022. %@2@%Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world,%@EH@%
  39023. and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar.%@NL@%
  39024. %@CR:POETRYShelley   @%%@NL@%
  39025.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  39026.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39027. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39028. %@NL@%
  39029. %@NL@%
  39030. %@2@%Poetry is what Milton saw when he went blind.%@NL@%
  39031. %@CR:POETRYMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  39032.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  39033.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  39034. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39035. %@NL@%
  39036. %@NL@%
  39037. %@2@%That willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which%@EH@%
  39038. constitutes poetic faith.%@NL@%
  39039. %@CR:POETRYColeridge @%%@NL@%
  39040.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  39041.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39042. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39043. %@NL@%
  39044. %@NL@%
  39045. %@2@%Poetry is the supreme fiction, madame.%@NL@%
  39046. %@CR:POETRYStevens3  @%%@NL@%
  39047.                                                Wallace Stevens (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  39048.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  39049. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39050. %@NL@%
  39051. %@NL@%
  39052. %@2@%Poetry is truth in its Sunday clothes.%@NL@%
  39053. %@CR:POETRYRoux      @%%@NL@%
  39054.                                                    Joseph Roux (1834-1886)%@NL@%
  39055.                                                      French priest, writer%@NL@%
  39056. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39057. %@NL@%
  39058. %@NL@%
  39059. %@2@%Poetry is man's rebellion against being what he is.%@NL@%
  39060. %@CR:POETRYCabell    @%%@NL@%
  39061.                                            James Branch Cabell (1879-1958)%@NL@%
  39062.                                                American novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  39063. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39064. %@NL@%
  39065. %@NL@%
  39066. %@2@%Out of our quarrels with others we make rhetoric. Out of our%@EH@%
  39067. quarrels with ourselves we make poetry.%@NL@%
  39068. %@CR:POETRYYeats     @%%@NL@%
  39069.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  39070.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  39071. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39072. %@NL@%
  39073. %@NL@%
  39074. %@2@%Poetry is what gets lost in translation.%@NL@%
  39075. %@CR:POETRYFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  39076.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  39077.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  39078.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  39079. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39080. %@NL@%
  39081. %@NL@%
  39082. %@2@%One merit of poetry few persons will deny: it says more and%@EH@%
  39083. in fewer words than prose.%@NL@%
  39084. %@CR:POETRYVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  39085.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  39086.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  39087. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39088. %@NL@%
  39089. %@NL@%
  39090. %@2@%The world, we believe, is pretty well agreed in thinking that%@EH@%
  39091. the shorter a prize poem is, the better.%@NL@%
  39092. %@CR:POETRYMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  39093.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  39094.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  39095. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39096. %@NL@%
  39097. %@NL@%
  39098. %@2@%Prose on certain occasions can bear a great deal of poetry;%@EH@%
  39099. on the other hand, poetry sinks and swoons under a moderate weight
  39100. of prose.%@NL@%
  39101. %@CR:POETRYLandor    @%%@NL@%
  39102.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  39103.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  39104. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39105. %@NL@%
  39106. %@NL@%
  39107. %@2@%Writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down.%@NL@%
  39108. %@CR:POETRYFrost2    @%%@NL@%
  39109.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  39110.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  39111. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39112. %@NL@%
  39113. %@NL@%
  39114. %@2@%Poetry should surprise by a fine excess and not by singularity - it%@EH@%
  39115. should strike the Reader as wording of his own highest thoughts,
  39116. and appear almost a Remembrance.%@NL@%
  39117. %@CR:POETRYKeats     @%%@NL@%
  39118.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  39119.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39120. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39121. %@NL@%
  39122. %@NL@%
  39123. %@2@%Science is for those who learn; poetry, for those who know.%@NL@%
  39124. %@CR:POETRYRoux      @%%@NL@%
  39125.                                                    Joseph Roux (1834-1886)%@NL@%
  39126.                                                      French priest, writer%@NL@%
  39127. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39128. %@NL@%
  39129. %@NL@%
  39130. %@2@%Knowledge of the subject is to the poet what durable materials%@EH@%
  39131. are to the architect.%@NL@%
  39132. %@CR:POETRYJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  39133.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  39134.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  39135. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39136. %@NL@%
  39137. %@NL@%
  39138. %@2@%The roaring of the wind is my wife and the stars through the%@EH@%
  39139. window pane are my children. The mighty abstract idea I have of
  39140. beauty in all things stifles the more divided and minute domestic
  39141. happiness.%@NL@%
  39142. %@CR:POETRYKeats     @%%@NL@%
  39143.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  39144.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39145. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39146. %@NL@%
  39147. %@NL@%
  39148. %@2@%These poems, with all their crudities, doubts, and confusions,%@EH@%
  39149. are written for the love of Man and in praise of God, and I'd be
  39150. a damn' fool if they weren't.%@NL@%
  39151. %@CR:POETRYThomas1   @%%@NL@%
  39152.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  39153.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  39154. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39155. %@NL@%
  39156. %@NL@%
  39157. %@2@%After all, the commonplaces are the great poetic truths.%@NL@%
  39158. %@CR:POETRYStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  39159.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  39160.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  39161. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39162. %@NL@%
  39163. %@NL@%
  39164. %@2@%Poetry is a mixture of common sense, which not all have, with%@EH@%
  39165. an uncommon sense, which very few have.%@NL@%
  39166. %@CR:POETRYMasefield @%%@NL@%
  39167.                                                 John Masefield (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  39168.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  39169. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39170. %@NL@%
  39171. %@NL@%
  39172. %@2@%The mind that finds its way to wild places is the poet's; but%@EH@%
  39173. the mind that never finds its way back is the lunatic's.%@NL@%
  39174. %@CR:POETRYChesterton@%%@NL@%
  39175.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  39176.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  39177. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39178. %@NL@%
  39179. %@NL@%
  39180. %@2@%Perhaps no person can be a poet, or can even enjoy poetry,%@EH@%
  39181. without a certain unsoundness of mind.%@NL@%
  39182. %@CR:POETRYMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  39183.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  39184.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  39185. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39186. %@NL@%
  39187. %@NL@%
  39188. %@2@%Poetry is the language of a state of crisis.%@NL@%
  39189. %@CR:POETRYMallarme  @%%@NL@%
  39190.                                              Stephane Mallarme (1842-1898)%@NL@%
  39191.                                                      French Symbolist poet%@NL@%
  39192. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39193. %@NL@%
  39194. %@NL@%
  39195. %@2@%Poetry is devil's wine.%@NL@%
  39196. %@CR:POETRYSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  39197.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  39198.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  39199. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39200. %@NL@%
  39201. %@NL@%
  39202. %@2@%The poet's business is not to save the soul of man but to make%@EH@%
  39203. it worth saving.%@NL@%
  39204. %@CR:POETRYFlecker   @%%@NL@%
  39205.                                            James Elroy Flecker (1884-1915)%@NL@%
  39206.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39207. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39208. %@NL@%
  39209. %@NL@%
  39210. %@2@%Poetry is the language in which man explores his own amazement.%@NL@%
  39211. %@CR:POETRYFry       @%%@NL@%
  39212.                                                  Christopher Fry (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  39213.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  39214. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39215. %@NL@%
  39216. %@NL@%
  39217. %@2@%Poetry should be great and unobtrusive, a thing which enters%@EH@%
  39218. into one's soul, and does not startle or amaze it with itself,
  39219. but with its subject.%@NL@%
  39220. %@CR:POETRYKeats     @%%@NL@%
  39221.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  39222.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39223. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39224. %@NL@%
  39225. %@NL@%
  39226. %@2@%Publishing a volume of verse is like dropping a rose petal%@EH@%
  39227. down the Grand Canyon and waiting for the echo.%@NL@%
  39228. %@CR:POETRYMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  39229.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  39230.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  39231. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39232. %@NL@%
  39233. %@NL@%
  39234. %@2@%Poetry has never brought in enough to buy shoe-strings.%@NL@%
  39235. %@CR:POETRYWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  39236.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  39237.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39238. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39239. %@NL@%
  39240. %@NL@%
  39241. %@2@%There's no money in poetry, but then there's no poetry in money%@EH@%
  39242. either.%@NL@%
  39243. %@CR:POETRYGraves    @%%@NL@%
  39244.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  39245.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  39246. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39247. %@NL@%
  39248. %@NL@%
  39249. %@2@%A poem is not necessarily obscure because it does not aim to%@EH@%
  39250. be popular. It is enough if a work be perspicuous to those for
  39251. whom it is written.%@NL@%
  39252. %@CR:POETRYColeridge @%%@NL@%
  39253.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  39254.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39255. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39256. %@NL@%
  39257. %@NL@%
  39258. %@2@%The one man who should never attempt an explanation of a poem%@EH@%
  39259. is its author. If the poem can be improved by its author's explanations
  39260. it never should have been published.%@NL@%
  39261. %@CR:POETRYMacLeish  @%%@NL@%
  39262.                                             Archibald MacLeish (1892-1982)%@NL@%
  39263.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  39264. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39265. %@NL@%
  39266. %@NL@%
  39267.      %@2@%Each venture%@NL@%
  39268.      Is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate%@NL@%
  39269.      With shabby equipment always deteriorating%@NL@%
  39270.      In the general mess of imprecision of feeling.%@NL@%
  39271. %@CR:POETRYEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  39272.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  39273.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  39274. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39275. %@NL@%
  39276. %@NL@%
  39277.      %@2@%When you are old and gray and full of sleep,%@NL@%
  39278.      And nodding by the fire, take down this book.%@NL@%
  39279. %@CR:POETRYYeats     @%%@NL@%
  39280.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  39281.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  39282. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39283. %@NL@%
  39284. %@NL@%
  39285.      %@2@%Not marble nor the gilded monuments%@NL@%
  39286.      Of princes shall outlive this powerful rhyme.%@NL@%
  39287. %@CR:POETRYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  39288.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  39289.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  39290. %@AS@%                                                                    Poetry%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39291. %@NL@%
  39292. %@NL@%
  39293. %@NL@%
  39294. %@1@%%@AS@%Poets%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  39295. %@CR:POETS           @%%@NL@%
  39296. %@2@%See:%@QR:Poets@%%@NL@%
  39297.      %@AB@%Lord Byron%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           4f877@%%@NL@%
  39298.      Plagiarism: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          1dd095@%%@NL@%
  39299.      Wine: %@AB@%Horace%@AE@%%@BO:          2b2b74@%%@NL@%
  39300. %@NL@%
  39301. %@2@%I hate the whole race  . . .  There is no believing a word they%@EH@%
  39302. say - your professional poets, I mean - there never existed
  39303. a more worthless set than Byron and his friends for example.%@NL@%
  39304. %@CR:POETS DukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  39305.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  39306.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  39307. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39308. %@NL@%
  39309. %@NL@%
  39310.      %@2@%Sir, I admit your general rule,%@NL@%
  39311.      That every poet is a fool,%@NL@%
  39312.      But you yourself may serve to show it,%@NL@%
  39313.      That every fool is not a poet.%@NL@%
  39314. %@CR:POETS Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  39315.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  39316.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39317. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39318. %@NL@%
  39319. %@NL@%
  39320. %@2@%Of course poets have morals and manners of their own.%@NL@%
  39321. %@CR:POETS Hardy     @%%@NL@%
  39322.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  39323.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  39324. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39325. %@NL@%
  39326. %@NL@%
  39327. %@2@%Idleness, that is the curse of other men, is the nurse of poets.%@NL@%
  39328. %@CR:POETS Cresswell @%%@NL@%
  39329.                                          Walter D'Arcy Cresswell (b. 1896)%@NL@%
  39330.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  39331. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39332. %@NL@%
  39333. %@NL@%
  39334. %@2@%The man who does not betake himself at once and desperately%@EH@%
  39335. to sawing is called a loafer, though he may be knocking at the
  39336. doors of heaven all the while.%@NL@%
  39337. %@CR:POETS Thoreau   @%%@NL@%
  39338.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  39339.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  39340. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39341. %@NL@%
  39342. %@NL@%
  39343. %@2@%Could a man live by it, it were not unpleasant employment to%@EH@%
  39344. be a poet.%@NL@%
  39345. %@CR:POETS Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  39346.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  39347.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  39348. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39349. %@NL@%
  39350. %@NL@%
  39351. %@2@%To be a poet is a condition rather than a profession.%@NL@%
  39352. %@CR:POETS Graves    @%%@NL@%
  39353.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  39354.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  39355. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39356. %@NL@%
  39357. %@NL@%
  39358. %@2@%God's most candid critics are those of his children whom he%@EH@%
  39359. has made poets.%@NL@%
  39360. %@CR:POETS Raleigh2  @%%@NL@%
  39361.                                             Sir Walter Raleigh (1861-1922)%@NL@%
  39362.                                                           British academic%@NL@%
  39363. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39364. %@NL@%
  39365. %@NL@%
  39366. %@2@%Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world.%@NL@%
  39367. %@CR:POETS Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  39368.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  39369.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39370. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39371. %@NL@%
  39372. %@NL@%
  39373. %@2@%Good artists exist simply in what they make, and consequently%@EH@%
  39374. are perfectly uninteresting in what they are. A really great poet
  39375. is the most unpoetical of all creatures. But inferior poets are
  39376. absolutely fascinating. The worse their rhymes are, the more picturesque
  39377. they look. The mere fact of having published a book of second-rate
  39378. sonnets makes a man quite irresistible. He lives the poetry that
  39379. he cannot write. The others write the poetry that they dare not
  39380. realize.%@NL@%
  39381. %@CR:POETS Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  39382.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  39383.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  39384. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39385. %@NL@%
  39386. %@NL@%
  39387. %@2@%Who shall measure the heat and violence of the poet's heart%@EH@%
  39388. when caught and tangled in a woman's body?%@NL@%
  39389. %@CR:POETS Woolf     @%%@NL@%
  39390.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  39391.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  39392. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39393. %@NL@%
  39394. %@NL@%
  39395. %@2@%As fire is kindled by fire, so is a poet's mind kindled by%@EH@%
  39396. contact with a brother poet.%@NL@%
  39397. %@CR:POETS Keble     @%%@NL@%
  39398.                                                     John Keble (1792-1866)%@NL@%
  39399.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  39400. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39401. %@NL@%
  39402. %@NL@%
  39403.      %@2@%I stood among them, but not of them; in a shroud%@NL@%
  39404.      Of thoughts which were not their thoughts.%@NL@%
  39405. %@CR:POETS Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  39406.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  39407.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39408. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39409. %@NL@%
  39410. %@NL@%
  39411. %@2@%That is what all poets do: they talk to themselves out loud;%@EH@%
  39412. and the world overhears them. But it's horribly lonely not to hear
  39413. someone else talk sometimes.%@NL@%
  39414. %@CR:POETS Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  39415.                                                        Marchbanks, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39416.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  39417.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  39418. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39419. %@NL@%
  39420. %@NL@%
  39421.      %@2@%I am two fools, I know,%@NL@%
  39422.      For loving, and for saying so%@NL@%
  39423.      In whining poetry.%@NL@%
  39424. %@CR:POETS Donne     @%%@NL@%
  39425.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  39426.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  39427. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39428. %@NL@%
  39429. %@NL@%
  39430. %@2@%Dr Donne's verses are like the peace of God: they pass all%@EH@%
  39431. understanding.%@NL@%
  39432. %@CR:POETS JamesI    @%%@NL@%
  39433.                                        King James I of England (1566-1625)%@NL@%
  39434. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39435. %@NL@%
  39436. %@NL@%
  39437. %@2@%Poets utter great and wise things which they do not themselves%@EH@%
  39438. understand.%@NL@%
  39439. %@CR:POETS Plato     @%%@NL@%
  39440.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  39441.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  39442. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39443. %@NL@%
  39444. %@NL@%
  39445. %@2@%Great poets are obscure for two opposite reasons; now, because%@EH@%
  39446. they are talking about something too large for anyone to understand,
  39447. and now again because they are talking about something too small
  39448. for anyone to see.%@NL@%
  39449. %@CR:POETS Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  39450.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  39451.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  39452. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39453. %@NL@%
  39454. %@NL@%
  39455. %@2@%No man was ever yet a great poet without being at the same%@EH@%
  39456. time a profound philosopher.%@NL@%
  39457. %@CR:POETS Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  39458.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  39459.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39460. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39461. %@NL@%
  39462. %@NL@%
  39463. %@2@%Being a professor of poetry is rather like being a Kentucky%@EH@%
  39464. colonel. It's not really a subject one can profess - unless
  39465. one hires oneself out to write pieces for funerals or the marriages
  39466. of dons.%@NL@%
  39467. %@CR:POETS Auden     @%%@NL@%
  39468.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  39469.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  39470. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39471. %@NL@%
  39472. %@NL@%
  39473. %@2@%Nine-tenths of English poetic literature is the result either%@EH@%
  39474. of vulgar careerism or of a poet trying to keep his hand in. Most
  39475. poets are dead by their late twenties.%@NL@%
  39476. %@CR:POETS Graves    @%%@NL@%
  39477.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  39478.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  39479. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39480. %@NL@%
  39481. %@NL@%
  39482.      %@2@%He lied with such a fervour of intention%@NL@%
  39483.      There was no doubt he earned his laureate pension.%@NL@%
  39484. %@CR:POETS Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  39485.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  39486.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39487. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39488. %@NL@%
  39489. %@NL@%
  39490. %@2@%A taste for drawing-rooms has spoiled more poets than ever%@EH@%
  39491. did a taste for gutters.%@NL@%
  39492. %@CR:POETS Beer      @%%@NL@%
  39493.                                                    Thomas Beer (1889-1940)%@NL@%
  39494.                                                American essayist, novelist%@NL@%
  39495. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39496. %@NL@%
  39497. %@NL@%
  39498.      %@2@%But I, being poor, have only my dreams.%@NL@%
  39499.      I have spread my dreams under your feet;%@NL@%
  39500.      Tread softly, because you tread on my dreams.%@NL@%
  39501. %@CR:POETS Yeats     @%%@NL@%
  39502.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  39503.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  39504. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39505. %@NL@%
  39506. %@NL@%
  39507. %@2@%If you want to write poetry you must earn a living some other%@EH@%
  39508. way.%@NL@%
  39509. %@CR:POETS Eliot2    @%%@NL@%
  39510.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  39511.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  39512. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39513. %@NL@%
  39514. %@NL@%
  39515. %@2@%The whole of my returns from the writing trade not amounting%@EH@%
  39516. to seven score pounds.%@NL@%
  39517. %@CR:POETS Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  39518.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  39519.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39520. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39521. %@NL@%
  39522. %@NL@%
  39523. %@2@%In his youth, Wordsworth sympathised with the French Revolution,%@EH@%
  39524. went to France, wrote good poetry, and had a natural daughter.
  39525. At this period, he was a "bad" man. Then he became "good,"
  39526. abandoned his daughter, adopted correct principles, and wrote bad
  39527. poetry.%@NL@%
  39528. %@CR:POETS Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  39529.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  39530.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  39531. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39532. %@NL@%
  39533. %@NL@%
  39534. %@2@%The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels%@EH@%
  39535. and God, and at liberty when of the Devils and Hell, is because
  39536. he was a true poet, and of the Devil's party without knowing it.%@NL@%
  39537. %@CR:POETS Blake     @%%@NL@%
  39538.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  39539.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  39540. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39541. %@NL@%
  39542. %@NL@%
  39543. %@2@%His imagination resembled the wings of an ostrich. It enabled%@EH@%
  39544. him to run, though not to soar.%@NL@%
  39545. %@CR:POETS Macaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  39546.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  39547.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  39548.                                                                  of Dryden%@NL@%
  39549. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39550. %@NL@%
  39551. %@NL@%
  39552.      %@2@%Cibber! write all thy Verses upon%@NL@%
  39553.      Glasses,%@NL@%
  39554.      The only way to save 'em from our%@NL@%
  39555.      Arses.%@NL@%
  39556. %@CR:POETS Pope      @%%@NL@%
  39557.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  39558.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  39559.                                                           of Colley Cibber%@NL@%
  39560. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39561. %@NL@%
  39562. %@NL@%
  39563. %@2@%Careless thinking carefully versified.%@NL@%
  39564. %@CR:POETS Lowell2   @%%@NL@%
  39565.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  39566.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  39567.                                                          of Alexander Pope%@NL@%
  39568. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39569. %@NL@%
  39570. %@NL@%
  39571. %@2@%In poetry, no less than in life, he is "a beautiful and ineffectual%@EH@%
  39572. angel, beating in the void his luminous wings in vain."%@NL@%
  39573. %@CR:POETS Arnold2   @%%@NL@%
  39574.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  39575.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  39576.                                                                 of Shelley%@NL@%
  39577. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39578. %@NL@%
  39579. %@NL@%
  39580. %@2@%He found in stones the sermons he had already hidden there.%@NL@%
  39581. %@CR:POETS Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  39582.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  39583.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  39584.                                                              of Wordsworth%@NL@%
  39585. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39586. %@NL@%
  39587. %@NL@%
  39588. %@2@%I listen to nature and mankind with astonishment, and I copy%@EH@%
  39589. what they teach me without pedantry and without giving things meanings
  39590. that I can't really be certain they have. Nobody, not even the
  39591. poet, holds the secret of the world. But people's sufferings, the
  39592. constant injustice that flows through the world, my own body and
  39593. my own thoughts, prevent me from moving my house and dwelling among
  39594. the stars.%@NL@%
  39595. %@CR:POETS Lorca     @%%@NL@%
  39596.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  39597.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  39598. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39599. %@NL@%
  39600. %@NL@%
  39601.      %@2@%Magnificently unprepared%@NL@%
  39602.      For the long littleness of life.%@NL@%
  39603. %@CR:POETS Cornford2 @%%@NL@%
  39604.                                               Frances Cornford (1886-1960)%@NL@%
  39605.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  39606.                                                           of Rupert Brooke%@NL@%
  39607. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39608. %@NL@%
  39609. %@NL@%
  39610.      %@2@%Some rhyme a neebor's name to lash;%@NL@%
  39611.      Some rhyme (vain thought!) for needfu' cash;%@NL@%
  39612.      Some rhyme to court the country clash,%@NL@%
  39613.      An' raise a din;%@NL@%
  39614.      For me, an aim I never fash;%@NL@%
  39615.      I rhyme for fun.%@NL@%
  39616. %@CR:POETS Burns     @%%@NL@%
  39617.                                                   Robert Burns (1759-1796)%@NL@%
  39618.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  39619. %@AS@%                                                                     Poets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39620. %@NL@%
  39621. %@NL@%
  39622. %@NL@%
  39623. %@1@%%@AS@%The Police%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  39624. %@CR:THEPOLICE       @%%@NL@%
  39625. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Police@%%@NL@%
  39626.      %@AB@%Killjoys%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1660da@%%@NL@%
  39627. %@NL@%
  39628.      %@2@%%@AI@%Con el alma de charol%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39629.      %@AI@%vienen por la carretera.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39630.      %@AI@%Jorobados y nocturnos,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39631.      %@AI@%por donde animan ordenan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39632.      %@AI@%silencios de goma oscura%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39633.      %@AI@%y miedos de fina arena.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39634. %@NL@%
  39635. %@2@%With their souls of patent leather they come down the road.
  39636. Hunched and nocturnal, where they breathe they impose silence of
  39637. dark rubber and fear of fine sand.%@NL@%
  39638. %@CR:THEPOLLorca     @%%@NL@%
  39639.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  39640.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  39641. %@AS@%                                                                The Police%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39642. %@NL@%
  39643. %@NL@%
  39644. %@2@%I'm not against the police; I'm just afraid of them.%@NL@%
  39645. %@CR:THEPOLHitchcock @%%@NL@%
  39646.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  39647.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  39648. %@AS@%                                                                The Police%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39649. %@NL@%
  39650. %@NL@%
  39651. %@2@%I have never seen a situation so dismal that a policeman%@EH@%
  39652. couldn't make it worse.%@NL@%
  39653. %@CR:THEPOLBehan     @%%@NL@%
  39654.                                                  Brendan Behan (1923-1964)%@NL@%
  39655.                                                           Irish playwright%@NL@%
  39656. %@AS@%                                                                The Police%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39657. %@NL@%
  39658. %@NL@%
  39659. %@2@%You are thought here to be the most senseless and fit man for%@EH@%
  39660. the constable of the watch.%@NL@%
  39661. %@CR:THEPOLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  39662.                                           Dogberry, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39663.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  39664.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  39665. %@AS@%                                                                The Police%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39666. %@NL@%
  39667. %@NL@%
  39668. %@2@%Every society gets the kind of criminal it deserves. What is%@EH@%
  39669. equally true is that every community gets the kind of law enforcement
  39670. it insists on.%@NL@%
  39671. %@CR:THEPOLKennedy2  @%%@NL@%
  39672.                                                 Robert Kennedy (1925-1968)%@NL@%
  39673.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  39674. %@AS@%                                                                The Police%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39675. %@NL@%
  39676. %@NL@%
  39677. %@NL@%
  39678. %@1@%%@AS@%Political Parties%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  39679. %@CR:POLITICALPARTIES@%%@NL@%
  39680. %@2@%See:%@QR:Political Parties@%%@NL@%
  39681.      %@AB@%Elections%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c3b3f@%%@NL@%
  39682.      Platitudes: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          1de047@%%@NL@%
  39683.      Politicians: %@AB@%Darling%@AE@%%@BO:          1ec719@%%@NL@%
  39684.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          209299@%%@NL@%
  39685.      Unemployment: %@AB@%Thatcher%@AE@%%@BO:          29b2b4@%%@NL@%
  39686. %@NL@%
  39687. %@2@%When great questions end, little parties begin.%@NL@%
  39688. %@CR:POLITIBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  39689.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  39690.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  39691. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39692. %@NL@%
  39693. %@NL@%
  39694. %@2@%Party is the madness of many, for the gain of a few.%@NL@%
  39695. %@CR:POLITISwift     @%%@NL@%
  39696.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  39697.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  39698. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39699. %@NL@%
  39700. %@NL@%
  39701. %@2@%A sect or a party is an elegant incognito devised to save a%@EH@%
  39702. man from the vexation of thinking.%@NL@%
  39703. %@CR:POLITIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  39704.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  39705.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  39706. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39707. %@NL@%
  39708. %@NL@%
  39709. %@2@%The best party is but a kind of conspiracy against the rest%@EH@%
  39710. of the nation.%@NL@%
  39711. %@CR:POLITISavile    @%%@NL@%
  39712.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  39713.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  39714. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39715. %@NL@%
  39716. %@NL@%
  39717. %@2@%The party should agree to vent nothing but the truth for three%@EH@%
  39718. months together, which will give them credit for six months' lying
  39719. afterwards.%@NL@%
  39720. %@CR:POLITIArbuthnot @%%@NL@%
  39721.                                                 John Arbuthnot (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  39722.                                                  English writer, physician%@NL@%
  39723. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39724. %@NL@%
  39725. %@NL@%
  39726. %@2@%The Democratic Party is like a mule - without pride of ancestry%@EH@%
  39727. or hope of posterity.%@NL@%
  39728. %@CR:POLITIDonnelly  @%%@NL@%
  39729.                                              Ignatius Donnelly (1831-1901)%@NL@%
  39730.                                                American writer, politician%@NL@%
  39731. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39732. %@NL@%
  39733. %@NL@%
  39734. %@2@%As usual the Liberals offer a mixture of sound and original%@EH@%
  39735. ideas. Unfortunately none of the sound ideas is original and none
  39736. of the original is sound.%@NL@%
  39737. %@CR:POLITIMacmillan @%%@NL@%
  39738.                                Harold Macmillan, Lord Stockton (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  39739.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  39740. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39741. %@NL@%
  39742. %@NL@%
  39743. %@2@%The Labour Party is a moral crusade or it is nothing.%@NL@%
  39744. %@CR:POLITIWilson3   @%%@NL@%
  39745.                                                    Harold Wilson (b. 1916)%@NL@%
  39746.                                  British Labour politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  39747. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39748. %@NL@%
  39749. %@NL@%
  39750. %@2@%We have never yet had a Labour Government that knew what taking%@EH@%
  39751. power really means; they always act like second-class citizens.%@NL@%
  39752. %@CR:POLITIRussell2  @%%@NL@%
  39753.                                                   Dora Russell (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  39754.                                                 British author, campaigner%@NL@%
  39755. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39756. %@NL@%
  39757. %@NL@%
  39758. %@2@%The lounge of the main hotel is full of jollity, with large%@EH@%
  39759. comfortable men sitting in braces; the bar is packed with talkative
  39760. intellectuals, full of witty disloyalties.%@NL@%
  39761. %@CR:POLITISampson   @%%@NL@%
  39762.                                                  Anthony Sampson (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  39763.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  39764.                                             at the Labour Party Conference%@NL@%
  39765. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39766. %@NL@%
  39767. %@NL@%
  39768. %@2@%What a genius the Labour Party has for cutting itself in half%@EH@%
  39769. and letting the two parts writhe in public.%@NL@%
  39770. %@CR:POLITIConnor    @%%@NL@%
  39771.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  39772.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  39773. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39774. %@NL@%
  39775. %@NL@%
  39776. %@2@%Growing older, I have lost the need to be political, which%@EH@%
  39777. means, in this country, the need to be left. I am driven into grudging
  39778. toleration of the Conservative Party because it is the party of
  39779. nonpolitics, of resistance to politics.%@NL@%
  39780. %@CR:POLITIAmis      @%%@NL@%
  39781.                                                    Kingsley Amis (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  39782.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  39783. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39784. %@NL@%
  39785. %@NL@%
  39786. %@2@%In order to succeed in our party the backbencher must be as%@EH@%
  39787. wise as a dove and as innocent as a serpent  . . .  Not to be a monetarist
  39788. in today's party is to suffer from a severe handicap; it is the
  39789. political equivalent of being young, black, and unemployed.%@NL@%
  39790. %@CR:POLITICritchley @%%@NL@%
  39791.                                                 Julian Critchley (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  39792.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  39793.                                                  of the Conservative Party%@NL@%
  39794. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39795. %@NL@%
  39796. %@NL@%
  39797. %@2@%A Conservative government is an organised hypocrisy.%@NL@%
  39798. %@CR:POLITIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  39799.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  39800.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  39801. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39802. %@NL@%
  39803. %@NL@%
  39804. %@2@%No party is as bad as its leaders.%@NL@%
  39805. %@CR:POLITIRogers3   @%%@NL@%
  39806.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  39807.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  39808. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39809. %@NL@%
  39810. %@NL@%
  39811. %@2@%Any party which takes credit for the rain must not be surprised%@EH@%
  39812. if its opponents blame it for the drought.%@NL@%
  39813. %@CR:POLITIMorrow    @%%@NL@%
  39814.                                               Dwight W. Morrow (1873-1931)%@NL@%
  39815.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  39816. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39817. %@NL@%
  39818. %@NL@%
  39819. %@2@%All political parties die at last of swallowing their own lies.%@NL@%
  39820. %@CR:POLITIArbuthnot @%%@NL@%
  39821.                                                 John Arbuthnot (1667-1735)%@NL@%
  39822.                                                  English writer, physician%@NL@%
  39823. %@AS@%                                                         Political Parties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39824. %@NL@%
  39825. %@NL@%
  39826. %@NL@%
  39827. %@1@%%@AS@%Politicians%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  39828. %@CR:POLITICIANS     @%%@NL@%
  39829. %@2@%See:%@QR:Politicians@%%@NL@%
  39830.      Crises: %@AB@%Kissinger%@AE@%%@BO:           8ea76@%%@NL@%
  39831.      Journalism: %@AB@%Simonds%@AE@%%@BO:          16202c@%%@NL@%
  39832.      %@AB@%The President%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1fee0e@%%@NL@%
  39833.      The Press: %@AB@%Nixon%@AE@%%@BO:          20104b@%%@NL@%
  39834.      %@AB@%Ronald Reagan%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          21ae37@%%@NL@%
  39835.      %@AB@%Margaret Thatcher%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          286bf0@%%@NL@%
  39836.      Wealth: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          2ae509@%%@NL@%
  39837. %@NL@%
  39838. %@2@%Oh Lord, grant that we may not despise our rulers; and grant,%@EH@%
  39839. oh Lord, that they may not act so we can't help it.%@NL@%
  39840. %@CR:POLITIBeecher2  @%%@NL@%
  39841.                                                  Lyman Beecher (1775-1863)%@NL@%
  39842.                                                          American preacher%@NL@%
  39843. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39844. %@NL@%
  39845. %@NL@%
  39846. %@2@%There have been many great men that have flattered the people,%@EH@%
  39847. who ne'er loved them.%@NL@%
  39848. %@CR:POLITIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  39849.                                                 Second Officer, %@AI@%Coriolanus%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39850.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  39851.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  39852. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39853. %@NL@%
  39854. %@NL@%
  39855. %@2@%Though it be a foul lie; set it a good face.%@NL@%
  39856. %@CR:POLITIBale      @%%@NL@%
  39857.                                               Bishop John Bale (1495-1563)%@NL@%
  39858.                                            English ecclesiastic, dramatist%@NL@%
  39859. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39860. %@NL@%
  39861. %@NL@%
  39862. %@2@%My choice early in life was either to be a piano-player in%@EH@%
  39863. a whorehouse or a politician. And to tell the truth there's hardly
  39864. any difference.%@NL@%
  39865. %@CR:POLITITruman    @%%@NL@%
  39866.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  39867.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  39868. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39869. %@NL@%
  39870. %@NL@%
  39871. %@2@%He knows nothing; and he thinks he knows everything. That points%@EH@%
  39872. clearly to a political career.%@NL@%
  39873. %@CR:POLITIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  39874.                                                  Undershaft, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39875.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  39876.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  39877. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39878. %@NL@%
  39879. %@NL@%
  39880. %@2@%A politician is an arse upon which everyone has sat except%@EH@%
  39881. a man.%@NL@%
  39882. %@CR:POLITIcummings  @%%@NL@%
  39883.                                                 e. e. cummings (1894-1962)%@NL@%
  39884.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  39885. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39886. %@NL@%
  39887. %@NL@%
  39888. %@2@%Little other than a %@AI@%red-tape%@AE@% talking machine, and unhappy%@EH@%
  39889. bag of parliamentary eloquence.%@NL@%
  39890. %@CR:POLITICarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  39891.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  39892.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  39893. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39894. %@NL@%
  39895. %@NL@%
  39896. %@2@%A sophistical rhetorician, inebriated with the exuberance of%@EH@%
  39897. his own verbosity.%@NL@%
  39898. %@CR:POLITIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  39899.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  39900.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  39901.                                                               of Gladstone%@NL@%
  39902. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39903. %@NL@%
  39904. %@NL@%
  39905. %@2@%The most successful politician is he who says what everybody%@EH@%
  39906. is thinking most often and in the loudest voice.%@NL@%
  39907. %@CR:POLITIRoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  39908.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  39909.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  39910. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39911. %@NL@%
  39912. %@NL@%
  39913. %@2@%Reader, suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member%@EH@%
  39914. of Congress. But I repeat myself.%@NL@%
  39915. %@CR:POLITITwain     @%%@NL@%
  39916.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  39917.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  39918. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39919. %@NL@%
  39920. %@NL@%
  39921. %@2@%A politician is a statesman who approaches every question with%@EH@%
  39922. an open mouth.%@NL@%
  39923. %@CR:POLITIStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  39924.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  39925.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  39926. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39927. %@NL@%
  39928. %@NL@%
  39929. %@2@%A statesman is a politician who is held upright by equal pressure%@EH@%
  39930. from all directions.%@NL@%
  39931. %@CR:POLITIJohnston  @%%@NL@%
  39932.                                               Eric A. Johnston (1896-1963)%@NL@%
  39933.                                                      American entrepreneur%@NL@%
  39934. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39935. %@NL@%
  39936. %@NL@%
  39937. %@2@%A politican thinks of the next election; a statesman, of the%@EH@%
  39938. next generation.%@NL@%
  39939. %@CR:POLITIClarke2   @%%@NL@%
  39940.                                           James Freeman Clarke (1810-1888)%@NL@%
  39941.                                                        American theologian%@NL@%
  39942. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39943. %@NL@%
  39944. %@NL@%
  39945. %@2@%A constitutional statesman is in general a man of common opinions%@EH@%
  39946. and uncommon abilities.%@NL@%
  39947. %@CR:POLITIBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  39948.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  39949.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  39950. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39951. %@NL@%
  39952. %@NL@%
  39953. %@2@%D'ye think that statesmen's kindnesses proceed from any principles%@EH@%
  39954. but their own need?%@NL@%
  39955. %@CR:POLITIHoward2   @%%@NL@%
  39956.                                              Sir Robert Howard (1626-1698)%@NL@%
  39957.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  39958. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39959. %@NL@%
  39960. %@NL@%
  39961. %@2@%A politician will do anything to keep his job - even become%@EH@%
  39962. a patriot.%@NL@%
  39963. %@CR:POLITIHearst    @%%@NL@%
  39964.                                        William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951)%@NL@%
  39965.                                                 American newspaper magnate%@NL@%
  39966. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39967. %@NL@%
  39968. %@NL@%
  39969. %@2@%The tragedy of one successful politician after another is the%@EH@%
  39970. gradual substitution of narcissism for an interest in the community.%@NL@%
  39971. %@CR:POLITIRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  39972.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  39973.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  39974. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39975. %@NL@%
  39976. %@NL@%
  39977. %@2@%Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his%@EH@%
  39978. judgement; and he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices
  39979. it to your opinion.%@NL@%
  39980. %@CR:POLITIBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  39981.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  39982.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  39983. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39984. %@NL@%
  39985. %@NL@%
  39986. %@2@%Politicians are not people who seek power in order to implement%@EH@%
  39987. policies they think necessary. They are people who seek policies
  39988. in order to attain power.%@NL@%
  39989. %@CR:POLITIWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  39990.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  39991.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  39992. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  39993. %@NL@%
  39994. %@NL@%
  39995. %@2@%Our differences are policies, our agreements principles.%@NL@%
  39996. %@CR:POLITIMcKinley  @%%@NL@%
  39997.                                               William McKinley (1843-1901)%@NL@%
  39998.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  39999. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40000. %@NL@%
  40001. %@NL@%
  40002. %@2@%To sacrifice one's honour to one's party is so unselfish an%@EH@%
  40003. act that our most generous statesmen have not hesitated to do it.%@NL@%
  40004. %@CR:POLITIDarling   @%%@NL@%
  40005.                                                   Lord Darling (1849-1936)%@NL@%
  40006.                                                              British judge%@NL@%
  40007. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40008. %@NL@%
  40009. %@NL@%
  40010. %@2@%We all know that Prime Ministers are wedded to the truth, but%@EH@%
  40011. like other wedded couples they sometimes live apart.%@NL@%
  40012. %@CR:POLITIMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  40013.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  40014.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  40015. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40016. %@NL@%
  40017. %@NL@%
  40018. %@2@%An honest politician is one who, when he is bought, will stay%@EH@%
  40019. bought.%@NL@%
  40020. %@CR:POLITICameron2  @%%@NL@%
  40021.                                                  Simon Cameron (1799-1889)%@NL@%
  40022.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  40023. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40024. %@NL@%
  40025. %@NL@%
  40026. %@2@%In fighting politicians you think you are winning and suddenly%@EH@%
  40027. you find you have lost.%@NL@%
  40028. %@CR:POLITIViscountMo@%%@NL@%
  40029.                                            Viscount Montgomery (1887-1976)%@NL@%
  40030.                                                            British soldier%@NL@%
  40031. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40032. %@NL@%
  40033. %@NL@%
  40034. %@2@%He was trying to save both his faces.%@NL@%
  40035. %@CR:POLITIGunther   @%%@NL@%
  40036.                                                   John Gunther (1901-1970)%@NL@%
  40037.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  40038. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40039. %@NL@%
  40040. %@NL@%
  40041. %@2@%Whenever a man has cast a longing eye on offices, a rottenness%@EH@%
  40042. begins in his conduct.%@NL@%
  40043. %@CR:POLITIJefferson @%%@NL@%
  40044.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  40045.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  40046. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40047. %@NL@%
  40048. %@NL@%
  40049. %@2@%There's just one rule for politicians all over the world: Don't%@EH@%
  40050. say in Power what you say in Opposition; if you do, you only have
  40051. to carry out what the other fellows have found impossible.%@NL@%
  40052. %@CR:POLITIGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  40053.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  40054.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  40055. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40056. %@NL@%
  40057. %@NL@%
  40058. %@2@%There are hardly two creatures of a more differing species%@EH@%
  40059. than the same man when pretending to a place and when in possession
  40060. of it.%@NL@%
  40061. %@CR:POLITISavile    @%%@NL@%
  40062.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  40063.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  40064. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40065. %@NL@%
  40066. %@NL@%
  40067. %@2@%To be out of place is not necessarily to be out of power.%@NL@%
  40068. %@CR:POLITIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  40069.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  40070.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  40071. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40072. %@NL@%
  40073. %@NL@%
  40074. %@2@%Resolv'd to ruin or to rule the state.%@NL@%
  40075. %@CR:POLITIDryden    @%%@NL@%
  40076.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  40077.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  40078. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40079. %@NL@%
  40080. %@NL@%
  40081. %@2@%The Right Honourable gentleman is indebted to his memory for%@EH@%
  40082. his jests, and to his imagination for his facts.%@NL@%
  40083. %@CR:POLITISheridan  @%%@NL@%
  40084.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  40085.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  40086. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40087. %@NL@%
  40088. %@NL@%
  40089. %@2@%There is one statesman of the present day of whom I always%@EH@%
  40090. say that he would have escaped making the blunders that he has
  40091. made if he had only ridden more in omnibuses.%@NL@%
  40092. %@CR:POLITIHelps     @%%@NL@%
  40093.                                               Sir Arthur Helps (1813-1875)%@NL@%
  40094.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  40095. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40096. %@NL@%
  40097. %@NL@%
  40098. %@2@%He thinks like a Tory and talks like a Radical, and that's%@EH@%
  40099. so important now-a-days.%@NL@%
  40100. %@CR:POLITIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  40101.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  40102.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  40103. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40104. %@NL@%
  40105. %@NL@%
  40106. %@2@%He was a power politically for years, but he has never got%@EH@%
  40107. prominent enough to have his speeches garbled.%@NL@%
  40108. %@CR:POLITIHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  40109.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  40110.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  40111. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40112. %@NL@%
  40113. %@NL@%
  40114. %@2@%His watchword is always Duty; and he never forgets that the%@EH@%
  40115. nation which lets its duty get on the opposite side to its interest
  40116. is lost.%@NL@%
  40117. %@CR:POLITIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  40118.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  40119.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  40120. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40121. %@NL@%
  40122. %@NL@%
  40123. %@2@%In Pierre Elliot Trudeau Canada has at last produced a political%@EH@%
  40124. leader worthy of assassination.%@NL@%
  40125. %@CR:POLITILayton    @%%@NL@%
  40126.                                                    Irving Layton (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  40127.                                                              Canadian poet%@NL@%
  40128. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40129. %@NL@%
  40130. %@NL@%
  40131. %@2@%You're not an MP, you're a gastronomic pimp.%@NL@%
  40132. %@CR:POLITIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  40133.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40134.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40135.                to a colleague accused of attending too many public dinners%@NL@%
  40136. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40137. %@NL@%
  40138. %@NL@%
  40139. %@2@%He has the lucidity which is the by-product of a fundamentally%@EH@%
  40140. sterile mind.%@NL@%
  40141. %@CR:POLITIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  40142.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40143.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40144.                                     of Neville Chamberlain, prime minister%@NL@%
  40145. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40146. %@NL@%
  40147. %@NL@%
  40148. %@2@%He seems determined to make a trumpet sound like a tin whistle.%@NL@%
  40149. %@CR:POLITIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  40150.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40151.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40152.                                          of Clement Attlee, prime minister%@NL@%
  40153. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40154. %@NL@%
  40155. %@NL@%
  40156. %@2@%The Prime Minister has an absolute genius for putting flamboyant%@EH@%
  40157. labels on empty luggage.%@NL@%
  40158. %@CR:POLITIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  40159.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40160.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40161.                                                        of Harold Macmillan%@NL@%
  40162. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40163. %@NL@%
  40164. %@NL@%
  40165. %@2@%Such a gift horse to his opponents that it would be ungrateful%@EH@%
  40166. for us to look him in the mouth.%@NL@%
  40167. %@CR:POLITIBonhamCart@%%@NL@%
  40168.                             Violet Bonham-Carter, Lady Asquith (1887-1969)%@NL@%
  40169.                                                 British Liberal politician%@NL@%
  40170.                                                           of Aneurin Bevan%@NL@%
  40171. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40172. %@NL@%
  40173. %@NL@%
  40174. %@2@%Women MPs have struck the bell of fame with a putty hammer.%@NL@%
  40175. %@CR:POLITIConnor    @%%@NL@%
  40176.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  40177.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  40178. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40179. %@NL@%
  40180. %@NL@%
  40181. %@2@% . . .  notwithstanding all my violence in politicks and talking%@EH@%
  40182. so much on that subject, I perfectly agree with you that no woman
  40183. has any business to meddle with that or any other serious business,
  40184. farther than giving her opinion (if she is ask'd).%@NL@%
  40185. %@CR:POLITIBessboroug@%%@NL@%
  40186.                                               Lady Bessborough (1720-1760)%@NL@%
  40187.                                                   letter to Lord Granville%@NL@%
  40188. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40189. %@NL@%
  40190. %@NL@%
  40191. %@2@%I wouldn't want to mislead you by doing other than saying however%@EH@%
  40192. easy it would be for me to answer the question you have asked,
  40193. it is not fair for me to go further than I have. And I would not
  40194. read too much into that.%@NL@%
  40195. %@CR:POLITIMcDonald  @%%@NL@%
  40196.                                                               Ian McDonald%@NL@%
  40197.                                      British Ministry of Defense spokesman%@NL@%
  40198.                                                                       1982%@NL@%
  40199. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40200. %@NL@%
  40201. %@NL@%
  40202. %@2@%As I interpret the President, we're now at the end of the beginning%@EH@%
  40203. of the upturn of the downturn.%@NL@%
  40204. %@CR:POLITIKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  40205.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  40206.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  40207.                                                               when Senator%@NL@%
  40208. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40209. %@NL@%
  40210. %@NL@%
  40211. %@2@%There are two problems in my life. The political ones are insoluble%@EH@%
  40212. and the economic ones are incomprehensible.%@NL@%
  40213. %@CR:POLITIDouglasHom@%%@NL@%
  40214.                                            Sir Alec Douglas-Home (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  40215.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  40216. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40217. %@NL@%
  40218. %@NL@%
  40219. %@2@%Exhortation to other people to %@AI@%do something%@AE@% is the last resort%@EH@%
  40220. of politicians who are at a loss to know what to do themselves.%@NL@%
  40221. %@CR:POLITIChambers  @%%@NL@%
  40222.                                              Sir Paul Chambers (1904-1981)%@NL@%
  40223.                                                      British industrialist%@NL@%
  40224. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40225. %@NL@%
  40226. %@NL@%
  40227.      %@2@%Get thee glass eyes,%@NL@%
  40228.      And, like a scurvy politician, seem%@NL@%
  40229.      To see the things thou dost not.%@NL@%
  40230. %@CR:POLITIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  40231.                                                            Lear, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40232.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  40233.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  40234. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40235. %@NL@%
  40236. %@NL@%
  40237. %@2@%Can there be a more horrible object in existence than an eloquent%@EH@%
  40238. man not speaking the truth?%@NL@%
  40239. %@CR:POLITICarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  40240.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  40241.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  40242. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40243. %@NL@%
  40244. %@NL@%
  40245. %@2@%No man, I fear, can effect great benefits for his country without%@EH@%
  40246. some sacrifice of the minor virtues.%@NL@%
  40247. %@CR:POLITISmith8    @%%@NL@%
  40248.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  40249.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  40250. %@AS@%                                                               Politicians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40251. %@NL@%
  40252. %@NL@%
  40253. %@NL@%
  40254. %@1@%%@AS@%Politics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40255. %@CR:POLITICS        @%%@NL@%
  40256. %@2@%See:%@QR:Politics@%%@NL@%
  40257.      %@AB@%Government%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1154fc@%%@NL@%
  40258.      %@AB@%Parliament%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1cd644@%%@NL@%
  40259.      Persuasion: %@AB@%Junius%@AE@%%@BO:          1d7333@%%@NL@%
  40260. %@NL@%
  40261. %@2@%Man is by nature a political animal.%@NL@%
  40262. %@CR:POLITIAristotle @%%@NL@%
  40263.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  40264.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  40265. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40266. %@NL@%
  40267. %@NL@%
  40268. %@2@%Politics is the science of how who gets what, when and why.%@NL@%
  40269. %@CR:POLITIHillman   @%%@NL@%
  40270.                                                 Sidney Hillman (1887-1946)%@NL@%
  40271.                                                    American trade unionist%@NL@%
  40272. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40273. %@NL@%
  40274. %@NL@%
  40275. %@2@%He who gives food to the people will win.%@NL@%
  40276. %@CR:POLITIWalesa    @%%@NL@%
  40277.                                                      Lech Walesa (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  40278.                                                   Polish Solidarity leader%@NL@%
  40279. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40280. %@NL@%
  40281. %@NL@%
  40282. %@2@%Magnanimity in politics is not seldom the truest wisdom; and%@EH@%
  40283. a great empire and little minds go ill together.%@NL@%
  40284. %@CR:POLITIBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  40285.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  40286.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  40287. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40288. %@NL@%
  40289. %@NL@%
  40290. %@2@%Politics is the diversion of trivial men who, when they succeed%@EH@%
  40291. at it, become important in the eyes of more trivial men.%@NL@%
  40292. %@CR:POLITINathan    @%%@NL@%
  40293.                                             George Jean Nathan (1882-1958)%@NL@%
  40294.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  40295. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40296. %@NL@%
  40297. %@NL@%
  40298. %@2@%I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly%@EH@%
  40299. that events have controlled me.%@NL@%
  40300. %@CR:POLITILincoln   @%%@NL@%
  40301.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  40302.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  40303. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40304. %@NL@%
  40305. %@NL@%
  40306. %@2@%Politics is not an exact science.%@NL@%
  40307. %@CR:POLITIBismarck  @%%@NL@%
  40308.                                       Prince Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)%@NL@%
  40309.                                                         Prussian statesman%@NL@%
  40310. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40311. %@NL@%
  40312. %@NL@%
  40313. %@2@%Practical politics consists in ignoring facts.%@NL@%
  40314. %@CR:POLITIAdams2    @%%@NL@%
  40315.                                                 Henry B. Adams (1838-1918)%@NL@%
  40316.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  40317. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40318. %@NL@%
  40319. %@NL@%
  40320. %@2@%I am invariably of the politics of people at whose table I%@EH@%
  40321. sit, or beneath whose roof I sleep.%@NL@%
  40322. %@CR:POLITIBorrow    @%%@NL@%
  40323.                                                  George Borrow (1803-1881)%@NL@%
  40324.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  40325. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40326. %@NL@%
  40327. %@NL@%
  40328. %@2@%I could not be leading a religious life unless I identified%@EH@%
  40329. myself with the whole of mankind, and that I could not do unless
  40330. I took part in politics.%@NL@%
  40331. %@CR:POLITIGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  40332.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  40333.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  40334. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40335. %@NL@%
  40336. %@NL@%
  40337. %@2@%Religion is organized to satisfy and guide the soul - politics%@EH@%
  40338. does the same thing for the body.%@NL@%
  40339. %@CR:POLITICary      @%%@NL@%
  40340.                                                     Joyce Cary (1888-1957)%@NL@%
  40341.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  40342. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40343. %@NL@%
  40344. %@NL@%
  40345. %@2@%I have never regarded politics as the arena of morals. It is%@EH@%
  40346. the arena of interests.%@NL@%
  40347. %@CR:POLITIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  40348.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40349.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40350. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40351. %@NL@%
  40352. %@NL@%
  40353. %@2@%In politics, what begins in fear usually ends in folly.%@NL@%
  40354. %@CR:POLITIColeridge @%%@NL@%
  40355.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  40356.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  40357. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40358. %@NL@%
  40359. %@NL@%
  40360. %@2@%Politics is not a bad profession. If you succeed there are%@EH@%
  40361. many rewards, if you disgrace yourself you can always write a book.%@NL@%
  40362. %@CR:POLITIReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  40363.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  40364.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  40365. %@AS@%                                                                  Politics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40366. %@NL@%
  40367. %@NL@%
  40368. %@NL@%
  40369. %@1@%%@AS@%Polls%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40370. %@CR:POLLS           @%%@NL@%
  40371. %@2@%%@QR:Polls@%A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows.%@NL@%
  40372. %@CR:POLLS Henry1    @%%@NL@%
  40373.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  40374.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  40375. %@AS@%                                                                     Polls%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40376. %@NL@%
  40377. %@NL@%
  40378. %@NL@%
  40379. %@1@%%@AS@%Pollution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40380. %@CR:POLLUTION       @%%@NL@%
  40381. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pollution@%%@NL@%
  40382.      %@AB@%Ecology%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           bdb7d@%%@NL@%
  40383. %@NL@%
  40384. %@2@%I durst not laugh, for fear of opening my lips and receiving%@EH@%
  40385. the bad air.%@NL@%
  40386. %@CR:POLLUTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  40387.                                                       Casca, %@AI@%Julius Caesar%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40388.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  40389.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  40390. %@AS@%                                                                 Pollution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40391. %@NL@%
  40392. %@NL@%
  40393. %@2@%Pollution is nothing but the resources we are not harvesting.%@EH@%
  40394. We allow them to disperse because we've been ignorant of their
  40395. value.%@NL@%
  40396. %@CR:POLLUTFuller1   @%%@NL@%
  40397.                                          R. Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983)%@NL@%
  40398.                                               American architect, engineer%@NL@%
  40399. %@AS@%                                                                 Pollution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40400. %@NL@%
  40401. %@NL@%
  40402. %@2@%Eighty percent of pollution is caused by plants and trees.%@NL@%
  40403. %@CR:POLLUTReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  40404.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  40405.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  40406. %@AS@%                                                                 Pollution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40407. %@NL@%
  40408. %@NL@%
  40409. %@NL@%
  40410. %@1@%%@AS@%Pop%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40411. %@CR:POP             @%%@NL@%
  40412. %@2@%%@QR:Pop@%Every popular song has at least one line or sentence that is%@EH@%
  40413. perfectly clear - the line that fits the music.%@NL@%
  40414. %@CR:POP   Pound     @%%@NL@%
  40415.                                                     Ezra Pound (1885-1972)%@NL@%
  40416.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  40417. %@AS@%                                                                       Pop%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40418. %@NL@%
  40419. %@NL@%
  40420. %@2@%My reputation is a media creation.%@NL@%
  40421. %@CR:POP   Rotten    @%%@NL@%
  40422.                                        John Lydon, Johnny Rotten (b. 1957)%@NL@%
  40423.                                                     British punk rock star%@NL@%
  40424. %@AS@%                                                                       Pop%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40425. %@NL@%
  40426. %@NL@%
  40427. %@NL@%
  40428. %@1@%%@AS@%The Pope%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40429. %@CR:THEPOPE         @%%@NL@%
  40430. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Pope@%%@NL@%
  40431.      Catholicism: %@AB@%Ayscough%@AE@%%@BO:           53f30@%%@NL@%
  40432.      Infallibility: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          14d04f@%%@NL@%
  40433. %@NL@%
  40434. %@2@%The Pope? How many divisions has %@AI@%he%@AE@% got?%@NL@%
  40435. %@CR:THEPOPStalin    @%%@NL@%
  40436.                                                   Josef Stalin (1879-1953)%@NL@%
  40437.                                                              USSR dictator%@NL@%
  40438.           to Pierre Laval, French foreign minister, in reply to suggestion%@NL@%
  40439.                           that the Soviet Union should propitiate the Pope%@NL@%
  40440. %@AS@%                                                                  The Pope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40441. %@NL@%
  40442. %@NL@%
  40443. %@2@%It is an error to believe that the Roman Pontiff can and ought%@EH@%
  40444. to reconcile himself to, and agree with, progress, liberalism,
  40445. and contemporary civilization.%@NL@%
  40446. %@CR:THEPOPPopePiusIX@%%@NL@%
  40447.                                                   Pope Pius IX (1792-1878)%@NL@%
  40448. %@AS@%                                                                  The Pope%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40449. %@NL@%
  40450. %@NL@%
  40451. %@NL@%
  40452. %@1@%%@AS@%Popularity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40453. %@CR:POPULARITY      @%%@NL@%
  40454. %@2@%%@QR:Popularity@%Popularity? It's glory's small change.%@NL@%
  40455. %@CR:POPULAHugo      @%%@NL@%
  40456.                                                    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)%@NL@%
  40457.                                           French poet, dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  40458. %@AS@%                                                                Popularity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40459. %@NL@%
  40460. %@NL@%
  40461. %@2@%I have never wished to cater to the crowd; for what I know%@EH@%
  40462. they do not approve, and what they approve I do not know.%@NL@%
  40463. %@CR:POPULAEpicurus  @%%@NL@%
  40464.                                                      Epicurus (341-270 BC)%@NL@%
  40465.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  40466. %@AS@%                                                                Popularity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40467. %@NL@%
  40468. %@NL@%
  40469. %@2@%Popularity is a crime from the moment it is sought; it is only%@EH@%
  40470. a virtue where men have it whether they will or no.%@NL@%
  40471. %@CR:POPULAHalifax   @%%@NL@%
  40472.                                                   Lord Halifax (1796-1865)%@NL@%
  40473. %@AS@%                                                                Popularity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40474. %@NL@%
  40475. %@NL@%
  40476.      %@2@%He cast off his friends as a huntsman his pack,%@NL@%
  40477.      For he knew when he pleas'd he could whistle them back.%@NL@%
  40478. %@CR:POPULAGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  40479.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  40480.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  40481. %@AS@%                                                                Popularity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40482. %@NL@%
  40483. %@NL@%
  40484. %@NL@%
  40485. %@1@%%@AS@%Pornography%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40486. %@CR:PORNOGRAPHY     @%%@NL@%
  40487. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pornography@%%@NL@%
  40488.      Delinquency: %@AB@%Gilmour%@AE@%%@BO:           a2d85@%%@NL@%
  40489. %@NL@%
  40490. %@2@%It's red hot, mate. I hate to think of this sort of book getting%@EH@%
  40491. into the wrong hands. As soon as I've finished this, I shall recommend
  40492. they ban it.%@NL@%
  40493. %@CR:PORNOGHancock   @%%@NL@%
  40494.                                                   Tony Hancock (1924-1968)%@NL@%
  40495.                                                           British comedian%@NL@%
  40496.                                 from script by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson%@NL@%
  40497. %@AS@%                                                               Pornography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40498. %@NL@%
  40499. %@NL@%
  40500. %@2@%A woman reading %@AI@%Playboy%@AE@% feels a little like a Jew reading%@EH@%
  40501. a Nazi manual.%@NL@%
  40502. %@CR:PORNOGSteinem   @%%@NL@%
  40503.                                                   Gloria Steinem (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  40504.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  40505. %@AS@%                                                               Pornography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40506. %@NL@%
  40507. %@NL@%
  40508. %@2@%I would like to see all people who read pornography or have%@EH@%
  40509. anything to do with it put in a mental hospital for observation
  40510. so we could find out what we have done to them.%@NL@%
  40511. %@CR:PORNOGLovelace1 @%%@NL@%
  40512.                                                   Linda Lovelace (b. 1952)%@NL@%
  40513.                                                    American model, actress%@NL@%
  40514. %@AS@%                                                               Pornography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40515. %@NL@%
  40516. %@NL@%
  40517. %@2@%Nine-tenths of the appeal of pornography is due to the indecent%@EH@%
  40518. feelings concerning sex which moralists inculcate in the young;
  40519. the other tenth is physiological, and will occur in one way or
  40520. another whatever the state of the law may be.%@NL@%
  40521. %@CR:PORNOGRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  40522.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  40523.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  40524. %@AS@%                                                               Pornography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40525. %@NL@%
  40526. %@NL@%
  40527. %@2@%Obscenity is such a tiny kingdom that a single tour covers%@EH@%
  40528. it completely.%@NL@%
  40529. %@CR:PORNOGBroun     @%%@NL@%
  40530.                                                  Heywood Broun (1888-1939)%@NL@%
  40531.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  40532. %@AS@%                                                               Pornography%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40533. %@NL@%
  40534. %@NL@%
  40535. %@NL@%
  40536. %@1@%%@AS@%Portraits%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40537. %@CR:PORTRAITS       @%%@NL@%
  40538. %@2@%%@QR:Portraits@%Every time I paint a portrait I lose a friend.%@NL@%
  40539. %@CR:PORTRASargent   @%%@NL@%
  40540.                                                   John Sargent (1856-1925)%@NL@%
  40541.                                                            American artist%@NL@%
  40542. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40543. %@NL@%
  40544. %@NL@%
  40545. %@2@%Every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of%@EH@%
  40546. the artist, not of the sitter.%@NL@%
  40547. %@CR:PORTRAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  40548.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  40549.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  40550. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40551. %@NL@%
  40552. %@NL@%
  40553. %@2@%There are only two styles of portrait painting; the serious%@EH@%
  40554. and the smirk.%@NL@%
  40555. %@CR:PORTRADickens   @%%@NL@%
  40556.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  40557.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  40558. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40559. %@NL@%
  40560. %@NL@%
  40561. %@2@%When one starts from a portrait and seeks by successive eliminations%@EH@%
  40562. to find pure form  . . .  one inevitably ends up with an egg. Similarly,
  40563. by starting from an egg and following the opposite course, one
  40564. can arrive at a portrait.%@NL@%
  40565. %@CR:PORTRAPicasso   @%%@NL@%
  40566.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  40567.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  40568. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40569. %@NL@%
  40570. %@NL@%
  40571. %@2@%Most of our portrait painters are doomed to absolute oblivion.%@EH@%
  40572. They never paint what they see. They paint what the public sees,
  40573. and the public never sees anything.%@NL@%
  40574. %@CR:PORTRAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  40575.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  40576.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  40577. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40578. %@NL@%
  40579. %@NL@%
  40580. %@2@%Mr Lely, I desire you would use all your skill to paint my%@EH@%
  40581. picture truly like me, and not flatter me at all; but remark all
  40582. these roughnesses, pimples, warts, and everything as you see me,
  40583. otherwise I will never pay a farthing for it.%@NL@%
  40584. %@CR:PORTRACromwell  @%%@NL@%
  40585.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  40586.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  40587. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40588. %@NL@%
  40589. %@NL@%
  40590. %@2@%Few persons who have ever sat for a portrait can have felt%@EH@%
  40591. anything but inferior while the process is going on.%@NL@%
  40592. %@CR:PORTRAPowell1   @%%@NL@%
  40593.                                                   Anthony Powell (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  40594.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  40595. %@AS@%                                                                 Portraits%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40596. %@NL@%
  40597. %@NL@%
  40598. %@NL@%
  40599. %@1@%%@AS@%Posterity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40600. %@CR:POSTERITY       @%%@NL@%
  40601. %@2@%See:%@QR:Posterity@%%@NL@%
  40602.      Writers: %@AB@%Ade%@AE@%%@BO:          2ca026@%%@NL@%
  40603. %@NL@%
  40604. %@2@%When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that%@EH@%
  40605. virtue is not heriditary.%@NL@%
  40606. %@CR:POSTERPaine     @%%@NL@%
  40607.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  40608.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  40609. %@AS@%                                                                 Posterity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40610. %@NL@%
  40611. %@NL@%
  40612. %@2@%Be careful of this - it is my %@AI@%carte de visite%@AE@% to posterity.%@NL@%
  40613. %@CR:POSTERChampollio@%%@NL@%
  40614.                                      Jean Francois Champollion (1790-1832)%@NL@%
  40615.                                                       French archaeologist%@NL@%
  40616.   on his death-bed, giving his printer the proofs of his study deciphering%@NL@%
  40617.                                     the hieroglyphics on the Rosetta stone%@NL@%
  40618. %@AS@%                                                                 Posterity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40619. %@NL@%
  40620. %@NL@%
  40621. %@2@%We are always doing something for Posterity, but I would fain%@EH@%
  40622. see Posterity do something for us.%@NL@%
  40623. %@CR:POSTERAddison   @%%@NL@%
  40624.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  40625.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  40626. %@AS@%                                                                 Posterity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40627. %@NL@%
  40628. %@NL@%
  40629. %@NL@%
  40630. %@1@%%@AS@%Poverty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40631. %@CR:POVERTY         @%%@NL@%
  40632. %@2@%See:%@QR:Poverty@%%@NL@%
  40633.      Culture: %@AB@%Menen%@AE@%%@BO:           93dfd@%%@NL@%
  40634.      Money: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          1ad34f@%%@NL@%
  40635.      Unemployment: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          29a921@%%@NL@%
  40636. %@NL@%
  40637.      %@2@%Oh, God! that bread should be so dear,%@NL@%
  40638.      And flesh and blood so cheap.%@NL@%
  40639. %@CR:POVERTHood      @%%@NL@%
  40640.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  40641.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  40642. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40643. %@NL@%
  40644. %@NL@%
  40645. %@2@%We all live in a state of ambitious poverty.%@NL@%
  40646. %@CR:POVERTJuvenal   @%%@NL@%
  40647.                                                        Juvenal (c. 40-130)%@NL@%
  40648.                                                         Roman satiric poet%@NL@%
  40649. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40650. %@NL@%
  40651. %@NL@%
  40652. %@2@%Poverty does not mean the possession of little, but the lack%@EH@%
  40653. of much.%@NL@%
  40654. %@CR:POVERTAntipater @%%@NL@%
  40655.                                  Antipater of Macedonia (c. 397-c. 319 BC)%@NL@%
  40656.                                                         Macedonian general%@NL@%
  40657. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40658. %@NL@%
  40659. %@NL@%
  40660.      %@2@%Too poor for a bribe, and too proud to importune,%@NL@%
  40661.      He had not the method of making a fortune.%@NL@%
  40662. %@CR:POVERTGray      @%%@NL@%
  40663.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  40664.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  40665.                                                       of his own character%@NL@%
  40666. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40667. %@NL@%
  40668. %@NL@%
  40669.      %@2@%This mournful truth is ev'rywhere confessed,%@NL@%
  40670.      Slow rises worth, by poverty  depressed.%@NL@%
  40671. %@CR:POVERTJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  40672.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  40673.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  40674. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40675. %@NL@%
  40676. %@NL@%
  40677. %@2@%The seven deadly sins  . . .  Food, clothing, firing, rent, taxes,%@EH@%
  40678. respectability and children. Nothing can lift those seven millstones
  40679. from man's neck but money; and the spirit cannot soar until the
  40680. millstones are lifted.%@NL@%
  40681. %@CR:POVERTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  40682.                                                  Undershaft, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40683.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  40684.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  40685. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40686. %@NL@%
  40687. %@NL@%
  40688. %@2@%The common argument that crime is caused by poverty is a kind%@EH@%
  40689. of slander on the poor.%@NL@%
  40690. %@CR:POVERTMencken   @%%@NL@%
  40691.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  40692.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  40693. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40694. %@NL@%
  40695. %@NL@%
  40696. %@2@%Hark ye, Clinker, you are a most notorious offender. You stand%@EH@%
  40697. convicted of sickness, hunger, wretchedness, and want.%@NL@%
  40698. %@CR:POVERTSmollett  @%%@NL@%
  40699.                                                Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)%@NL@%
  40700.                                                 Scottish novelist, surgeon%@NL@%
  40701. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40702. %@NL@%
  40703. %@NL@%
  40704. %@2@%There's no scandal like rags, nor any crime so shameful as%@EH@%
  40705. poverty.%@NL@%
  40706. %@CR:POVERTFarquhar  @%%@NL@%
  40707.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  40708.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  40709. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40710. %@NL@%
  40711. %@NL@%
  40712. %@2@%Poverty is not a shame, but the being ashamed of it is.%@NL@%
  40713. %@CR:POVERTFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  40714.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  40715.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  40716. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40717. %@NL@%
  40718. %@NL@%
  40719. %@2@%O world, how apt the poor are to be proud!%@NL@%
  40720. %@CR:POVERTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  40721.                                                      Olivia, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40722.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  40723.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  40724. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40725. %@NL@%
  40726. %@NL@%
  40727. %@2@%Poverty is no disgrace to a man, but it is confoundedly inconvenient.%@NL@%
  40728. %@CR:POVERTSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  40729.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  40730.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  40731. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40732. %@NL@%
  40733. %@NL@%
  40734. %@2@%The fundamental strength of Egypt's economy is its broad base%@EH@%
  40735. of individual poverty.%@NL@%
  40736. %@CR:POVERTSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  40737.                   Middle East correspondent, The London %@AI@%Times%@AE@%February 1958%@NL@%
  40738. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40739. %@NL@%
  40740. %@NL@%
  40741. %@2@%I think the advantages of self dependent poverty for the purpose%@EH@%
  40742. of developing moral fiber are greatly exaggerated.%@NL@%
  40743. %@CR:POVERTGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  40744.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  40745.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  40746.                                               while US ambassador to India%@NL@%
  40747. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40748. %@NL@%
  40749. %@NL@%
  40750. %@2@%There are 200 million poor in the world who would gladly take%@EH@%
  40751. the vow of poverty if they could eat, dress and have a home like
  40752. myself and many of those who profess the vow of poverty.%@NL@%
  40753. %@CR:POVERTSheen     @%%@NL@%
  40754.                                                Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979)%@NL@%
  40755.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  40756. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40757. %@NL@%
  40758. %@NL@%
  40759. %@2@%No man should commend poverty unless he is poor.%@NL@%
  40760. %@CR:POVERTSaintBerna@%%@NL@%
  40761.                                                  Saint Bernard (1091-1153)%@NL@%
  40762.                                                  French churchman, scholar%@NL@%
  40763. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40764. %@NL@%
  40765. %@NL@%
  40766. %@2@%My earliest emotions are bound to the earth and to the labors%@EH@%
  40767. of the fields. I find in the land a profound suggestion of poverty
  40768. and I love poverty above all other things; not sordid and famished
  40769. poverty but poverty that is blessed - simple, humble, like brown
  40770. bread.%@NL@%
  40771. %@CR:POVERTLorca     @%%@NL@%
  40772.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  40773.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  40774. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40775. %@NL@%
  40776. %@NL@%
  40777. %@2@%Poverty keeps together more homes than it breaks up.%@NL@%
  40778. %@CR:POVERTMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  40779.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  40780.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  40781. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40782. %@NL@%
  40783. %@NL@%
  40784. %@2@%That's another advantage of being poor - a doctor will cure%@EH@%
  40785. you faster.%@NL@%
  40786. %@CR:POVERTHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  40787.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  40788.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  40789. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40790. %@NL@%
  40791. %@NL@%
  40792. %@2@%Resolve not to be poor: whatever you have, spend less. Poverty%@EH@%
  40793. is a great enemy to human happiness; it certainly destroys liberty,
  40794. and it makes some virtues impracticable, and others extremely
  40795. difficult.%@NL@%
  40796. %@CR:POVERTJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  40797.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  40798.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  40799. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40800. %@NL@%
  40801. %@NL@%
  40802. %@2@%To be poor and independent is very nearly an impossibility.%@NL@%
  40803. %@CR:POVERTCobbett   @%%@NL@%
  40804.                                                William Cobbett (1762-1835)%@NL@%
  40805.                              English essayist, politician, agriculturalist%@NL@%
  40806. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40807. %@NL@%
  40808. %@NL@%
  40809. %@2@%My father was second cousin to a baronet, and my mother the%@EH@%
  40810. daughter of a country gentleman whose rule was, when in difficulties,
  40811. mortgage. That was my sort of poverty.%@NL@%
  40812. %@CR:POVERTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  40813.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  40814.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  40815. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40816. %@NL@%
  40817. %@NL@%
  40818. %@2@%The prevalent fear of poverty among the educated classes is%@EH@%
  40819. the worst moral disease from which our civilization suffers.%@NL@%
  40820. %@CR:POVERTJames4    @%%@NL@%
  40821.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  40822.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  40823. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40824. %@NL@%
  40825. %@NL@%
  40826. %@2@%Poverty is an anomaly to rich people. It is very difficult%@EH@%
  40827. to make out why people who want dinner do not ring the bell.%@NL@%
  40828. %@CR:POVERTBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  40829.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  40830.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  40831. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40832. %@NL@%
  40833. %@NL@%
  40834. %@2@%A good poor man is better than a good rich man because he has%@EH@%
  40835. to resist more temptations.%@NL@%
  40836. %@CR:POVERTPlato     @%%@NL@%
  40837.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  40838.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  40839. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40840. %@NL@%
  40841. %@NL@%
  40842. %@2@%The poorest He that is in England hath a life to live as the%@EH@%
  40843. greatest He.%@NL@%
  40844. %@CR:POVERTRaineborou@%%@NL@%
  40845.                                              Thomas Raineborough (d. 1648)%@NL@%
  40846.                                                Puritan soldier, politician%@NL@%
  40847. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40848. %@NL@%
  40849. %@NL@%
  40850. %@2@%"No one has ever said it," observed Lady Caroline, "but%@EH@%
  40851. how painfully true it is that the poor have us always with them!"%@NL@%
  40852. %@CR:POVERTMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  40853.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  40854.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  40855. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40856. %@NL@%
  40857. %@NL@%
  40858. %@2@%Poverty has strange bedfellows.%@NL@%
  40859. %@CR:POVERTBulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  40860.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  40861.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  40862. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40863. %@NL@%
  40864. %@NL@%
  40865. %@2@%I used to think I was poor. Then they told me I wasn't poor,%@EH@%
  40866. I was needy. Then they told me it was self-defeating to think of
  40867. myself as needy, I was deprived. Then they told me deprived was
  40868. a bad image, I was underprivileged. Then they told me underprivileged
  40869. was overused, I was disadvantaged. I still don't have a dime. But
  40870. I sure have a great vocabulary.%@NL@%
  40871. %@CR:POVERTFeiffer   @%%@NL@%
  40872.                                                    Jules Feiffer (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  40873.                                                        American cartoonist%@NL@%
  40874. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40875. %@NL@%
  40876. %@NL@%
  40877. %@2@%I hate the poor and look forward eagerly to their extermination.%@NL@%
  40878. %@CR:POVERTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  40879.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  40880.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  40881. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40882. %@NL@%
  40883. %@NL@%
  40884. %@2@%If you've ever really been poor, you remain poor at heart all%@EH@%
  40885. your life.%@NL@%
  40886. %@CR:POVERTBennett   @%%@NL@%
  40887.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  40888.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  40889. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40890. %@NL@%
  40891. %@NL@%
  40892. %@2@%Come away; poverty's catching.%@NL@%
  40893. %@CR:POVERTBehn      @%%@NL@%
  40894.                                                     Aphra Behn (1640-1689)%@NL@%
  40895.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  40896. %@AS@%                                                                   Poverty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40897. %@NL@%
  40898. %@NL@%
  40899. %@NL@%
  40900. %@1@%%@AS@%Power%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  40901. %@CR:POWER           @%%@NL@%
  40902. %@2@%See:%@QR:Power@%%@NL@%
  40903.      Despotism: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:           a6e11@%%@NL@%
  40904.      Greatness: %@AB@%Acton%@AE@%%@BO:          119aaa@%%@NL@%
  40905.      The President: %@AB@%Adams%@AE@%%@BO:          1ff2a8@%%@NL@%
  40906. %@NL@%
  40907. %@2@%You cannot have power for good without having power for evil%@EH@%
  40908. too. Even mother's milk nourishes murderers as well as heroes.%@NL@%
  40909. %@CR:POWER Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  40910.                                                      Cusins, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40911.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  40912.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  40913. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40914. %@NL@%
  40915. %@NL@%
  40916. %@2@%Those who have been once intoxicated with power, and have derived%@EH@%
  40917. any kind of emolument from it, even though but for one year, can
  40918. never willingly abandon it.%@NL@%
  40919. %@CR:POWER Burke2    @%%@NL@%
  40920.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  40921.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  40922. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40923. %@NL@%
  40924. %@NL@%
  40925. %@2@%Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac.%@NL@%
  40926. %@CR:POWER Kissinger @%%@NL@%
  40927.                                                  Henry Kissinger (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  40928.                                  American adviser on international affairs%@NL@%
  40929. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40930. %@NL@%
  40931. %@NL@%
  40932. %@2@%A cock has great influence on his own dunghill.%@NL@%
  40933. %@CR:POWER PubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  40934.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  40935.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  40936. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40937. %@NL@%
  40938. %@NL@%
  40939. %@2@%Unused power slips imperceptibly into the hands of another.%@NL@%
  40940. %@CR:POWER Heiden    @%%@NL@%
  40941.                                                  Konrad Heiden (1901-1975)%@NL@%
  40942.                                                              German author%@NL@%
  40943. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40944. %@NL@%
  40945. %@NL@%
  40946. %@2@%The purpose of getting power is to be able to give it away.%@NL@%
  40947. %@CR:POWER Bevan     @%%@NL@%
  40948.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  40949.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  40950. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40951. %@NL@%
  40952. %@NL@%
  40953. %@2@%Power? It's like a Dead Sea fruit. When you achieve it, there%@EH@%
  40954. is nothing there.%@NL@%
  40955. %@CR:POWER Macmillan @%%@NL@%
  40956.                                Harold Macmillan, Lord Stockton (1894-1986)%@NL@%
  40957.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  40958. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40959. %@NL@%
  40960. %@NL@%
  40961. %@2@%Power admits no equal, and dismisses friendship for flattery.%@NL@%
  40962. %@CR:POWER Moore1    @%%@NL@%
  40963.                                                   Edward Moore (1712-1757)%@NL@%
  40964.                                                English fabulist, dramatist%@NL@%
  40965. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40966. %@NL@%
  40967. %@NL@%
  40968. %@2@%Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go.%@NL@%
  40969. %@CR:POWER Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  40970.                                                           Claudius, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40971.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  40972.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  40973. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40974. %@NL@%
  40975. %@NL@%
  40976.      %@2@%The good old rule%@NL@%
  40977.      Sufficeth them, the simple plan,%@NL@%
  40978.      That they should take, who have the power,%@NL@%
  40979.      And they should keep who can.%@NL@%
  40980. %@CR:POWER Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  40981.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  40982.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  40983. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40984. %@NL@%
  40985. %@NL@%
  40986. %@2@%You only have power over people so long as you don't take %@AI@%everything%@AE@%%@EH@%
  40987. away from them. But when you've robbed a man of everything he's
  40988. no longer in your power - he's free again.%@NL@%
  40989. %@CR:POWER Solzhenits@%%@NL@%
  40990.                                           Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  40991.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  40992. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  40993. %@NL@%
  40994. %@NL@%
  40995. %@2@%They say power corrupts and perhaps it does. What I know, in%@EH@%
  40996. myself, is quite a different thing. That power corrupts the people
  40997. it is exercised over.%@NL@%
  40998. %@CR:POWER Williams4 @%%@NL@%
  40999.                                               Raymond Williams (1921-1988)%@NL@%
  41000.                                                           British academic%@NL@%
  41001. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41002. %@NL@%
  41003. %@NL@%
  41004.      %@2@%Power, like a desolating pestilence,%@NL@%
  41005.      Pollutes whate'er it touches.%@NL@%
  41006. %@CR:POWER Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  41007.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  41008.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  41009. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41010. %@NL@%
  41011. %@NL@%
  41012. %@2@%Alexander at the head of the world never tasted the true pleasure%@EH@%
  41013. that boys of his own age have enjoyed at the head of a school.%@NL@%
  41014. %@CR:POWER Walpole1  @%%@NL@%
  41015.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  41016.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  41017. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41018. %@NL@%
  41019. %@NL@%
  41020. %@2@%No man is good enough to be another man's master.%@NL@%
  41021. %@CR:POWER Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  41022.                                                  Undershaft, %@AI@%Major Barbara%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41023.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  41024.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  41025. %@AS@%                                                                     Power%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41026. %@NL@%
  41027. %@NL@%
  41028. %@NL@%
  41029. %@1@%%@AS@%Praise%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41030. %@CR:PRAISE          @%%@NL@%
  41031. %@2@%See:%@QR:Praise@%%@NL@%
  41032.      Flattery: %@AB@%King Louis XIV%@AE@%%@BO:           f1eb5@%; %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           f1334@%%@NL@%
  41033.      Modesty: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          1abcdf@%%@NL@%
  41034. %@NL@%
  41035.      %@2@%Fondly we think we honour merit then,%@NL@%
  41036.      When we but praise ourselves in other men.%@NL@%
  41037. %@CR:PRAISEPope      @%%@NL@%
  41038.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  41039.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  41040. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41041. %@NL@%
  41042. %@NL@%
  41043. %@2@%I will praise any man that will praise me.%@NL@%
  41044. %@CR:PRAISEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  41045.                                            Enobarbus, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41046.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  41047.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  41048. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41049. %@NL@%
  41050. %@NL@%
  41051. %@2@%He who praises everybody praises nobody.%@NL@%
  41052. %@CR:PRAISEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  41053.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  41054.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  41055. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41056. %@NL@%
  41057. %@NL@%
  41058. %@2@%I know of no manner of speaking so offensive as that of giving%@EH@%
  41059. praise, and closing it with an exception.%@NL@%
  41060. %@CR:PRAISESteele    @%%@NL@%
  41061.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  41062.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  41063. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41064. %@NL@%
  41065. %@NL@%
  41066. %@2@%Among the smaller duties of life I hardly know any one more%@EH@%
  41067. important than that of not praising where praise is not due.%@NL@%
  41068. %@CR:PRAISESmith8    @%%@NL@%
  41069.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  41070.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  41071. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41072. %@NL@%
  41073. %@NL@%
  41074. %@2@%Praise yourself daringly, something always sticks.%@NL@%
  41075. %@CR:PRAISEBacon     @%%@NL@%
  41076.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  41077.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  41078. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41079. %@NL@%
  41080. %@NL@%
  41081. %@2@%The advantage of doing one's praising for oneself is that one%@EH@%
  41082. can lay it on so thick and exactly in the right places.%@NL@%
  41083. %@CR:PRAISEButler4   @%%@NL@%
  41084.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  41085.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  41086. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41087. %@NL@%
  41088. %@NL@%
  41089. %@2@%A continual feast of commendation is only to be attained by%@EH@%
  41090. merit or by wealth.%@NL@%
  41091. %@CR:PRAISEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  41092.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  41093.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  41094. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41095. %@NL@%
  41096. %@NL@%
  41097. %@2@%Eulogy. Praise of a person who has either advantages of wealth%@EH@%
  41098. and power, or the consideration to be dead.%@NL@%
  41099. %@CR:PRAISEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  41100.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  41101.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41102. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41103. %@NL@%
  41104. %@NL@%
  41105. %@2@%The greatest mistake I made was not to die in office.%@NL@%
  41106. %@CR:PRAISEAcheson   @%%@NL@%
  41107.                                                   Dean Acheson (1893-1971)%@NL@%
  41108.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  41109.               on hearing eulogies to his successor as Secretary of State,
  41110.                                      John Foster Dulles, who died in office%@NL@%
  41111. %@AS@%                                                                    Praise%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41112. %@NL@%
  41113. %@NL@%
  41114. %@NL@%
  41115. %@1@%%@AS@%Prayer%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41116. %@CR:PRAYER          @%%@NL@%
  41117. %@2@%See:%@QR:Prayer@%%@NL@%
  41118.      Enemies: %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:           c968d@%%@NL@%
  41119.      God: %@AB@%Tomlin%@AE@%%@BO:          110d8d@%%@NL@%
  41120.      Sleep: %@AB@%Browne%@AE@%%@BO:          2584df@%%@NL@%
  41121. %@NL@%
  41122. %@2@%Bow, stubborn knees!%@NL@%
  41123. %@CR:PRAYERShakespear@%%@NL@%
  41124.                                                           Claudius, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41125.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  41126.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  41127. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41128. %@NL@%
  41129. %@NL@%
  41130. %@2@%Pray. To ask the laws of the universe to be annulled on behalf%@EH@%
  41131. of a single petitioner confessedly unworthy.%@NL@%
  41132. %@CR:PRAYERBierce    @%%@NL@%
  41133.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  41134.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41135. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41136. %@NL@%
  41137. %@NL@%
  41138. %@2@%Whatever a man prays for, he prays for a miracle. Every prayer%@EH@%
  41139. reduces itself to this: "Great God, grant that twice two be not
  41140. four."%@NL@%
  41141. %@CR:PRAYERTurgenev  @%%@NL@%
  41142.                                                  Ivan Turgenev (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  41143.                            Russian novelist, short story writer, dramatist%@NL@%
  41144. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41145. %@NL@%
  41146. %@NL@%
  41147. %@2@%Whatsoever we beg of God, let us also work for it.%@NL@%
  41148. %@CR:PRAYERTaylor4   @%%@NL@%
  41149.                                                  Jeremy Taylor (1613-1667)%@NL@%
  41150.                                                  English churchman, writer%@NL@%
  41151. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41152. %@NL@%
  41153. %@NL@%
  41154. %@2@%Serving God is doing good to man, but praying is thought an%@EH@%
  41155. easier service and therefore more generally chosen.%@NL@%
  41156. %@CR:PRAYERFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  41157.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  41158.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  41159. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41160. %@NL@%
  41161. %@NL@%
  41162. %@2@%If you want to make a man very angry, get someone to pray for%@EH@%
  41163. him.%@NL@%
  41164. %@CR:PRAYERHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  41165.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  41166.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  41167. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41168. %@NL@%
  41169. %@NL@%
  41170. %@2@%Prayer does not change God, but it changes him who prays.%@NL@%
  41171. %@CR:PRAYERKierkegaar@%%@NL@%
  41172.                                              Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)%@NL@%
  41173.                                                         Danish philosopher%@NL@%
  41174. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41175. %@NL@%
  41176. %@NL@%
  41177. %@2@%The Lord's Prayer contains the sum total of religion and morals.%@NL@%
  41178. %@CR:PRAYERDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  41179.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  41180.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  41181. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41182. %@NL@%
  41183. %@NL@%
  41184. %@2@%The man who says his prayers in the evening is a captain posting%@EH@%
  41185. his sentries. After that, he can sleep.%@NL@%
  41186. %@CR:PRAYERBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  41187.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  41188.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  41189. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41190. %@NL@%
  41191. %@NL@%
  41192. %@2@%I throw myself down in my chamber, and I call in, and invite%@EH@%
  41193. God, and his Angels thither, and when they are there, I neglect
  41194. God and his Angels, for the noise of a fly, for the rattling of
  41195. a coach, for the whining of a door.%@NL@%
  41196. %@CR:PRAYERDonne     @%%@NL@%
  41197.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  41198.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  41199. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41200. %@NL@%
  41201. %@NL@%
  41202. %@2@%Prayer should be short without giving God Almighty reasons%@EH@%
  41203. why He should grant this or that. He knows best what is good for
  41204. us.%@NL@%
  41205. %@CR:PRAYERSelden    @%%@NL@%
  41206.                                                    John Selden (1584-1654)%@NL@%
  41207.                                                  English jurist, statesman%@NL@%
  41208. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41209. %@NL@%
  41210. %@NL@%
  41211. %@2@%The best prayers have often more groans than words.%@NL@%
  41212. %@CR:PRAYERBunyan    @%%@NL@%
  41213.                                                    John Bunyan (1628-1688)%@NL@%
  41214.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  41215. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41216. %@NL@%
  41217. %@NL@%
  41218. %@2@%A short prayer enters heaven; a long drink empties the flagon.%@NL@%
  41219. %@CR:PRAYERRabelais  @%%@NL@%
  41220.                                                       Rabelais (1494-1553)%@NL@%
  41221.                                                    French humanist, author%@NL@%
  41222. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41223. %@NL@%
  41224. %@NL@%
  41225. %@2@%We often want one thing and pray for another, not telling the%@EH@%
  41226. truth even to the gods.%@NL@%
  41227. %@CR:PRAYERSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  41228.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  41229.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  41230. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41231. %@NL@%
  41232. %@NL@%
  41233. %@2@%He didn't actually accuse God of inefficiency, but when he%@EH@%
  41234. prayed his tone was loud and angry, like that of a dissatisfied
  41235. guest in a carelessly managed hotel.%@NL@%
  41236. %@CR:PRAYERDay1      @%%@NL@%
  41237.                                                   Clarence Day (1874-1935)%@NL@%
  41238.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41239. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41240. %@NL@%
  41241. %@NL@%
  41242. %@2@%God is not a cosmic bell-boy for whom we can press a button%@EH@%
  41243. to get things.%@NL@%
  41244. %@CR:PRAYERFosdick1  @%%@NL@%
  41245.                                                  H. E. Fosdick (1878-1969)%@NL@%
  41246.                                                  American Baptist minister%@NL@%
  41247. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41248. %@NL@%
  41249. %@NL@%
  41250. %@2@%Prayer must never be answered: if it is, it ceases to be prayer%@EH@%
  41251. and becomes correspondence.%@NL@%
  41252. %@CR:PRAYERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  41253.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  41254.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  41255. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41256. %@NL@%
  41257. %@NL@%
  41258. %@2@%I have lived to thank God that all my prayers have not been%@EH@%
  41259. answered.%@NL@%
  41260. %@CR:PRAYERIngelow   @%%@NL@%
  41261.                                                   Jean Ingelow (1820-1897)%@NL@%
  41262.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  41263. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41264. %@NL@%
  41265. %@NL@%
  41266. %@2@%O Lord! thou knowest how busy I must be this day: if I forget%@EH@%
  41267. thee, do not thou forget me.%@NL@%
  41268. %@CR:PRAYERAstley    @%%@NL@%
  41269.                                               Sir Jacob Astley (1579-1652)%@NL@%
  41270.                                                   English Royalist soldier%@NL@%
  41271. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41272. %@NL@%
  41273. %@NL@%
  41274. %@2@%It is best to read the weather forecasts before we pray for%@EH@%
  41275. rain.%@NL@%
  41276. %@CR:PRAYERTwain     @%%@NL@%
  41277.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  41278.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41279. %@AS@%                                                                    Prayer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41280. %@NL@%
  41281. %@NL@%
  41282. %@NL@%
  41283. %@1@%%@AS@%Preaching%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41284. %@CR:PREACHING       @%%@NL@%
  41285. %@2@%%@QR:Preaching@%To be good is noble, but to teach others how to be good is%@EH@%
  41286. nobler - and less trouble.%@NL@%
  41287. %@CR:PREACHTwain     @%%@NL@%
  41288.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  41289.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41290. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41291. %@NL@%
  41292. %@NL@%
  41293. %@2@%Preaching is heady wine. It is pleasant to tell people where%@EH@%
  41294. they get off.%@NL@%
  41295. %@CR:PREACHLunn      @%%@NL@%
  41296.                                                    Arnold Lunn (1888-1974)%@NL@%
  41297.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  41298. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41299. %@NL@%
  41300. %@NL@%
  41301. %@2@%Philosophy rests on the proposition that whatever is is right.%@EH@%
  41302. Preaching begins by assuming that whatever is is wrong.%@NL@%
  41303. %@CR:PREACHHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  41304.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  41305.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41306. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41307. %@NL@%
  41308. %@NL@%
  41309. %@2@%Go into the street, and give one man a lecture on morality,%@EH@%
  41310. and another a shilling, and see which will respect you most.%@NL@%
  41311. %@CR:PREACHJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  41312.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  41313.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  41314. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41315. %@NL@%
  41316. %@NL@%
  41317. %@2@%The best sermon is preached by the minister who has a sermon%@EH@%
  41318. to preach and not by the man who has to preach a sermon.%@NL@%
  41319. %@CR:PREACHFeather   @%%@NL@%
  41320.                                                  William Feather (b. 1889)%@NL@%
  41321.                                                       American businessman%@NL@%
  41322. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41323. %@NL@%
  41324. %@NL@%
  41325. %@2@%That we should practice what we preach is generally admitted;%@EH@%
  41326. but anyone who preaches what he and his hearers practice must incur
  41327. the gravest moral disapprobation.%@NL@%
  41328. %@CR:PREACHSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  41329.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  41330.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  41331. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41332. %@NL@%
  41333. %@NL@%
  41334. %@2@%Only the sinner has the right to preach.%@NL@%
  41335. %@CR:PREACHMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  41336.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  41337.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  41338. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41339. %@NL@%
  41340. %@NL@%
  41341. %@2@%The British churchgoer prefers a severe preacher because he%@EH@%
  41342. thinks a few home truths will do his neighbours no harm.%@NL@%
  41343. %@CR:PREACHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  41344.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  41345.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  41346. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41347. %@NL@%
  41348. %@NL@%
  41349. %@2@%When I hear a man preach, I like to see him act as if he were%@EH@%
  41350. fighting bees.%@NL@%
  41351. %@CR:PREACHLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  41352.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  41353.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41354. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41355. %@NL@%
  41356. %@NL@%
  41357.      %@2@%I preached as never sure to preach again,%@NL@%
  41358.      And as a dying man to dying men.%@NL@%
  41359. %@CR:PREACHBaxter    @%%@NL@%
  41360.                                                 Richard Baxter (1615-1691)%@NL@%
  41361.                                               English Nonconformist cleric%@NL@%
  41362. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41363. %@NL@%
  41364. %@NL@%
  41365. %@2@%To preach long, loud, and Damnation, is the way to be cried%@EH@%
  41366. up. We love a man that damns us, and we run after him again to
  41367. save us.%@NL@%
  41368. %@CR:PREACHSelden    @%%@NL@%
  41369.                                                    John Selden (1584-1654)%@NL@%
  41370.                                                  English jurist, statesman%@NL@%
  41371. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41372. %@NL@%
  41373. %@NL@%
  41374. %@2@%Nothing in the world delights a truly religious people so much%@EH@%
  41375. as consigning them to eternal damnation.%@NL@%
  41376. %@CR:PREACHHogg      @%%@NL@%
  41377.                                                     James Hogg (1770-1835)%@NL@%
  41378.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  41379. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41380. %@NL@%
  41381. %@NL@%
  41382. %@2@%An advantage itinerant preachers have over those who are stationary,%@EH@%
  41383. the latter cannot well improve their delivery of a sermon by so
  41384. many rehearsals.%@NL@%
  41385. %@CR:PREACHFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  41386.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  41387.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  41388. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41389. %@NL@%
  41390. %@NL@%
  41391. %@2@%Not one clergyman in ten uses his own voice - he uses only%@EH@%
  41392. an imitation.%@NL@%
  41393. %@CR:PREACHHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  41394.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  41395.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41396. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41397. %@NL@%
  41398. %@NL@%
  41399. %@2@%The Methodists love your big sinners, as proper subjects to%@EH@%
  41400. work upon.%@NL@%
  41401. %@CR:PREACHWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  41402.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  41403.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  41404. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41405. %@NL@%
  41406. %@NL@%
  41407. %@2@%Few sinners are saved after the first twenty minutes of a sermon.%@NL@%
  41408. %@CR:PREACHTwain     @%%@NL@%
  41409.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  41410.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41411. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41412. %@NL@%
  41413. %@NL@%
  41414.      %@2@%Even in the church, where boredom is prolific,%@NL@%
  41415.      I hail thee first, Episcopalian bore:%@NL@%
  41416.      Who else could serve as social soporific,%@NL@%
  41417.      And without snoring teach the rest to snore.%@NL@%
  41418. %@CR:PREACHMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  41419.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  41420.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  41421. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41422. %@NL@%
  41423. %@NL@%
  41424. %@2@%The world runs after pulpit orators. They please the ear, and%@EH@%
  41425. do not disturb the conscience. They move the emotions but do not
  41426. change the will.%@NL@%
  41427. %@CR:PREACHManning   @%%@NL@%
  41428.                                         Cardinal Henry Manning (1808-1892)%@NL@%
  41429.                                                         English theologian%@NL@%
  41430. %@AS@%                                                                 Preaching%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41431. %@NL@%
  41432. %@NL@%
  41433. %@NL@%
  41434. %@1@%%@AS@%Prejudice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41435. %@CR:PREJUDICE       @%%@NL@%
  41436. %@2@%%@QR:Prejudice@%A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely%@EH@%
  41437. rearranging their prejudices.%@NL@%
  41438. %@CR:PREJUDJames4    @%%@NL@%
  41439.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  41440.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  41441. %@AS@%                                                                 Prejudice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41442. %@NL@%
  41443. %@NL@%
  41444. %@2@%A prejudice is a vagrant opinion without visible means of support.%@NL@%
  41445. %@CR:PREJUDBierce    @%%@NL@%
  41446.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  41447.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41448. %@AS@%                                                                 Prejudice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41449. %@NL@%
  41450. %@NL@%
  41451. %@2@%Our prejudices are our mistresses; reason is at best our wife,%@EH@%
  41452. very often needed, but seldom minded.%@NL@%
  41453. %@CR:PREJUDChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  41454.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  41455.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  41456. %@AS@%                                                                 Prejudice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41457. %@NL@%
  41458. %@NL@%
  41459. %@2@%One may no more live in the world without picking up the moral%@EH@%
  41460. prejudices of the world than one will be able to go to hell without
  41461. perspiring.%@NL@%
  41462. %@CR:PREJUDMencken   @%%@NL@%
  41463.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  41464.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  41465. %@AS@%                                                                 Prejudice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41466. %@NL@%
  41467. %@NL@%
  41468. %@2@%The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the children's teeth%@EH@%
  41469. are set on edge.%@NL@%
  41470. %@CR:PREJUDBibleJerem@%%@NL@%
  41471.                                                            Bible, Jeremiah%@NL@%
  41472. %@AS@%                                                                 Prejudice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41473. %@NL@%
  41474. %@NL@%
  41475. %@NL@%
  41476. %@1@%%@AS@%The President%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41477. %@CR:THEPRESIDENT    @%%@NL@%
  41478. %@2@%See:%@QR:The President@%%@NL@%
  41479.      Loyalty: %@AB@%Kissinger%@AE@%%@BO:          1887bf@%%@NL@%
  41480.      Politicians: %@AB@%Kennedy%@AE@%%@BO:          1ef051@%%@NL@%
  41481.      %@AB@%Ronald Reagan%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          21ae37@%%@NL@%
  41482. %@NL@%
  41483. %@2@%I really don't think I'm worthy of the office, but I have to%@EH@%
  41484. put the country before my own limitations.%@NL@%
  41485. %@CR:THEPREBuchwald  @%%@NL@%
  41486.                                                     Art Buchwald (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  41487.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  41488. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41489. %@NL@%
  41490. %@NL@%
  41491. %@2@%When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President;%@EH@%
  41492. I'm beginning to believe it.%@NL@%
  41493. %@CR:THEPREDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  41494.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  41495.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  41496. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41497. %@NL@%
  41498. %@NL@%
  41499. %@2@%Power is poison. Its effect on Presidents has always been tragic.%@NL@%
  41500. %@CR:THEPREAdams2    @%%@NL@%
  41501.                                                 Henry B. Adams (1838-1918)%@NL@%
  41502.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  41503. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41504. %@NL@%
  41505. %@NL@%
  41506. %@2@%I have nothing to hide. The White House has nothing to hide.%@NL@%
  41507. %@CR:THEPRENixon     @%%@NL@%
  41508.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  41509.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41510. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41511. %@NL@%
  41512. %@NL@%
  41513. %@2@%No man will ever carry out of the Presidency the reputation%@EH@%
  41514. which carried him into it.%@NL@%
  41515. %@CR:THEPREJefferson @%%@NL@%
  41516.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  41517.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41518. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41519. %@NL@%
  41520. %@NL@%
  41521. %@2@%Even the President of the United States sometimes must have%@EH@%
  41522. to stand naked.%@NL@%
  41523. %@CR:THEPREDylan     @%%@NL@%
  41524.                                                        Bob Dylan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  41525.                                                American singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  41526. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41527. %@NL@%
  41528. %@NL@%
  41529. %@2@%As President Nixon says, presidents can do almost anything,%@EH@%
  41530. and President Nixon has done many things that nobody would have
  41531. thought of doing.%@NL@%
  41532. %@CR:THEPREMeir      @%%@NL@%
  41533.                                                     Golda Meir (1898-1978)%@NL@%
  41534.                                                     Israeli prime minister%@NL@%
  41535. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41536. %@NL@%
  41537. %@NL@%
  41538. %@2@%The (United States') presidential system just won't work any%@EH@%
  41539. more. Anyone who gets in under it ought not to be allowed to serve.%@NL@%
  41540. %@CR:THEPREVidal     @%%@NL@%
  41541.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  41542.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  41543. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41544. %@NL@%
  41545. %@NL@%
  41546. %@2@%I sit here all day trying to persuade people to do the things%@EH@%
  41547. they ought to have sense enough to do without my persuading them
  41548.  . . .  that's all the powers of the President amount to.%@NL@%
  41549. %@CR:THEPRETruman    @%%@NL@%
  41550.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  41551.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41552. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41553. %@NL@%
  41554. %@NL@%
  41555. %@2@%When you get to be President, there are all those things, the%@EH@%
  41556. honors, the twenty-one gun salutes, all those things. You have
  41557. to remember it isn't for you. It's for the Presidency.%@NL@%
  41558. %@CR:THEPRETruman    @%%@NL@%
  41559.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  41560.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41561. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41562. %@NL@%
  41563. %@NL@%
  41564. %@2@%Nothing would please the Kremlin more than to have the people%@EH@%
  41565. of this country choose a second-rate President.%@NL@%
  41566. %@CR:THEPRENixon     @%%@NL@%
  41567.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  41568.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41569. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41570. %@NL@%
  41571. %@NL@%
  41572. %@2@%I feel very proud, even though they didn't elect me, to be%@EH@%
  41573. President of the Argentines.%@NL@%
  41574. %@CR:THEPREGaltieri  @%%@NL@%
  41575.                                                 General Galtieri (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  41576.                                                     President of Argentina%@NL@%
  41577. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41578. %@NL@%
  41579. %@NL@%
  41580. %@2@%In the Bob Hope Golf Classic the participation of President%@EH@%
  41581. Gerald Ford was more than enough to remind you that the nuclear
  41582. button was at one stage at the disposal of a man who might have
  41583. either pressed it by mistake or else pressed it deliberately to
  41584. obtain room service.%@NL@%
  41585. %@CR:THEPREJames1    @%%@NL@%
  41586.                                                      Clive James (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  41587.                                                  Australian writer, critic%@NL@%
  41588. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41589. %@NL@%
  41590. %@NL@%
  41591. %@2@%We're an ideal political family, as accessible as Disneyland.%@NL@%
  41592. %@CR:THEPREReagan1   @%%@NL@%
  41593.                                                   Maureen Reagan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  41594.                                               daughter of President Reagan%@NL@%
  41595. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41596. %@NL@%
  41597. %@NL@%
  41598. %@2@%The buck stops here.%@NL@%
  41599. %@CR:THEPRETruman    @%%@NL@%
  41600.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  41601.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41602. %@AS@%                                                             The President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41603. %@NL@%
  41604. %@NL@%
  41605. %@1@%%@AS@%The President: the Vice President%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41606. %@CR:THEVICEPRESIDENT@%%@NL@%
  41607. %@2@%%@QR:The President: the Vice President@%Once there were two brothers. One ran away to sea, the other%@EH@%
  41608. was elected Vice-President, and nothing was ever heard of either
  41609. of them again.%@NL@%
  41610. %@CR:THEVICMarshall  @%%@NL@%
  41611.                                             Thomas R. Marshall (1854-1925)%@NL@%
  41612.                                            American lawyer, vice-president%@NL@%
  41613. %@AS@%                                         The President: the Vice President%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41614. %@NL@%
  41615. %@NL@%
  41616. %@NL@%
  41617. %@1@%%@AS@%The Press%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41618. %@CR:THEPRESS        @%%@NL@%
  41619. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Press@%%@NL@%
  41620.      %@AB@%Journalism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          160ea0@%%@NL@%
  41621.      %@AB@%Newspapers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1bba04@%%@NL@%
  41622. %@NL@%
  41623. %@2@%In old days men had the rack. Now they have the press.%@NL@%
  41624. %@CR:THEPREWilde     @%%@NL@%
  41625.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  41626.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  41627. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41628. %@NL@%
  41629. %@NL@%
  41630. %@2@%The price of justice is eternal publicity.%@NL@%
  41631. %@CR:THEPREBennett   @%%@NL@%
  41632.                                                 Arnold Bennett (1867-1931)%@NL@%
  41633.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  41634. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41635. %@NL@%
  41636. %@NL@%
  41637. %@2@%No government ought to be without censors; and where the press%@EH@%
  41638. is free none ever will.%@NL@%
  41639. %@CR:THEPREJefferson @%%@NL@%
  41640.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  41641.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41642. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41643. %@NL@%
  41644. %@NL@%
  41645. %@2@%You know very well that whether you are on page one or page%@EH@%
  41646. thirty depends on whether they fear you. It is just as simple as
  41647. that.%@NL@%
  41648. %@CR:THEPRENixon     @%%@NL@%
  41649.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  41650.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41651.                                                               of the press%@NL@%
  41652. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41653. %@NL@%
  41654. %@NL@%
  41655. %@2@%The freedom of the press works in such a way that there is%@EH@%
  41656. not much freedom from it.%@NL@%
  41657. %@CR:THEPREPrincessGr@%%@NL@%
  41658.                                       Princess Grace of Monaco (1928-1982)%@NL@%
  41659. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41660. %@NL@%
  41661. %@NL@%
  41662. %@2@%The men with the muck-rake are often indispensable to the well-being%@EH@%
  41663. of society, but only if they knew when to stop raking the muck.%@NL@%
  41664. %@CR:THEPRERoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  41665.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  41666.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41667. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41668. %@NL@%
  41669. %@NL@%
  41670. %@2@%One gets the impression from the popular Press that rape has%@EH@%
  41671. become the British national pastime.%@NL@%
  41672. %@CR:THEPREWigoder   @%%@NL@%
  41673.                                                     Lord Wigoder (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  41674.                                      British barrister, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  41675. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41676. %@NL@%
  41677. %@NL@%
  41678. %@2@%Generally speaking, the Press lives on disaster.%@NL@%
  41679. %@CR:THEPREAttlee    @%%@NL@%
  41680.                                                 Clement Attlee (1883-1967)%@NL@%
  41681.                                  British Labour politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  41682. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41683. %@NL@%
  41684. %@NL@%
  41685. %@2@%The Press can best be compared to haemorrhoids.%@NL@%
  41686. %@CR:THEPREDavies1   @%%@NL@%
  41687.                                                    Gareth Davies (b. 1956)%@NL@%
  41688.                                                        Welsh rugby captain%@NL@%
  41689. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41690. %@NL@%
  41691. %@NL@%
  41692. %@2@%Photographers are the most loathsome inconvenience. They're%@EH@%
  41693. merciless. They're the pits.%@NL@%
  41694. %@CR:THEPRENewman3   @%%@NL@%
  41695.                                                      Paul Newman (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  41696.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  41697. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41698. %@NL@%
  41699. %@NL@%
  41700. %@2@%If you guys could get just one percent of the stories right.%@NL@%
  41701. %@CR:THEPREMcEnroe   @%%@NL@%
  41702.                                                     John McEnroe (b. 1959)%@NL@%
  41703.                                                     American tennis player%@NL@%
  41704.                                            of the Press at Wimbledon, 1985%@NL@%
  41705. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41706. %@NL@%
  41707. %@NL@%
  41708. %@2@%I'm sure if I have any plans, the Press will inform me.%@NL@%
  41709. %@CR:THEPREScargill  @%%@NL@%
  41710.                                                  Arthur Scargill (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  41711.                                                     British trade unionist%@NL@%
  41712. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41713. %@NL@%
  41714. %@NL@%
  41715. %@2@%I got to know Ike's plumbing like the back of my hand. I could%@EH@%
  41716. walk around his innards in the dark.%@NL@%
  41717. %@CR:THEPREConnor    @%%@NL@%
  41718.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  41719.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  41720. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41721. %@NL@%
  41722. %@NL@%
  41723. %@2@%The most important service rendered by the press and the magazines%@EH@%
  41724. is that of educating people to approach printed matter with distrust.%@NL@%
  41725. %@CR:THEPREButler4   @%%@NL@%
  41726.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  41727.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  41728. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41729. %@NL@%
  41730. %@NL@%
  41731. %@2@%Report me and my cause aright.%@NL@%
  41732. %@CR:THEPREShakespear@%%@NL@%
  41733.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41734.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  41735.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  41736. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41737. %@NL@%
  41738. %@NL@%
  41739. %@2@%Goodbye, and don't betray me too much.%@NL@%
  41740. %@CR:THEPRESignoret  @%%@NL@%
  41741.                                                Simone Signoret (1921-1985)%@NL@%
  41742.                                                       closing an interview%@NL@%
  41743. %@AS@%                                                                 The Press%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41744. %@NL@%
  41745. %@NL@%
  41746. %@NL@%
  41747. %@1@%%@AS@%Pride%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41748. %@CR:PRIDE           @%%@NL@%
  41749. %@2@%See:%@QR:Pride@%%@NL@%
  41750.      Good Deeds: %@AB@%Flaubert%@AE@%%@BO:          11290a@%%@NL@%
  41751.      Poverty: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          1f55f6@%%@NL@%
  41752. %@NL@%
  41753. %@2@%My family pride is something inconceivable. I can't help it.%@EH@%
  41754. I was born sneering.%@NL@%
  41755. %@CR:PRIDE Gilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  41756.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  41757.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  41758. %@AS@%                                                                     Pride%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41759. %@NL@%
  41760. %@NL@%
  41761. %@2@%I cannot dig; to beg I am ashamed.%@NL@%
  41762. %@CR:PRIDE Jesus     @%%@NL@%
  41763.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  41764.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  41765.                                       in the parable of the unjust steward%@NL@%
  41766. %@AS@%                                                                     Pride%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41767. %@NL@%
  41768. %@NL@%
  41769.      %@2@%And the Devil did grin, for his darling sin%@NL@%
  41770.      Is pride that apes humility.%@NL@%
  41771. %@CR:PRIDE Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  41772.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  41773.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  41774. %@AS@%                                                                     Pride%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41775. %@NL@%
  41776. %@NL@%
  41777. %@NL@%
  41778. %@1@%%@AS@%Primitive Life%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41779. %@CR:PRIMITIVELIFE   @%%@NL@%
  41780. %@2@%%@QR:Primitive Life@%No arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all%@EH@%
  41781. continual fear and danger of violent death; and the life of man,
  41782. solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.%@NL@%
  41783. %@CR:PRIMITHobbes    @%%@NL@%
  41784.                                                  Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)%@NL@%
  41785.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  41786. %@AS@%                                                            Primitive Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41787. %@NL@%
  41788. %@NL@%
  41789. %@2@%So often among so-called "primitives" one comes across spiritual%@EH@%
  41790. personalities who immediately inspire respect, as though they were
  41791. the fully matured products of an undisturbed fate.%@NL@%
  41792. %@CR:PRIMITJung      @%%@NL@%
  41793.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  41794.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  41795. %@AS@%                                                            Primitive Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41796. %@NL@%
  41797. %@NL@%
  41798. %@NL@%
  41799. %@1@%%@AS@%Principles%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41800. %@CR:PRINCIPLES      @%%@NL@%
  41801. %@2@%See:%@QR:Principles@%%@NL@%
  41802.      The English: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           cdfcb@%%@NL@%
  41803.      Religion: %@AB@%Luther%@AE@%%@BO:          2209bb@%%@NL@%
  41804.      Tradition: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          28fc1f@%%@NL@%
  41805. %@NL@%
  41806. %@2@%When a fellow says, "It ain't the money but the principle%@EH@%
  41807. of the thing," it's the money.%@NL@%
  41808. %@CR:PRINCIHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  41809.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  41810.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  41811. %@AS@%                                                                Principles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41812. %@NL@%
  41813. %@NL@%
  41814. %@2@%Principles have no real force except when one is well-fed.%@NL@%
  41815. %@CR:PRINCITwain     @%%@NL@%
  41816.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  41817.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41818. %@AS@%                                                                Principles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41819. %@NL@%
  41820. %@NL@%
  41821. %@2@%The difficulty is to know conscience from self-interest.%@NL@%
  41822. %@CR:PRINCIHowells   @%%@NL@%
  41823.                                           William Dean Howells (1837-1920)%@NL@%
  41824.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  41825. %@AS@%                                                                Principles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41826. %@NL@%
  41827. %@NL@%
  41828. %@2@%It is easier to fight for one's principles than to live up%@EH@%
  41829. to them.%@NL@%
  41830. %@CR:PRINCIAdler     @%%@NL@%
  41831.                                                   Alfred Adler (1870-1937)%@NL@%
  41832.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  41833. %@AS@%                                                                Principles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41834. %@NL@%
  41835. %@NL@%
  41836. %@NL@%
  41837. %@1@%%@AS@%Priorities%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41838. %@CR:PRIORITIES      @%%@NL@%
  41839. %@2@%%@QR:Priorities@%The three most important things a man has are, briefly, his%@EH@%
  41840. private parts, his money, and his religious opinions.%@NL@%
  41841. %@CR:PRIORIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  41842.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  41843.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  41844. %@AS@%                                                                Priorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41845. %@NL@%
  41846. %@NL@%
  41847. %@2@%The least pain in our little finger gives us more concern and%@EH@%
  41848. uneasiness than the destruction of millions of our fellow-beings.%@NL@%
  41849. %@CR:PRIORIHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  41850.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  41851.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  41852. %@AS@%                                                                Priorities%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41853. %@NL@%
  41854. %@NL@%
  41855. %@NL@%
  41856. %@1@%%@AS@%Prison%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41857. %@CR:PRISON          @%%@NL@%
  41858. %@2@%See:%@QR:Prison@%%@NL@%
  41859.      Anxiety: %@AB@%Greer%@AE@%%@BO:           22568@%%@NL@%
  41860. %@NL@%
  41861.      %@2@%A Robin Redbreast in a cage%@NL@%
  41862.      Puts all Heaven in a Rage.%@NL@%
  41863. %@CR:PRISONBlake     @%%@NL@%
  41864.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  41865.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  41866. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41867. %@NL@%
  41868. %@NL@%
  41869. %@2@%The first prison I ever saw had inscribed on it "Cease to%@EH@%
  41870. do evil: learn to do well"; but as the inscription was on the
  41871. outside, the prisoners could not read it.%@NL@%
  41872. %@CR:PRISONShaw      @%%@NL@%
  41873.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  41874.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  41875. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41876. %@NL@%
  41877. %@NL@%
  41878.      %@2@%I know not whether Laws be right%@NL@%
  41879.      Or whether Laws be wrong;%@NL@%
  41880.      All that we know who live in gaol%@NL@%
  41881.      Is that the wall is strong;%@NL@%
  41882.      And that each day is like a year,%@NL@%
  41883.      A year whose days are long.%@NL@%
  41884. %@CR:PRISONWilde     @%%@NL@%
  41885.                                                from %@AI@%Ballad of Reading Gaol%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41886.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  41887.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  41888. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41889. %@NL@%
  41890. %@NL@%
  41891. %@2@%In prison those things withheld from and denied the prisoner%@EH@%
  41892. become precisely what he wants most of all.%@NL@%
  41893. %@CR:PRISONCleaver   @%%@NL@%
  41894.                                                 Eldridge Cleaver (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  41895.                                              American black leader, writer%@NL@%
  41896. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41897. %@NL@%
  41898. %@NL@%
  41899. %@2@%Anyone who has been to an English public school will always%@EH@%
  41900. feel comparatively at home in prison. It is the people brought
  41901. up in the gay intimacy of the slums who find prison so soul-destroying.%@NL@%
  41902. %@CR:PRISONWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  41903.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  41904.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  41905. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41906. %@NL@%
  41907. %@NL@%
  41908.      %@2@%Stone walls do not a prison make%@NL@%
  41909.      Nor iron bars a cage;%@NL@%
  41910.      Minds innocent and quiet take%@NL@%
  41911.      That for an hermitage.%@NL@%
  41912. %@CR:PRISONLovelace2 @%%@NL@%
  41913.                                               Richard Lovelace (1618-1658)%@NL@%
  41914.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  41915. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41916. %@NL@%
  41917. %@NL@%
  41918. %@2@%The most anxious man in a prison is the governor.%@NL@%
  41919. %@CR:PRISONShaw      @%%@NL@%
  41920.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  41921.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  41922. %@AS@%                                                                    Prison%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41923. %@NL@%
  41924. %@NL@%
  41925. %@NL@%
  41926. %@1@%%@AS@%Private Education%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41927. %@CR:PRIVATEEDUCATION@%%@NL@%
  41928. %@2@%See:%@QR:Private Education@%%@NL@%
  41929.      Prison: %@AB@%Waugh%@AE@%%@BO:          204259@%%@NL@%
  41930. %@NL@%
  41931. %@2@%Public schools teach the young to argue without quarreling,%@EH@%
  41932. to quarrel without suspecting, and to suspect without slandering.%@NL@%
  41933. %@CR:PRIVATHahn      @%%@NL@%
  41934.                                                  Dr. Kurt Hahn (1886-1974)%@NL@%
  41935.                                                      German educationalist%@NL@%
  41936. %@AS@%                                                         Private Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41937. %@NL@%
  41938. %@NL@%
  41939. %@2@%First religious and moral principles: secondly, gentlemanly%@EH@%
  41940. conduct: thirdly, intellectual ability.%@NL@%
  41941. %@CR:PRIVATArnold3   @%%@NL@%
  41942.                                                  Thomas Arnold (1785-1842)%@NL@%
  41943.                                                  English educator, scholar%@NL@%
  41944. %@AS@%                                                         Private Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41945. %@NL@%
  41946. %@NL@%
  41947. %@2@%But, good gracious, you've got to educate him first. You can't%@EH@%
  41948. expect a boy to be vicious till he's been to a good school.%@NL@%
  41949. %@CR:PRIVATMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  41950.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  41951.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  41952. %@AS@%                                                         Private Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41953. %@NL@%
  41954. %@NL@%
  41955. %@2@%Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality.%@NL@%
  41956. %@CR:PRIVATFielding  @%%@NL@%
  41957.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  41958.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  41959. %@AS@%                                                         Private Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41960. %@NL@%
  41961. %@NL@%
  41962. %@2@%You can still buy five years' education at one of the best%@EH@%
  41963. schools for less than half the cost of a Bentley.%@NL@%
  41964. %@CR:PRIVATJames3    @%%@NL@%
  41965.                                            Lord Jamesof Rusholme (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  41966.                                                           British educator%@NL@%
  41967. %@AS@%                                                         Private Education%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41968. %@NL@%
  41969. %@NL@%
  41970. %@NL@%
  41971. %@1@%%@AS@%Private Interest%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41972. %@CR:PRIVATEINTEREST @%%@NL@%
  41973. %@2@%%@QR:Private Interest@%We must especially beware of that small group of selfish men%@EH@%
  41974. who would clip the wings of the American Eagle in order to feather
  41975. their own nests.%@NL@%
  41976. %@CR:PRIVATRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  41977.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  41978.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  41979. %@AS@%                                                          Private Interest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41980. %@NL@%
  41981. %@NL@%
  41982. %@2@%The little I know of it has not served to raise my opinion%@EH@%
  41983. of what is vulgarly called the "Monied Interest"; I mean, that
  41984. blood-sucker, that muckworm, that calls itself "the friend of
  41985. government."%@NL@%
  41986. %@CR:PRIVATPitt1     @%%@NL@%
  41987.                                                   William Pitt (1708-1778)%@NL@%
  41988.                                         English politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  41989. %@AS@%                                                          Private Interest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  41990. %@NL@%
  41991. %@NL@%
  41992. %@NL@%
  41993. %@1@%%@AS@%Privilege%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  41994. %@CR:PRIVILEGE       @%%@NL@%
  41995. %@2@%%@QR:Privilege@%What men value in this world is not rights, but privileges.%@NL@%
  41996. %@CR:PRIVILMencken   @%%@NL@%
  41997.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  41998.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  41999. %@AS@%                                                                 Privilege%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42000. %@NL@%
  42001. %@NL@%
  42002. %@2@%What men prize most is a privilege, even if it be that of a%@EH@%
  42003. chief mourner at a funeral.%@NL@%
  42004. %@CR:PRIVILLowell2   @%%@NL@%
  42005.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  42006.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  42007. %@AS@%                                                                 Privilege%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42008. %@NL@%
  42009. %@NL@%
  42010. %@2@%God is no respecter of persons.%@NL@%
  42011. %@CR:PRIVILSaintPeter@%%@NL@%
  42012.                                            Saint Peter (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  42013.                                                          Apostle of Christ%@NL@%
  42014. %@AS@%                                                                 Privilege%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42015. %@NL@%
  42016. %@NL@%
  42017. %@NL@%
  42018. %@1@%%@AS@%Procreation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42019. %@CR:PROCREATION     @%%@NL@%
  42020. %@2@%See:%@QR:Procreation@%%@NL@%
  42021.      Fertility: %@AB@%Keynes%@AE@%%@BO:           ee80b@%%@NL@%
  42022.      Sex: %@AB@%Luther%@AE@%%@BO:          24c95f@%; %@AB@%Browne%@AE@%%@BO:          24cb4a@%%@NL@%
  42023. %@NL@%
  42024. %@2@%He plough'd her, and she cropp'd.%@NL@%
  42025. %@CR:PROCREShakespear@%%@NL@%
  42026.                                              Agrippa, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42027.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  42028.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  42029. %@AS@%                                                               Procreation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42030. %@NL@%
  42031. %@NL@%
  42032. %@2@%Common morality now treats childbearing as an aberration. There%@EH@%
  42033. are practically no good reasons left for exercising one's fertility.%@NL@%
  42034. %@CR:PROCREGreer     @%%@NL@%
  42035.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  42036.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  42037. %@AS@%                                                               Procreation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42038. %@NL@%
  42039. %@NL@%
  42040. %@2@%The purpose of population is not ultimately peopling earth.%@EH@%
  42041. It is to fill heaven.%@NL@%
  42042. %@CR:PROCRELeonard   @%%@NL@%
  42043.                                                    G. D. Leonard (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  42044.                                                           Bishop of London%@NL@%
  42045.                                                                       1983%@NL@%
  42046. %@AS@%                                                               Procreation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42047. %@NL@%
  42048. %@NL@%
  42049. %@2@%A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg.%@NL@%
  42050. %@CR:PROCREButler4   @%%@NL@%
  42051.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  42052.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42053. %@AS@%                                                               Procreation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42054. %@NL@%
  42055. %@NL@%
  42056. %@NL@%
  42057. %@1@%%@AS@%Progress%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42058. %@CR:PROGRESS        @%%@NL@%
  42059. %@2@%See:%@QR:Progress@%%@NL@%
  42060.      Change: %@AB@%Hooker%@AE@%%@BO:           59386@%; %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           59205@%%@NL@%
  42061.      Father: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           ea469@%%@NL@%
  42062.      Reform: %@AB@%Gladstone%@AE@%%@BO:          21eec9@%%@NL@%
  42063. %@NL@%
  42064. %@2@%The world is moving so fast these days that the man who says%@EH@%
  42065. it can't be done is generally interrupted by someone doing it.%@NL@%
  42066. %@CR:PROGREHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  42067.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  42068.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  42069. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42070. %@NL@%
  42071. %@NL@%
  42072. %@2@%The longer I live the more keenly I feel that whatever was%@EH@%
  42073. good enough for our fathers is not good enough for us.%@NL@%
  42074. %@CR:PROGREWilde     @%%@NL@%
  42075.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  42076.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  42077. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42078. %@NL@%
  42079. %@NL@%
  42080. %@2@%The slogan of progress is changing from the full dinner pail%@EH@%
  42081. to the full garage.%@NL@%
  42082. %@CR:PROGREHoover    @%%@NL@%
  42083.                                                 Herbert Hoover (1874-1964)%@NL@%
  42084.                                  American Republican politician, president%@NL@%
  42085. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42086. %@NL@%
  42087. %@NL@%
  42088. %@2@%All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the%@EH@%
  42089. part of every organism to live beyond its income.%@NL@%
  42090. %@CR:PROGREButler4   @%%@NL@%
  42091.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  42092.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42093. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42094. %@NL@%
  42095. %@NL@%
  42096. %@2@%The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable%@EH@%
  42097. one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
  42098. all progress depends on the unreasonable man.%@NL@%
  42099. %@CR:PROGREShaw      @%%@NL@%
  42100.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  42101.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  42102. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42103. %@NL@%
  42104. %@NL@%
  42105. %@2@%There is a slow movement in history toward the recognition%@EH@%
  42106. of a man by his fellow man. When this happens all that has been
  42107. done in the past will fall into place and find its true value.%@NL@%
  42108. %@CR:PROGRESartre    @%%@NL@%
  42109.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  42110.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  42111.                                                      in his last interview%@NL@%
  42112. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42113. %@NL@%
  42114. %@NL@%
  42115. %@2@%You can't say that civilization don't advance, for in every%@EH@%
  42116. war they kill you a new way.%@NL@%
  42117. %@CR:PROGRERogers3   @%%@NL@%
  42118.                                                    Will Rogers (1879-1935)%@NL@%
  42119.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  42120. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42121. %@NL@%
  42122. %@NL@%
  42123. %@2@%We have stopped believing in progress. What progress that is!%@NL@%
  42124. %@CR:PROGREBorges    @%%@NL@%
  42125.                                              Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986)%@NL@%
  42126.                                  Argentine poet, critic, short storywriter%@NL@%
  42127. %@AS@%                                                                  Progress%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42128. %@NL@%
  42129. %@NL@%
  42130. %@NL@%
  42131. %@1@%%@AS@%Promiscuity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42132. %@CR:PROMISCUITY     @%%@NL@%
  42133. %@2@%See:%@QR:Promiscuity@%%@NL@%
  42134.      Love: %@AB@%Fletcher%@AE@%%@BO:          184002@%%@NL@%
  42135. %@NL@%
  42136. %@2@%Elyot: It doesn't suit women to be promiscuous.%@EH@%
  42137. Amanda: It doesn't suit men for women to be promiscuous.%@NL@%
  42138. %@CR:PROMISCoward    @%%@NL@%
  42139.                                                              %@AI@%Private Lives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42140.                                                    Noel Coward (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  42141.                                        English playwright, actor, composer%@NL@%
  42142. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42143. %@NL@%
  42144. %@NL@%
  42145. %@2@%We still have these double standards, where the emphasis is%@EH@%
  42146. all on the male's sexual appetites - that it's OK for him to
  42147. collect as many scalps as he can before he settles down and "pays
  42148. the pace." If a woman displays the same attitude, all the epithets
  42149. that exist in the English language are laid at her door, and with
  42150. extraordinary bitterness.%@NL@%
  42151. %@CR:PROMISJackson2  @%%@NL@%
  42152.                                                   Glenda Jackson (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  42153.                                                       English film actress%@NL@%
  42154. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42155. %@NL@%
  42156. %@NL@%
  42157. %@2@%Europeans used to say Americans were puritanical. Then they%@EH@%
  42158. discovered that we were not puritans. So now they say we are obsessed
  42159. with sex.%@NL@%
  42160. %@CR:PROMISMcCarthy2 @%%@NL@%
  42161.                                                  Mary McCarthy (1912-1989)%@NL@%
  42162.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  42163. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42164. %@NL@%
  42165. %@NL@%
  42166. %@2@%Permissiveness is simply removing the dust sheets from our%@EH@%
  42167. follies.%@NL@%
  42168. %@CR:PROMISOBrien    @%%@NL@%
  42169.                                                     Edna O'Brien (b. 1936)%@NL@%
  42170.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  42171. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42172. %@NL@%
  42173. %@NL@%
  42174. %@2@%It is as absurd to say that a man can't love one woman all%@EH@%
  42175. the time as it is to say that a violinist needs several violins
  42176. to play the same piece of music.%@NL@%
  42177. %@CR:PROMISBalzac    @%%@NL@%
  42178.                                               Honore de Balzac (1799-1850)%@NL@%
  42179.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  42180. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42181. %@NL@%
  42182. %@NL@%
  42183. %@2@%You were born with your legs apart. They'll send you to your%@EH@%
  42184. grave in a Y-shaped coffin.%@NL@%
  42185. %@CR:PROMISORton     @%%@NL@%
  42186.                                                      Joe Orton (1933-1967)%@NL@%
  42187.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  42188. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42189. %@NL@%
  42190. %@NL@%
  42191. %@2@%The sexual freedom of today for most people is really only%@EH@%
  42192. a convention, an obligation, a social duty, a social anxiety, a
  42193. necessary feature of the consumer's way of life.%@NL@%
  42194. %@CR:PROMISPasolini  @%%@NL@%
  42195.                                            Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975)%@NL@%
  42196.                                            Italian film director, essayist%@NL@%
  42197. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42198. %@NL@%
  42199. %@NL@%
  42200. %@2@%Like the bee its sting, the promiscuous leave behind them in%@EH@%
  42201. each encounter something of themselves by which they are made to
  42202. suffer.%@NL@%
  42203. %@CR:PROMISConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  42204.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  42205.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  42206. %@AS@%                                                               Promiscuity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42207. %@NL@%
  42208. %@NL@%
  42209. %@NL@%
  42210. %@1@%%@AS@%Promises%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42211. %@CR:PROMISES        @%%@NL@%
  42212. %@2@%See:%@QR:Promises@%%@NL@%
  42213.      Hope: %@AB@%da Vinci%@AE@%%@BO:          1354e5@%%@NL@%
  42214. %@NL@%
  42215. %@2@%The man who promises everything is sure to fulfil nothing,%@EH@%
  42216. and everyone who promises too much is in danger of using evil means
  42217. in order to carry out his promises, and is already on the road
  42218. to perdition.%@NL@%
  42219. %@CR:PROMISJung      @%%@NL@%
  42220.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  42221.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42222. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42223. %@NL@%
  42224. %@NL@%
  42225. %@2@%%@AI@%Sed mulier cupido quod dicit amanti, In vento et rapida scribere%@AE@%%@EH@%
  42226. %@AI@%oportet aqua.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42227. %@NL@%
  42228. What a woman says to her avid lover should be written in wind
  42229. and running water.%@NL@%
  42230. %@CR:PROMISCatullus  @%%@NL@%
  42231.                                                        Catullus (87-54 BC)%@NL@%
  42232.                                                           Roman lyric poet%@NL@%
  42233. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42234. %@NL@%
  42235. %@NL@%
  42236. %@2@%Do not vow - our love is frail as is our life, and full%@EH@%
  42237. as little in our power.%@NL@%
  42238. %@CR:PROMISEtherege  @%%@NL@%
  42239.                                            Sir George Etherege (1635-1691)%@NL@%
  42240.                                                English dramatist, diplomat%@NL@%
  42241. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42242. %@NL@%
  42243. %@NL@%
  42244. %@2@%Promises and pie-crust are made to be broken.%@NL@%
  42245. %@CR:PROMISSwift     @%%@NL@%
  42246.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  42247.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  42248. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42249. %@NL@%
  42250. %@NL@%
  42251. %@2@%Half the promises people say were never kept, were never made.%@NL@%
  42252. %@CR:PROMISHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  42253.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  42254.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  42255. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42256. %@NL@%
  42257. %@NL@%
  42258. %@2@%The rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yesterday - but never%@EH@%
  42259. jam today.%@NL@%
  42260. %@CR:PROMISCarroll   @%%@NL@%
  42261.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  42262.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  42263. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42264. %@NL@%
  42265. %@NL@%
  42266. %@2@%It is not the oath that makes us believe the man, but the man%@EH@%
  42267. the oath.%@NL@%
  42268. %@CR:PROMISAeschylus @%%@NL@%
  42269.                                                     Aeschylus (525-456 BC)%@NL@%
  42270.                                                          Greek tragic poet%@NL@%
  42271. %@AS@%                                                                  Promises%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42272. %@NL@%
  42273. %@NL@%
  42274. %@NL@%
  42275. %@1@%%@AS@%Promotion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42276. %@CR:PROMOTION       @%%@NL@%
  42277. %@2@%See:%@QR:Promotion@%%@NL@%
  42278.      Partnership: %@AB@%Carnegie%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce2e6@%%@NL@%
  42279.      Work: %@AB@%Frost%@AE@%%@BO:          2c3f2e@%%@NL@%
  42280. %@NL@%
  42281. %@2@%Comrades, you have lost a good captain to make him an ill general.%@NL@%
  42282. %@CR:PROMOTMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  42283.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  42284.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  42285. %@AS@%                                                                 Promotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42286. %@NL@%
  42287. %@NL@%
  42288. %@2@%It is easier to appear worthy of a position one does not hold,%@EH@%
  42289. than of the office which one fills.%@NL@%
  42290. %@CR:PROMOTLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  42291.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  42292.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  42293. %@AS@%                                                                 Promotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42294. %@NL@%
  42295. %@NL@%
  42296. %@2@%Every man who takes office in Washington either grows or swells,%@EH@%
  42297. and when I give a man an office, I watch him carefully to see whether
  42298. he is swelling or growing.%@NL@%
  42299. %@CR:PROMOTWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  42300.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  42301.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  42302. %@AS@%                                                                 Promotion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42303. %@NL@%
  42304. %@NL@%
  42305. %@NL@%
  42306. %@1@%%@AS@%Propaganda%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42307. %@CR:PROPAGANDA      @%%@NL@%
  42308. %@2@%See:%@QR:Propaganda@%%@NL@%
  42309.      Idealism: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          1413e6@%%@NL@%
  42310. %@NL@%
  42311. %@2@%The three chief qualifications of a party writer are to stick%@EH@%
  42312. at nothing, to delight in flinging dirt, and to slander in the
  42313. dark by guess.%@NL@%
  42314. %@CR:PROPAGPope      @%%@NL@%
  42315.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  42316.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  42317. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42318. %@NL@%
  42319. %@NL@%
  42320. %@2@%Propaganda is that branch of the art of lying which consists%@EH@%
  42321. in nearly deceiving your friends without quite deceiving your enemies.%@NL@%
  42322. %@CR:PROPAGCornford1 @%%@NL@%
  42323.                                                 F. M. Cornford (1874-1943)%@NL@%
  42324.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  42325. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42326. %@NL@%
  42327. %@NL@%
  42328. %@2@%Nobody has ever succeeded in keeping nations at war except%@EH@%
  42329. by lies.%@NL@%
  42330. %@CR:PROPAGdeMadariag@%%@NL@%
  42331.                                          Salvador de Madariaga (1886-1978)%@NL@%
  42332.                                           Spanish diplomat, writer, critic%@NL@%
  42333. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42334. %@NL@%
  42335. %@NL@%
  42336. %@2@%As soon as by one's own propaganda even a glimpse of right%@EH@%
  42337. on the other side is admitted, the cause for doubting one's own
  42338. right is laid.%@NL@%
  42339. %@CR:PROPAGHitler    @%%@NL@%
  42340.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  42341.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  42342. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42343. %@NL@%
  42344. %@NL@%
  42345. %@2@%In our country the lie has become not just a moral category%@EH@%
  42346. but a pillar of the State.%@NL@%
  42347. %@CR:PROPAGSolzhenits@%%@NL@%
  42348.                                           Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  42349.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  42350. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42351. %@NL@%
  42352. %@NL@%
  42353. %@2@%He that has the worst cause makes the most noise.%@NL@%
  42354. %@CR:PROPAGSolzhenits@%%@NL@%
  42355.                                                                    proverb%@NL@%
  42356. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42357. %@NL@%
  42358. %@NL@%
  42359. %@2@%Get your facts first, and then you can distort 'em as much%@EH@%
  42360. as you please.%@NL@%
  42361. %@CR:PROPAGTwain     @%%@NL@%
  42362.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  42363.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  42364. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42365. %@NL@%
  42366. %@NL@%
  42367. %@2@%The most dangerous of all falsehoods is a slightly distorted%@EH@%
  42368. truth.%@NL@%
  42369. %@CR:PROPAGLichtenber@%%@NL@%
  42370.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  42371.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  42372. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42373. %@NL@%
  42374. %@NL@%
  42375. %@2@%I have never seen pessimism in a Company prospectus.%@NL@%
  42376. %@CR:PROPAGConnor    @%%@NL@%
  42377.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  42378.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  42379. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42380. %@NL@%
  42381. %@NL@%
  42382. %@2@%Why is propaganda so much more successful when it stirs up%@EH@%
  42383. hatred than when it tries to stir up friendly feeling?%@NL@%
  42384. %@CR:PROPAGRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  42385.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  42386.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  42387. %@AS@%                                                                Propaganda%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42388. %@NL@%
  42389. %@NL@%
  42390. %@NL@%
  42391. %@1@%%@AS@%Property%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42392. %@CR:PROPERTY        @%%@NL@%
  42393. %@2@%See:%@QR:Property@%%@NL@%
  42394.      Communism: %@AB@%Proudhon%@AE@%%@BO:           7588d@%%@NL@%
  42395.      Government: %@AB@%Locke%@AE@%%@BO:          1162ce@%%@NL@%
  42396.      %@AB@%Landlords%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          169cab@%%@NL@%
  42397.      Socialism: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          25e953@%%@NL@%
  42398. %@NL@%
  42399. %@2@%Next to the right of liberty, the right of property is the%@EH@%
  42400. most important individual right guaranteed by the Constitution
  42401. and the one which, united with that of personal liberty, has contributed
  42402. more to the growth of civilization than any other institution established
  42403. by the human race.%@NL@%
  42404. %@CR:PROPERTaft2     @%%@NL@%
  42405.                                            William Howard Taft (1857-1930)%@NL@%
  42406.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  42407. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42408. %@NL@%
  42409. %@NL@%
  42410. %@2@%It is preoccupation with possession, more than anything else,%@EH@%
  42411. that prevents men from living freely and nobly.%@NL@%
  42412. %@CR:PROPERRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  42413.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  42414.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  42415. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42416. %@NL@%
  42417. %@NL@%
  42418. %@2@%If property had simply pleasures, we could stand it; but its%@EH@%
  42419. duties make it unbearable. In the interest of the rich we must
  42420. get rid of it.%@NL@%
  42421. %@CR:PROPERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  42422.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  42423.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  42424. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42425. %@NL@%
  42426. %@NL@%
  42427. %@2@%By abolishing private property one takes away the human love%@EH@%
  42428. of aggression.%@NL@%
  42429. %@CR:PROPERFreud     @%%@NL@%
  42430.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  42431.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42432. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42433. %@NL@%
  42434. %@NL@%
  42435. %@2@%In our rich consumers' civilization we spin cocoons around%@EH@%
  42436. ourselves and get possessed by our possessions.%@NL@%
  42437. %@CR:PROPERLerner    @%%@NL@%
  42438.                                                       Max Lerner (b. 1902)%@NL@%
  42439.                                              American academic, journalist%@NL@%
  42440. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42441. %@NL@%
  42442. %@NL@%
  42443. %@2@%If a man owns land, the land owns him.%@NL@%
  42444. %@CR:PROPEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  42445.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  42446.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  42447. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42448. %@NL@%
  42449. %@NL@%
  42450.      %@2@%The law doth punish man or woman%@NL@%
  42451.      That steals the goose from off the common,%@NL@%
  42452.      But lets the greater felon loose,%@NL@%
  42453.      That steals the common from the goose.%@NL@%
  42454. %@CR:PROPEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  42455.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  42456. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42457. %@NL@%
  42458. %@NL@%
  42459. %@2@%Property is a god. This god already has its theology (called%@EH@%
  42460. state politics and juridical right) and also its morality, the
  42461. most adequate expression of which is summed up in the phrase: "That
  42462. man is worth so much!"%@NL@%
  42463. %@CR:PROPERBakunin   @%%@NL@%
  42464.                                                Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)%@NL@%
  42465.                                                 Russian political theorist%@NL@%
  42466. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42467. %@NL@%
  42468. %@NL@%
  42469. %@2@%Thieves respect property. They merely wish the property to%@EH@%
  42470. become their property that they may more perfectly respect it.%@NL@%
  42471. %@CR:PROPERChesterton@%%@NL@%
  42472.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  42473.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42474. %@AS@%                                                                  Property%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42475. %@NL@%
  42476. %@NL@%
  42477. %@NL@%
  42478. %@1@%%@AS@%Prophecy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42479. %@CR:PROPHECY        @%%@NL@%
  42480. %@2@%%@QR:Prophecy@%Prophecy is the most gratuitous form of error.%@NL@%
  42481. %@CR:PROPHEEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  42482.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  42483.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  42484. %@AS@%                                                                  Prophecy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42485. %@NL@%
  42486. %@NL@%
  42487. %@NL@%
  42488. %@1@%%@AS@%Prostitution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42489. %@CR:PROSTITUTION    @%%@NL@%
  42490. %@2@%See:%@QR:Prostitution@%%@NL@%
  42491.      Lawyers: %@AB@%Brabazon%@AE@%%@BO:          16e328@%%@NL@%
  42492.      Lust: %@AB@%Dahlberg%@AE@%%@BO:          18a1b3@%%@NL@%
  42493. %@NL@%
  42494.      %@2@%O unknown man,%@NL@%
  42495.      Whose hunger on my hunger wrought,%@NL@%
  42496.      Body shall give what body can,%@NL@%
  42497.      Shall give you all - save what you sought.%@NL@%
  42498. %@CR:PROSTIDodds1    @%%@NL@%
  42499.                                                    E. R. Dodds (1893-1979)%@NL@%
  42500.                                                  British classical scholar%@NL@%
  42501. %@AS@%                                                              Prostitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42502. %@NL@%
  42503. %@NL@%
  42504. %@2@%If a woman hasn't got a tiny streak of a harlot in her, she's%@EH@%
  42505. a dry stick as a rule.%@NL@%
  42506. %@CR:PROSTILawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  42507.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  42508.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42509. %@AS@%                                                              Prostitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42510. %@NL@%
  42511. %@NL@%
  42512.      %@2@%If you want to buy my wares%@NL@%
  42513.      Follow me and climb the stairs . . . %@NL@%
  42514.      Love for sale.%@NL@%
  42515. %@CR:PROSTIPorter    @%%@NL@%
  42516.                                                              %@AI@%Love for Sale%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42517.                                                    Cole Porter (1893-1964)%@NL@%
  42518.                                                American composer, lyricist%@NL@%
  42519. %@AS@%                                                              Prostitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42520. %@NL@%
  42521. %@NL@%
  42522.      %@2@%Prisons are built with stones of Law,%@NL@%
  42523.      Brothels with bricks of Religion.%@NL@%
  42524. %@CR:PROSTIBlake     @%%@NL@%
  42525.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  42526.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  42527. %@AS@%                                                              Prostitution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42528. %@NL@%
  42529. %@NL@%
  42530. %@NL@%
  42531. %@1@%%@AS@%Protest%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42532. %@CR:PROTEST         @%%@NL@%
  42533. %@2@%%@QR:Protest@%While there is a lower class, I am in it; while there is a%@EH@%
  42534. criminal element, I am of it; and while there is a soul in prison,
  42535. I am not free.%@NL@%
  42536. %@CR:PROTESDebs      @%%@NL@%
  42537.                                                 Eugene V. Debs (1855-1926)%@NL@%
  42538.                                                    American trade unionist%@NL@%
  42539. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42540. %@NL@%
  42541. %@NL@%
  42542. %@2@%Lean, hungry, savage, anti-everythings.%@NL@%
  42543. %@CR:PROTESHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  42544.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  42545.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  42546. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42547. %@NL@%
  42548. %@NL@%
  42549. %@2@%One fifth of the people are against everything all the time.%@NL@%
  42550. %@CR:PROTESKennedy2  @%%@NL@%
  42551.                                                 Robert Kennedy (1925-1968)%@NL@%
  42552.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  42553. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42554. %@NL@%
  42555. %@NL@%
  42556. %@2@%Yippies, hippies, yahoos, Black Panthers, lions and tigers%@EH@%
  42557. alike - I'd swap the whole damn zoo for the kind of young Americans
  42558. I saw in Vietnam.%@NL@%
  42559. %@CR:PROTESAgnew     @%%@NL@%
  42560.                                                      Spiro Agnew (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  42561.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  42562. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42563. %@NL@%
  42564. %@NL@%
  42565. %@2@%It's the kind of gathering where one feels a need to apologise%@EH@%
  42566. for never having been to prison.%@NL@%
  42567. %@CR:PROTESMathews   @%%@NL@%
  42568.                                     Dame Vera Laughton Mathews (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  42569.                                                        British suffragette%@NL@%
  42570. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42571. %@NL@%
  42572. %@NL@%
  42573. %@2@%If any demonstrator ever lays down in front of my car, it'll%@EH@%
  42574. be the last car he'll ever lay down in front of.%@NL@%
  42575. %@CR:PROTESWallace   @%%@NL@%
  42576.                                                George C. Wallace (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  42577.                                            American Independent politician%@NL@%
  42578. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42579. %@NL@%
  42580. %@NL@%
  42581. %@2@%I feel that I am a citizen of the American dream and that the%@EH@%
  42582. revolutionary struggle of which I am a part is a struggle against
  42583. the American nightmare.%@NL@%
  42584. %@CR:PROTESCleaver   @%%@NL@%
  42585.                                                 Eldridge Cleaver (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  42586.                                              American black leader, writer%@NL@%
  42587. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42588. %@NL@%
  42589. %@NL@%
  42590. %@2@%America I'm putting my queer shoulder to the wheel.%@NL@%
  42591. %@CR:PROTESGinsberg  @%%@NL@%
  42592.                                                   Allen Ginsberg (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  42593.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  42594. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42595. %@NL@%
  42596. %@NL@%
  42597. %@2@%I pondered all these things and how men fight and lose the%@EH@%
  42598. battle, and the thing that they fought for comes about in spite
  42599. of their defeat, and, when it comes, turns out not to be what they
  42600. meant, and other men have to fight for what they meant under another
  42601. name.%@NL@%
  42602. %@CR:PROTESMorris2   @%%@NL@%
  42603.                                                 William Morris (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  42604.                                            English artist, writer, printer%@NL@%
  42605. %@AS@%                                                                   Protest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42606. %@NL@%
  42607. %@NL@%
  42608. %@NL@%
  42609. %@1@%%@AS@%Proverbs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42610. %@CR:PROVERBS        @%%@NL@%
  42611. %@2@%%@QR:Proverbs@%A proverb is the wisdom of many and the wit of one.%@NL@%
  42612. %@CR:PROVERRussell3  @%%@NL@%
  42613.                                               Lord JohnRussell (1792-1878)%@NL@%
  42614.                                          English statesman, prime minister%@NL@%
  42615. %@AS@%                                                                  Proverbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42616. %@NL@%
  42617. %@NL@%
  42618. %@2@%Proverbs are always platitudes until you have personally experienced%@EH@%
  42619. the truth of them.%@NL@%
  42620. %@CR:PROVERHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  42621.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  42622.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42623. %@AS@%                                                                  Proverbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42624. %@NL@%
  42625. %@NL@%
  42626. %@2@%A country can be judged by the quality of its proverbs.%@NL@%
  42627. %@CR:PROVERHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  42628.                                                             German proverb%@NL@%
  42629. %@AS@%                                                                  Proverbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42630. %@NL@%
  42631. %@NL@%
  42632. %@NL@%
  42633. %@1@%%@AS@%Psychiatric Wards%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42634. %@CR:PSYCHIATRICWARDS@%%@NL@%
  42635. %@2@%%@QR:Psychiatric Wards@%The rule is perfect: in all matters of opinion our adversaries%@EH@%
  42636. are insane.%@NL@%
  42637. %@CR:PSYCHITwain     @%%@NL@%
  42638.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  42639.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  42640. %@AS@%                                                         Psychiatric Wards%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42641. %@NL@%
  42642. %@NL@%
  42643. %@NL@%
  42644. %@1@%%@AS@%Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42645. %@CR:PSYCHIATRISTS   @%%@NL@%
  42646. %@2@%%@QR:Psychiatrists@%A psychiatrist is a man who goes to the Folies-Bergere and%@EH@%
  42647. looks at the audience.%@NL@%
  42648. %@CR:PSYCHIStockwood @%%@NL@%
  42649.                                          Bishop Mervyn Stockwood (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  42650.                                                  British churchman, author%@NL@%
  42651. %@AS@%                                                             Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42652. %@NL@%
  42653. %@NL@%
  42654. %@2@%Institutional psychiatry is a continuation of the Inquisition.%@EH@%
  42655. All that has changed really is the vocabulary and the social style.
  42656. The vocabulary conforms to the intellectual expectations of our
  42657. age: it is a pseudo-medical jargon that parodies the concepts
  42658. of science. The social style conforms to the political expectations
  42659. of our age: it is a pseudo-liberal social movement that parodies
  42660. the ideals of freedom and rationality.%@NL@%
  42661. %@CR:PSYCHISzasz     @%%@NL@%
  42662.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  42663.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42664. %@AS@%                                                             Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42665. %@NL@%
  42666. %@NL@%
  42667. %@2@%I have myself spent nine years in a lunatic asylum and have%@EH@%
  42668. never suffered from the obsession of wanting to kill myself;
  42669. but I know that each conversation with a psychiatrist in the morning,
  42670. made me want to hang myself because I knew I could not strangle
  42671. him.%@NL@%
  42672. %@CR:PSYCHIArtaud    @%%@NL@%
  42673.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  42674.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  42675. %@AS@%                                                             Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42676. %@NL@%
  42677. %@NL@%
  42678.      %@2@%Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased;%@NL@%
  42679.      Pluck from the misery a rooted sorrow;%@NL@%
  42680.      Raze out the written troubles of the brain;%@NL@%
  42681.      And, with some sweet oblivious antidote%@NL@%
  42682.      Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff%@NL@%
  42683.      Which weighs upon the heart?%@NL@%
  42684. %@CR:PSYCHIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  42685.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42686.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  42687.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  42688. %@AS@%                                                             Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42689. %@NL@%
  42690. %@NL@%
  42691. %@2@%One should only see a psychiatrist out of boredom.%@NL@%
  42692. %@CR:PSYCHISpark     @%%@NL@%
  42693.                                                     Muriel Spark (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  42694.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  42695. %@AS@%                                                             Psychiatrists%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42696. %@NL@%
  42697. %@NL@%
  42698. %@NL@%
  42699. %@1@%%@AS@%Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42700. %@CR:PSYCHOANALYSIS  @%%@NL@%
  42701. %@2@%See:%@QR:Psychoanalysis@%%@NL@%
  42702.      Science: %@AB@%Freud%@AE@%%@BO:          23ad26@%%@NL@%
  42703. %@NL@%
  42704. %@2@%Psychoanalysis is confession without absolution.%@NL@%
  42705. %@CR:PSYCHOChesterton@%%@NL@%
  42706.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  42707.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  42708. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42709. %@NL@%
  42710. %@NL@%
  42711. %@2@%Psychoanalysis is the probing of mind by mind; confession is%@EH@%
  42712. the communion of conscience and God.%@NL@%
  42713. %@CR:PSYCHOSheen     @%%@NL@%
  42714.                                                Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979)%@NL@%
  42715.                                                 American clergyman, author%@NL@%
  42716. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42717. %@NL@%
  42718. %@NL@%
  42719. %@2@%No doubt fate would find it easier than I do to relieve you%@EH@%
  42720. of your illness. But you will be able to convince yourself that
  42721. much will be gained if we succeed in transforming your hysterical
  42722. misery into common unhappiness.%@NL@%
  42723. %@CR:PSYCHOFreud     @%%@NL@%
  42724.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  42725.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42726. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42727. %@NL@%
  42728. %@NL@%
  42729.      %@2@%"When dreams come true," the ballad singer sang,%@NL@%
  42730.      And loudly through the hall the plaudits rang;%@NL@%
  42731.      For some folk's time has been so ill-employed%@NL@%
  42732.      They've hardly glanced at either Jung or Freud.%@NL@%
  42733. %@CR:PSYCHOWilliams3 @%%@NL@%
  42734.                                          Iolo Aneurin Williams (1890-1962)%@NL@%
  42735.                                                 British author, journalist%@NL@%
  42736. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42737. %@NL@%
  42738. %@NL@%
  42739. %@2@%Psychoanalysis cannot be considered a method of education if%@EH@%
  42740. by education we mean the topiary art of clipping a tree into a
  42741. beautiful artificial shape. But those who have a higher conception
  42742. of education will prize most the method of cultivating a tree
  42743. so that it fulfills to perfection its own natural conditions of
  42744. growth.%@NL@%
  42745. %@CR:PSYCHOJung      @%%@NL@%
  42746.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  42747.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42748. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42749. %@NL@%
  42750. %@NL@%
  42751. %@2@%Psychoanalysts believe that the only "normal" people are%@EH@%
  42752. those who cause no trouble either to themselves or anyone else.%@NL@%
  42753. %@CR:PSYCHOTaylor1   @%%@NL@%
  42754.                                                  A. J. P. Taylor (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  42755.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  42756. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42757. %@NL@%
  42758. %@NL@%
  42759. %@2@%Psychoanalysis pretends to investigate the Unconscious. The%@EH@%
  42760. Unconscious by definition is what you are not conscious of. But
  42761. the Analysts already know what's in it - they should, because
  42762. they put it all in beforehand.%@NL@%
  42763. %@CR:PSYCHOBellow    @%%@NL@%
  42764.                                                      Saul Bellow (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  42765.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  42766. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42767. %@NL@%
  42768. %@NL@%
  42769. %@2@%Where %@AI@%id%@AE@% was, there shall %@AI@%ego%@AE@% be.%@NL@%
  42770. %@CR:PSYCHOFreud     @%%@NL@%
  42771.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  42772.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  42773. %@AS@%                                                            Psychoanalysis%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42774. %@NL@%
  42775. %@NL@%
  42776. %@NL@%
  42777. %@1@%%@AS@%The Public%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42778. %@CR:THEPUBLIC       @%%@NL@%
  42779. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Public@%%@NL@%
  42780.      %@AB@%The Masses%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19bcd8@%%@NL@%
  42781.      Opinion: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          1c43bc@%%@NL@%
  42782.      Portraits: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          1f38ed@%%@NL@%
  42783. %@NL@%
  42784. %@2@%The public! How many fools does it take to make a public?%@NL@%
  42785. %@CR:THEPUBChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  42786.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  42787.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  42788. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42789. %@NL@%
  42790. %@NL@%
  42791. %@2@%If it has to choose who is to be crucified, the crowd will%@EH@%
  42792. always save Barabbas.%@NL@%
  42793. %@CR:THEPUBCocteau   @%%@NL@%
  42794.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  42795.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  42796. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42797. %@NL@%
  42798. %@NL@%
  42799. %@2@%No one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American%@EH@%
  42800. public.%@NL@%
  42801. %@CR:THEPUBMencken   @%%@NL@%
  42802.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  42803.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  42804. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42805. %@NL@%
  42806. %@NL@%
  42807. %@2@%Public opinion, a vulgar, impertinent, anonymous tyrant who%@EH@%
  42808. deliberately makes life unpleasant for anyone who is not content
  42809. to be the average man.%@NL@%
  42810. %@CR:THEPUBInge      @%%@NL@%
  42811.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  42812.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  42813. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42814. %@NL@%
  42815. %@NL@%
  42816. %@2@%Public Opinion, an attempt to organize the ignorance of the%@EH@%
  42817. community and to elevate it to the dignity of physical force.%@NL@%
  42818. %@CR:THEPUBWilde     @%%@NL@%
  42819.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  42820.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  42821. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42822. %@NL@%
  42823. %@NL@%
  42824. %@2@%When the people have no other tyrant, their own public opinion%@EH@%
  42825. becomes one.%@NL@%
  42826. %@CR:THEPUBBulwerLytt@%%@NL@%
  42827.                                           Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873)%@NL@%
  42828.                                               English novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  42829. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42830. %@NL@%
  42831. %@NL@%
  42832. %@2@%There are times when public opinion is the worst of all opinions.%@NL@%
  42833. %@CR:THEPUBChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  42834.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  42835.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  42836. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42837. %@NL@%
  42838. %@NL@%
  42839. %@2@%If forty million people say a foolish thing it does not become%@EH@%
  42840. a wise one, but the wise man is foolish to give them the lie.%@NL@%
  42841. %@CR:THEPUBMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  42842.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  42843.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  42844. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42845. %@NL@%
  42846. %@NL@%
  42847. %@2@%The public, with its mob yearning to be instructed, edified%@EH@%
  42848. and pulled by the nose, demands certainties;  . . .  but there are
  42849. no certainties.%@NL@%
  42850. %@CR:THEPUBMencken   @%%@NL@%
  42851.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  42852.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  42853. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42854. %@NL@%
  42855. %@NL@%
  42856. %@2@%The public seldom forgive twice.%@NL@%
  42857. %@CR:THEPUBLavater   @%%@NL@%
  42858.                                          Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801)%@NL@%
  42859.                                                         Swiss divine, poet%@NL@%
  42860. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42861. %@NL@%
  42862. %@NL@%
  42863. %@2@%There is not a more mean, stupid, dastardly, pitiless, selfish,%@EH@%
  42864. spiteful, envious, ungrateful animal than the public.%@NL@%
  42865. %@CR:THEPUBHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  42866.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  42867.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  42868. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42869. %@NL@%
  42870. %@NL@%
  42871. %@2@%The Public is an old woman. Let her maunder and mumble.%@NL@%
  42872. %@CR:THEPUBCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  42873.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  42874.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  42875. %@AS@%                                                                The Public%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42876. %@NL@%
  42877. %@NL@%
  42878. %@NL@%
  42879. %@1@%%@AS@%Public Life%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42880. %@CR:PUBLICLIFE      @%%@NL@%
  42881. %@2@%See:%@QR:Public Life@%%@NL@%
  42882.      The Public: %@AB@%Lavater%@AE@%%@BO:          20fd3f@%%@NL@%
  42883. %@NL@%
  42884. %@2@%Public life is the paradise of voluble windbags.%@NL@%
  42885. %@CR:PUBLICShaw      @%%@NL@%
  42886.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  42887.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  42888. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42889. %@NL@%
  42890. %@NL@%
  42891. %@2@%The General has dedicated himself so many times, he must feel%@EH@%
  42892. like the cornerstone of a public building.%@NL@%
  42893. %@CR:PUBLICStevenson1@%%@NL@%
  42894.                                                Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965)%@NL@%
  42895.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  42896.                                                    of President Eisenhower%@NL@%
  42897. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42898. %@NL@%
  42899. %@NL@%
  42900. %@2@%If you're there before it's over, you're on time.%@NL@%
  42901. %@CR:PUBLICWalker2   @%%@NL@%
  42902.                                        James(Jimmy J.)  Walker (1881-1946)%@NL@%
  42903.                                         American lawyer, mayor of New York%@NL@%
  42904. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42905. %@NL@%
  42906. %@NL@%
  42907. %@2@%The first lesson in public life is to make sure you have a%@EH@%
  42908. strong corps of implacable enemies.%@NL@%
  42909. %@CR:PUBLICConnor    @%%@NL@%
  42910.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  42911.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  42912. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42913. %@NL@%
  42914. %@NL@%
  42915. %@2@%Eminent posts make great men greater and little men less.%@NL@%
  42916. %@CR:PUBLIClaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  42917.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  42918.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  42919. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42920. %@NL@%
  42921. %@NL@%
  42922. %@2@%A man occupied with public or other important business cannot,%@EH@%
  42923. and need not, attend to spelling.%@NL@%
  42924. %@CR:PUBLICNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  42925.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  42926.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  42927. %@AS@%                                                               Public Life%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42928. %@NL@%
  42929. %@NL@%
  42930. %@NL@%
  42931. %@1@%%@AS@%Publicity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42932. %@CR:PUBLICITY       @%%@NL@%
  42933. %@2@%See:%@QR:Publicity@%%@NL@%
  42934.      The Press: %@AB@%Bennett%@AE@%%@BO:          200cf9@%%@NL@%
  42935. %@NL@%
  42936. %@2@%Sir, if they should cease to talk of me I must starve.%@NL@%
  42937. %@CR:PUBLICJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  42938.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  42939.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  42940. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42941. %@NL@%
  42942. %@NL@%
  42943. %@2@%All publicity is good, except an obituary notice.%@NL@%
  42944. %@CR:PUBLICBehan     @%%@NL@%
  42945.                                                  Brendan Behan (1923-1964)%@NL@%
  42946.                                                           Irish playwright%@NL@%
  42947. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42948. %@NL@%
  42949. %@NL@%
  42950. %@2@%I have bought golden opinions from all sorts of people.%@NL@%
  42951. %@CR:PUBLICShakespear@%%@NL@%
  42952.                                                           Macbeth, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42953.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  42954.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  42955. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42956. %@NL@%
  42957. %@NL@%
  42958. %@2@%A telescope will magnify a star a thousand times, but a good%@EH@%
  42959. press agent can do even better.%@NL@%
  42960. %@CR:PUBLICAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  42961.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  42962.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  42963. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42964. %@NL@%
  42965. %@NL@%
  42966. %@2@%To have news value is to have a tin can tied to one's tail.%@NL@%
  42967. %@CR:PUBLICLawrence2 @%%@NL@%
  42968.                                                 T. E. Lawrence (1888-1935)%@NL@%
  42969.                                                   British soldier, scholar%@NL@%
  42970. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42971. %@NL@%
  42972. %@NL@%
  42973. %@2@%I want it so that you can't wipe your ass on a piece of paper%@EH@%
  42974. that hasn't got my picture on it.%@NL@%
  42975. %@CR:PUBLICJohnson4  @%%@NL@%
  42976.                                              Lyndon B. Johnson (1908-1973)%@NL@%
  42977.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  42978.                                                         to his press agent%@NL@%
  42979. %@AS@%                                                                 Publicity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42980. %@NL@%
  42981. %@NL@%
  42982. %@NL@%
  42983. %@1@%%@AS@%Pubs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  42984. %@CR:PUBS            @%%@NL@%
  42985. %@2@%%@QR:Pubs@%There is no private house in which people can enjoy themselves%@EH@%
  42986. so well as in a capital tavern.%@NL@%
  42987. %@CR:PUBS  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  42988.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  42989.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  42990. %@AS@%                                                                      Pubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42991. %@NL@%
  42992. %@NL@%
  42993.      %@2@%Where village statesmen talked with looks profound,%@NL@%
  42994.      And news much older than their ale went round.%@NL@%
  42995. %@CR:PUBS  Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  42996.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  42997.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  42998. %@AS@%                                                                      Pubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  42999. %@NL@%
  43000. %@NL@%
  43001. %@2@%There is nothing which has yet been contrived by man, by which%@EH@%
  43002. so much happiness is produced as by a good tavern or inn; a tavern
  43003. chair is the throne of human felicity.%@NL@%
  43004. %@CR:PUBS  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  43005.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  43006.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  43007. %@AS@%                                                                      Pubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43008. %@NL@%
  43009. %@NL@%
  43010. %@NL@%
  43011. %@1@%%@AS@%Punctuality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43012. %@CR:PUNCTUALITY     @%%@NL@%
  43013. %@2@%See:%@QR:Punctuality@%%@NL@%
  43014.      Public Life: %@AB@%Walker%@AE@%%@BO:          2105dd@%%@NL@%
  43015. %@NL@%
  43016. %@2@%He was always late on principle, his principle being that punctuality%@EH@%
  43017. is the thief of time.%@NL@%
  43018. %@CR:PUNCTUWilde     @%%@NL@%
  43019.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  43020.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  43021. %@AS@%                                                               Punctuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43022. %@NL@%
  43023. %@NL@%
  43024. %@2@%Punctuality is the virtue of the bored.%@NL@%
  43025. %@CR:PUNCTUWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  43026.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  43027.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  43028. %@AS@%                                                               Punctuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43029. %@NL@%
  43030. %@NL@%
  43031. %@2@%I am a believer in punctuality though it makes me very lonely.%@NL@%
  43032. %@CR:PUNCTULucas1    @%%@NL@%
  43033.                                                    E. V. Lucas (1868-1938)%@NL@%
  43034.                                               British journalist, essayist%@NL@%
  43035. %@AS@%                                                               Punctuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43036. %@NL@%
  43037. %@NL@%
  43038. %@2@%Punctuality is the politeness of kings.%@NL@%
  43039. %@CR:PUNCTULouisXVIII@%%@NL@%
  43040.                                          Louis XVIII of France (1755-1824)%@NL@%
  43041. %@AS@%                                                               Punctuality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43042. %@NL@%
  43043. %@NL@%
  43044. %@NL@%
  43045. %@1@%%@AS@%Punishment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43046. %@CR:PUNISHMENT      @%%@NL@%
  43047. %@2@%See:%@QR:Punishment@%%@NL@%
  43048.      %@AB@%Capital Punishment%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           501d0@%%@NL@%
  43049.      Hell: %@AB@%John%@AE@%%@BO:          1259a3@%%@NL@%
  43050.      Justice: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:          165244@%; %@AB@%Young%@AE@%%@BO:          165507@%%@NL@%
  43051. %@NL@%
  43052. %@2@%As a man chasteneth his son, so the Lord God chasteneth thee.%@NL@%
  43053. %@CR:PUNISHBibleDeute@%%@NL@%
  43054.                                                         Bible, Deuteronomy%@NL@%
  43055. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43056. %@NL@%
  43057. %@NL@%
  43058. %@2@%The generality of men are naturally apt to be swayed by fear%@EH@%
  43059. rather than reverence, and to refrain from evil rather because
  43060. of the punishment that it brings than because of its own foulness.%@NL@%
  43061. %@CR:PUNISHAristotle @%%@NL@%
  43062.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  43063.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  43064. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43065. %@NL@%
  43066. %@NL@%
  43067. %@2@%He deserves to be preached to death by wild curates.%@NL@%
  43068. %@CR:PUNISHSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  43069.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  43070.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  43071. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43072. %@NL@%
  43073. %@NL@%
  43074. %@2@%Evil-doers are not to be allowed their way on the ground that%@EH@%
  43075. they are unable to hurt our souls: the hurt may be in the cowardice
  43076. or sloth that will not punish them.%@NL@%
  43077. %@CR:PUNISHRolleston @%%@NL@%
  43078.                                                  %@AI@%The Teaching of Epictetus%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43079.                                                T. W. Rolleston (1857-1920)%@NL@%
  43080.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  43081. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43082. %@NL@%
  43083. %@NL@%
  43084. %@2@%Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment,%@EH@%
  43085. the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way to the common feelings
  43086. of mankind.%@NL@%
  43087. %@CR:PUNISHGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  43088.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  43089.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  43090. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43091. %@NL@%
  43092. %@NL@%
  43093. %@2@%Thwackum was for doing justice, and leaving mercy to Heaven.%@NL@%
  43094. %@CR:PUNISHFielding  @%%@NL@%
  43095.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  43096.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  43097. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43098. %@NL@%
  43099. %@NL@%
  43100. %@2@%The first time a schoolmaster ordered me to take my trousers%@EH@%
  43101. down I knew it was not from any doubt that he could punish me efficiently
  43102. enough with them up.%@NL@%
  43103. %@CR:PUNISHOlivier   @%%@NL@%
  43104.                                         Lawrence, Lord Olivier (1907-1989)%@NL@%
  43105.                                                    British actor, director%@NL@%
  43106. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43107. %@NL@%
  43108. %@NL@%
  43109. %@2@%He must have known me if he had seen me as he was wont to see%@EH@%
  43110. me, for he was in the habit of flogging me constantly. Perhaps
  43111. he did not recognise me by my face.%@NL@%
  43112. %@CR:PUNISHTrollope  @%%@NL@%
  43113.                                               Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)%@NL@%
  43114.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  43115. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43116. %@NL@%
  43117. %@NL@%
  43118. %@2@%The Bible warns very strongly that you are to obey your parents.%@EH@%
  43119. The rod is considered old-fashioned in many homes. Psychiatrists
  43120. say it will warp your personality. When I did something wrong
  43121. as a boy, my mother warped part of me, but it wasn't my personality.%@NL@%
  43122. %@CR:PUNISHGraham1   @%%@NL@%
  43123.                                                     Billy Graham (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  43124.                                                        American evangelist%@NL@%
  43125. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43126. %@NL@%
  43127. %@NL@%
  43128. %@2@%Flogging is a form of debauchery.%@NL@%
  43129. %@CR:PUNISHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  43130.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  43131.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  43132. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43133. %@NL@%
  43134. %@NL@%
  43135. %@2@%I'm all for bringing back the birch, but only between consenting%@EH@%
  43136. adults.%@NL@%
  43137. %@CR:PUNISHVidal     @%%@NL@%
  43138.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  43139.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  43140. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43141. %@NL@%
  43142. %@NL@%
  43143. %@2@%The only true way to make the mass of mankind see the beauty%@EH@%
  43144. of justice is by showing to them in pretty plain terms the consequences
  43145. of injustice.%@NL@%
  43146. %@CR:PUNISHSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  43147.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  43148.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  43149. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43150. %@NL@%
  43151. %@NL@%
  43152. %@2@%And where the offence is, let the great axe fall.%@NL@%
  43153. %@CR:PUNISHShakespear@%%@NL@%
  43154.                                                           Claudius, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43155.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  43156.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  43157. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43158. %@NL@%
  43159. %@NL@%
  43160. %@2@%Men are not hanged for stealing horses, but that horses may%@EH@%
  43161. not be stolen.%@NL@%
  43162. %@CR:PUNISHSavile    @%%@NL@%
  43163.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  43164.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  43165. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43166. %@NL@%
  43167. %@NL@%
  43168. %@2@%Distrust everyone in whom the impulse to punish is powerful.%@NL@%
  43169. %@CR:PUNISHNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  43170.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  43171.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  43172. %@AS@%                                                                Punishment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43173. %@NL@%
  43174. %@NL@%
  43175. %@NL@%
  43176. %@1@%%@AS@%Punk%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43177. %@CR:PUNK            @%%@NL@%
  43178. %@2@%%@QR:Punk@%Punks in their silly leather jackets are a cliche. I have%@EH@%
  43179. never liked the term and have never discussed it. I just got on
  43180. with it and got out of it when it became a competition.%@NL@%
  43181. %@CR:PUNK  Rotten    @%%@NL@%
  43182.                                        John Lydon, Johnny Rotten (b. 1957)%@NL@%
  43183.                                                     British punk rock star%@NL@%
  43184. %@AS@%                                                                      Punk%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43185. %@NL@%
  43186. %@NL@%
  43187. %@2@%I can imagine him becoming a successful hairdresser, a singing%@EH@%
  43188. Vidal Sassoon.%@NL@%
  43189. %@CR:PUNK  McLaren   @%%@NL@%
  43190.                                                            Malcolm McLaren%@NL@%
  43191.                                                    British rock impresario%@NL@%
  43192.                                                           of Johnny Rotten%@NL@%
  43193. %@AS@%                                                                      Punk%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43194. %@NL@%
  43195. %@NL@%
  43196. %@NL@%
  43197. %@1@%%@AS@%Puritans%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43198. %@CR:PURITANS        @%%@NL@%
  43199. %@2@%See:%@QR:Puritans@%%@NL@%
  43200.      Religion: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          2232d0@%%@NL@%
  43201. %@NL@%
  43202. %@2@%Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may%@EH@%
  43203. be happy.%@NL@%
  43204. %@CR:PURITAMencken   @%%@NL@%
  43205.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  43206.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  43207. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43208. %@NL@%
  43209. %@NL@%
  43210. %@2@%The Puritan hated bearbaiting, not because it gave pain to%@EH@%
  43211. the bear, but because it gave pleasure to the spectators.%@NL@%
  43212. %@CR:PURITAMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  43213.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  43214.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  43215. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43216. %@NL@%
  43217. %@NL@%
  43218. %@2@%A puritan is a person who pours righteous indignation into%@EH@%
  43219. the wrong things.%@NL@%
  43220. %@CR:PURITAChesterton@%%@NL@%
  43221.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  43222.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  43223. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43224. %@NL@%
  43225. %@NL@%
  43226. %@2@%The objection to Puritans is not that they try to make us think%@EH@%
  43227. as they do, but that they try to make us do as they think.%@NL@%
  43228. %@CR:PURITAMencken   @%%@NL@%
  43229.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  43230.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  43231. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43232. %@NL@%
  43233. %@NL@%
  43234. %@2@%Intolerance is the besetting sin of moral fervour.%@NL@%
  43235. %@CR:PURITAWhitehead @%%@NL@%
  43236.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  43237.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  43238. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43239. %@NL@%
  43240. %@NL@%
  43241.      %@2@%The Puritan through Life's sweet garden goes%@NL@%
  43242.      To pluck the thorn and cast away the rose.%@NL@%
  43243. %@CR:PURITAHare4     @%%@NL@%
  43244.                                                   Kenneth Hare (1888-1962)%@NL@%
  43245.                                                       British poet, author%@NL@%
  43246. %@AS@%                                                                  Puritans%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43247. %@NL@%
  43248. %@NL@%
  43249. %@NL@%
  43250. %@1@%%@AS@%Purity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43251. %@CR:PURITY          @%%@NL@%
  43252. %@2@%%@QR:Purity@%To the pure all things are indecent.%@NL@%
  43253. %@CR:PURITYWilde     @%%@NL@%
  43254.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  43255.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  43256. %@AS@%                                                                    Purity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43257. %@NL@%
  43258. %@NL@%
  43259. %@2@%Mud-pies gratify one of our first and best instincts. So long%@EH@%
  43260. as we are dirty, we are pure.%@NL@%
  43261. %@CR:PURITYWarner    @%%@NL@%
  43262.                                              Charles D. Warner (1829-1900)%@NL@%
  43263.                                                American essayist, novelist%@NL@%
  43264. %@AS@%                                                                    Purity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43265. %@NL@%
  43266. %@NL@%
  43267. %@NL@%
  43268. %@1@%%@AS@%Quarrels%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43269. %@CR:QUARRELS        @%%@NL@%
  43270. %@2@%See:%@QR:Quarrels@%%@NL@%
  43271.      Lovers: %@AB@%proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          1876c2@%; %@AB@%Terence%@AE@%%@BO:          187554@%%@NL@%
  43272.      Poetry: %@AB@%Yeats%@AE@%%@BO:          1e0aa9@%%@NL@%
  43273. %@NL@%
  43274. %@2@%I find my wife hath something in her gizzard, that only waits%@EH@%
  43275. an opportunity of being provoked to bring up; but I will not, for
  43276. my content-sake, give it.%@NL@%
  43277. %@CR:QUARREPepys     @%%@NL@%
  43278.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  43279.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  43280. %@AS@%                                                                  Quarrels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43281. %@NL@%
  43282. %@NL@%
  43283. %@2@%Next to the wound, what women make best is the bandage.%@NL@%
  43284. %@CR:QUARREdAurevilly@%%@NL@%
  43285.                                             Barbey d'Aurevilly (1808-1889)%@NL@%
  43286.                                              French novelist, poet, critic%@NL@%
  43287. %@AS@%                                                                  Quarrels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43288. %@NL@%
  43289. %@NL@%
  43290. %@2@%The falling out of faithful friends, renewing is of love.%@NL@%
  43291. %@CR:QUARREEdwardes  @%%@NL@%
  43292.                                               Richard Edwardes (1523-1566)%@NL@%
  43293.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  43294. %@AS@%                                                                  Quarrels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43295. %@NL@%
  43296. %@NL@%
  43297. %@2@%I strove with none; for none was worth my strife.%@NL@%
  43298. %@CR:QUARRELandor    @%%@NL@%
  43299.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  43300.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  43301. %@AS@%                                                                  Quarrels%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43302. %@NL@%
  43303. %@NL@%
  43304. %@NL@%
  43305. %@1@%%@AS@%Quotations%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43306. %@CR:QUOTATIONS      @%%@NL@%
  43307. %@2@%See:%@QR:Quotations@%%@NL@%
  43308.      Learning: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          1725be@%%@NL@%
  43309.      Ronald Reagan: %@AB@%Mondale%@AE@%%@BO:          21b72e@%%@NL@%
  43310.      Wealth: %@AB@%Lynd%@AE@%%@BO:          2ae850@%%@NL@%
  43311. %@NL@%
  43312. %@2@%A book that furnishes no quotations is, %@AI@%me judice,%@AE@% no book - it%@EH@%
  43313. is a plaything.%@NL@%
  43314. %@CR:QUOTATPeacock   @%%@NL@%
  43315.                                            Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866)%@NL@%
  43316.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  43317. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43318. %@NL@%
  43319. %@NL@%
  43320. %@2@%The wisdom of the wise and the experience of the ages are perpetuated%@EH@%
  43321. by quotations.%@NL@%
  43322. %@CR:QUOTATDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  43323.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  43324.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  43325. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43326. %@NL@%
  43327. %@NL@%
  43328. %@2@%It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations.%@NL@%
  43329. %@CR:QUOTATChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  43330.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  43331.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  43332. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43333. %@NL@%
  43334. %@NL@%
  43335.      %@2@%Some, for renown, on scraps of learning dote,%@NL@%
  43336.      And think they grow immortal as they quote.%@NL@%
  43337. %@CR:QUOTATYoung3    @%%@NL@%
  43338.                                                   Edward Young (1683-1765)%@NL@%
  43339.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  43340. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43341. %@NL@%
  43342. %@NL@%
  43343. %@2@%One has to secrete a jelly in which to slip quotations down%@EH@%
  43344. people's throats and one always secretes too much jelly.%@NL@%
  43345. %@CR:QUOTATWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  43346.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  43347.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  43348. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43349. %@NL@%
  43350. %@NL@%
  43351. %@2@%We prefer to believe that the absence of inverted commas guarantees%@EH@%
  43352. the originality of a thought, whereas it may be merely that the
  43353. utterer has forgotten its source.%@NL@%
  43354. %@CR:QUOTATFadiman   @%%@NL@%
  43355.                                                  Clifton Fadiman (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  43356.                                                            American critic%@NL@%
  43357. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43358. %@NL@%
  43359. %@NL@%
  43360. %@2@%When a thing has been said and said well, have no scruple.%@EH@%
  43361. Take it and copy it.%@NL@%
  43362. %@CR:QUOTATFrance    @%%@NL@%
  43363.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  43364.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  43365. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43366. %@NL@%
  43367. %@NL@%
  43368. %@2@%It is better to be quotable than to be honest.%@NL@%
  43369. %@CR:QUOTATStoppard  @%%@NL@%
  43370.                                                     Tom Stoppard (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  43371.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  43372. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43373. %@NL@%
  43374. %@NL@%
  43375. %@2@%The surest way to make a monkey of a man is to quote him.%@NL@%
  43376. %@CR:QUOTATBenchley  @%%@NL@%
  43377.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  43378.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  43379. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43380. %@NL@%
  43381. %@NL@%
  43382. %@2@%I often quote myself. It adds spice to my conversation.%@NL@%
  43383. %@CR:QUOTATShaw      @%%@NL@%
  43384.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  43385.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  43386. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43387. %@NL@%
  43388. %@NL@%
  43389. %@2@%By necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, we all quote.%@NL@%
  43390. %@CR:QUOTATEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  43391.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  43392.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  43393. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43394. %@NL@%
  43395. %@NL@%
  43396. %@2@%Be sure you go to the author to get at HIS meaning, not%@EH@%
  43397. to find yours.%@NL@%
  43398. %@CR:QUOTATRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  43399.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  43400.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  43401. %@AS@%                                                                Quotations%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43402. %@NL@%
  43403. %@NL@%
  43404. %@NL@%
  43405. %@1@%%@AS@%Race%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43406. %@CR:RACE            @%%@NL@%
  43407. %@2@%See:%@QR:Race@%%@NL@%
  43408.      %@AB@%Fraternity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           f9fc7@%%@NL@%
  43409.      The Jews: %@AB@%Galsworthy%@AE@%%@BO:          15e5c4@%%@NL@%
  43410.      Slavery: %@AB@%Hammond%@AE@%%@BO:          2576aa@%%@NL@%
  43411.      South Africa: %@AB@%Tutu%@AE@%%@BO:          263c98@%%@NL@%
  43412.      Stardom: %@AB@%Davis Jr.%@AE@%%@BO:          26ad46@%%@NL@%
  43413. %@NL@%
  43414. %@2@%It is a great shock at the age of five or six to find that%@EH@%
  43415. in a world of Gary Coopers you are the Indian.%@NL@%
  43416. %@CR:RACE  Baldwin   @%%@NL@%
  43417.                                                  James Baldwin (1924-1987)%@NL@%
  43418.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  43419. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43420. %@NL@%
  43421. %@NL@%
  43422. %@2@%I believe in white supremacy until the blacks are educated%@EH@%
  43423. to a point of responsibility.%@NL@%
  43424. %@CR:RACE  Wayne     @%%@NL@%
  43425.                                                     John Wayne (1907-1979)%@NL@%
  43426.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  43427. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43428. %@NL@%
  43429. %@NL@%
  43430. %@2@%Segregation now, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever!%@NL@%
  43431. %@CR:RACE  Wallace   @%%@NL@%
  43432.                                                George C. Wallace (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  43433.                                            American Independent politician%@NL@%
  43434. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43435. %@NL@%
  43436. %@NL@%
  43437. %@2@%Segregation is the adultery of an illicit intercourse between%@EH@%
  43438. injustice and immorality.%@NL@%
  43439. %@CR:RACE  King3     @%%@NL@%
  43440.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  43441.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  43442. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43443. %@NL@%
  43444. %@NL@%
  43445. %@2@%A racially integrated community is a chronological term timed%@EH@%
  43446. from the entrance of the first black family to the exit of the
  43447. last white family.%@NL@%
  43448. %@CR:RACE  Alinsky   @%%@NL@%
  43449.                                                   Saul Alinsky (1909-1972)%@NL@%
  43450.                                                           American radical%@NL@%
  43451. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43452. %@NL@%
  43453. %@NL@%
  43454. %@2@%No one has been barred on account of his race from fighting%@EH@%
  43455. or dying for America - there are no "white" or "colored"
  43456. signs on the foxholes or graveyards of battle.%@NL@%
  43457. %@CR:RACE  Kennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  43458.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  43459.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43460. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43461. %@NL@%
  43462. %@NL@%
  43463. %@2@%I have no purpose to introduce political and social equality%@EH@%
  43464. between the white and black races. There is a physical difference
  43465. between the two, which, in my judgment, will probably forever
  43466. forbid their living together upon the footing of perfect equality;
  43467. and inasmuch as it becomes a necessity that there must be a difference,
  43468. I  . . .  am in favor of the race to which I belong having the superior
  43469. position.%@NL@%
  43470. %@CR:RACE  Lincoln   @%%@NL@%
  43471.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  43472.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43473. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43474. %@NL@%
  43475. %@NL@%
  43476. %@2@%Whites must be made to realize that they are only human, not%@EH@%
  43477. superior. Same with blacks. They must be made to realize that they
  43478. are also human, not inferior.%@NL@%
  43479. %@CR:RACE  Biko      @%%@NL@%
  43480.                                                     Steve Biko (1946-1977)%@NL@%
  43481.                                             South African political leader%@NL@%
  43482. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43483. %@NL@%
  43484. %@NL@%
  43485. %@2@%The trouble with our people is as soon as they got out of slavery%@EH@%
  43486. they didn't want to give the white man nothing else. But the fact
  43487. is, you got to give 'em something. Either your money, your land,
  43488. your woman or your ass.%@NL@%
  43489. %@CR:RACE  Walker1   @%%@NL@%
  43490.                                                     Alice Walker (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  43491.                                                    American author, critic%@NL@%
  43492. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43493. %@NL@%
  43494. %@NL@%
  43495. %@2@%Every time I embrace a black woman I'm embracing slavery, and%@EH@%
  43496. when I put my arms around a white woman, well I'm hugging freedom.
  43497. The white man forbade me to have the white woman on pain of death . . . 
  43498. I will not be free until the day I can have a white woman in my
  43499. bed.%@NL@%
  43500. %@CR:RACE  Cleaver   @%%@NL@%
  43501.                                                 Eldridge Cleaver (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  43502.                                              American black leader, writer%@NL@%
  43503. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43504. %@NL@%
  43505. %@NL@%
  43506. %@2@%The truth is that Mozart, Pascal, Boolean algebra, Shakespeare,%@EH@%
  43507. parliamentary government, baroque churches, Newton, the emancipation
  43508. of women, Kant, Marx, and Ballanchine ballets don't redeem what
  43509. this particular civilization has wrought upon the world. The white
  43510. race %@AI@%is%@AE@% the cancer of human history.%@NL@%
  43511. %@CR:RACE  Sontag    @%%@NL@%
  43512.                                                     Susan Sontag (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  43513.                                                          American essayist%@NL@%
  43514. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43515. %@NL@%
  43516. %@NL@%
  43517. %@2@%Purity of race does not exist. Europe is a continent of energetic%@EH@%
  43518. mongrels.%@NL@%
  43519. %@CR:RACE  Fisher    @%%@NL@%
  43520.                                                H. A. L. Fisher (1865-1940)%@NL@%
  43521.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  43522. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43523. %@NL@%
  43524. %@NL@%
  43525. %@2@%Race prejudice is not only a shadow over the colored - it%@EH@%
  43526. is a shadow over all of us, and the shadow is darkest over those
  43527. who feel it least and allow its evil effects to go on.%@NL@%
  43528. %@CR:RACE  Buck      @%%@NL@%
  43529.                                                  Pearl S. Buck (1892-1973)%@NL@%
  43530.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  43531. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43532. %@NL@%
  43533. %@NL@%
  43534. %@2@%Thank God I am black. White people will have a lot to answer%@EH@%
  43535. for at the last judgement.%@NL@%
  43536. %@CR:RACE  Tutu      @%%@NL@%
  43537.                                              Bishop Desmond Tutu (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  43538.                                             South African religious leader%@NL@%
  43539. %@AS@%                                                                      Race%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43540. %@NL@%
  43541. %@NL@%
  43542. %@NL@%
  43543. %@1@%%@AS@%Rain%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43544. %@CR:RAIN            @%%@NL@%
  43545. %@2@%See:%@QR:Rain@%%@NL@%
  43546.      England: %@AB@%Phelps%@AE@%%@BO:           ca383@%%@NL@%
  43547.      Scotland: %@AB@%Ford%@AE@%%@BO:          23d19b@%%@NL@%
  43548.      Seasons: %@AB@%Watson%@AE@%%@BO:          23f172@%%@NL@%
  43549.      %@AB@%The Weather%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2ae9ab@%%@NL@%
  43550. %@NL@%
  43551.      %@2@%Still fall, the Rain-%@NL@%
  43552.      Dark as the world of man, black as our loss -%@NL@%
  43553.      Blind as the nineteen hundred and forty nails%@NL@%
  43554.      Upon the cross.%@NL@%
  43555. %@CR:RAIN  Sitwell1  @%%@NL@%
  43556.                                             Dame Edith Sitwell (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  43557.                                                       British writer, poet%@NL@%
  43558. %@AS@%                                                                      Rain%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43559. %@NL@%
  43560. %@NL@%
  43561. %@2@%The tanned appearance of many Londoners is not sunburn - it%@EH@%
  43562. is rust.%@NL@%
  43563. %@CR:RAIN  Sitwell1  @%%@NL@%
  43564.    London %@AI@%Evening Standard,%@AE@% 1961 during Britain's wettest winter on record%@NL@%
  43565. %@AS@%                                                                      Rain%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43566. %@NL@%
  43567. %@NL@%
  43568. %@2@%Nature, like man, sometimes weeps for gladness.%@NL@%
  43569. %@CR:RAIN  Disraeli  @%%@NL@%
  43570.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  43571.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  43572. %@AS@%                                                                      Rain%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43573. %@NL@%
  43574. %@NL@%
  43575. %@NL@%
  43576. %@1@%%@AS@%Reactionaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43577. %@CR:REACTIONARIES   @%%@NL@%
  43578. %@2@%See:%@QR:Reactionaries@%%@NL@%
  43579.      Tradition: %@AB@%Mill%@AE@%%@BO:          2902e7@%; %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          290158@%%@NL@%
  43580. %@NL@%
  43581. %@2@%The march of the human mind is slow.%@NL@%
  43582. %@CR:REACTIBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  43583.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  43584.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  43585. %@AS@%                                                             Reactionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43586. %@NL@%
  43587. %@NL@%
  43588. %@2@%A reactionary is a somnambulist walking backwards.%@NL@%
  43589. %@CR:REACTIRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  43590.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  43591.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43592. %@AS@%                                                             Reactionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43593. %@NL@%
  43594. %@NL@%
  43595. %@2@%He is a man walking backwards with his face to the future.%@NL@%
  43596. %@CR:REACTIBevan     @%%@NL@%
  43597.                                                  Aneurin Bevan (1897-1960)%@NL@%
  43598.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  43599.                                                       of Sir Walter Elliot%@NL@%
  43600. %@AS@%                                                             Reactionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43601. %@NL@%
  43602. %@NL@%
  43603. %@NL@%
  43604. %@1@%%@AS@%Reading%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43605. %@CR:READING         @%%@NL@%
  43606. %@2@%See:%@QR:Reading@%%@NL@%
  43607.      Books: %@AB@%Bacon%@AE@%%@BO:           467ec@%; %@AB@%Kempis%@AE@%%@BO:           47676@%%@NL@%
  43608.      Critics: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           9148c@%%@NL@%
  43609.      Writing: %@AB@%Birrell%@AE@%%@BO:          2cfd45@%%@NL@%
  43610. %@NL@%
  43611. %@2@%Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.%@NL@%
  43612. %@CR:READINAddison   @%%@NL@%
  43613.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  43614.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  43615. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43616. %@NL@%
  43617. %@NL@%
  43618. %@2@%There is a great deal of difference between the eager man who%@EH@%
  43619. wants to read a book and the tired man who wants a book to read.%@NL@%
  43620. %@CR:READINChesterton@%%@NL@%
  43621.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  43622.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  43623. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43624. %@NL@%
  43625. %@NL@%
  43626. %@2@%Reading is sometimes an ingenious device for avoiding thought.%@NL@%
  43627. %@CR:READINHelps     @%%@NL@%
  43628.                                               Sir Arthur Helps (1813-1875)%@NL@%
  43629.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  43630. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43631. %@NL@%
  43632. %@NL@%
  43633. %@2@%He has left off reading altogether, to the great improvement%@EH@%
  43634. of his originality.%@NL@%
  43635. %@CR:READINLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  43636.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  43637.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  43638. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43639. %@NL@%
  43640. %@NL@%
  43641. %@2@%Much reading is an oppression of the mind, and extinguishes%@EH@%
  43642. the natural candle, which is the reason of so many senseless scholars
  43643. in the world.%@NL@%
  43644. %@CR:READINPenn      @%%@NL@%
  43645.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  43646.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  43647. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43648. %@NL@%
  43649. %@NL@%
  43650. %@2@%He had read much, but his contemplation was much more than%@EH@%
  43651. his reading. He was wont to say that if he had read as much as
  43652. other men he should have known no more than other men.%@NL@%
  43653. %@CR:READINAubrey    @%%@NL@%
  43654.                                                    John Aubrey (1626-1697)%@NL@%
  43655.                                                  English antiquary, author%@NL@%
  43656.                                                                  of Hobbes%@NL@%
  43657. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43658. %@NL@%
  43659. %@NL@%
  43660.      %@2@%A reading machine, always wound up and going,%@NL@%
  43661.      He mastered whatever was not worth the knowing.%@NL@%
  43662. %@CR:READINLowell2   @%%@NL@%
  43663.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  43664.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  43665. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43666. %@NL@%
  43667. %@NL@%
  43668. %@2@%'Tis the good reader that makes the good book.%@NL@%
  43669. %@CR:READINEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  43670.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  43671.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  43672. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43673. %@NL@%
  43674. %@NL@%
  43675. %@2@%Reading a book is like rewriting it for yourself . . .  You bring%@EH@%
  43676. to a novel, anything you read, all your experience of the world.
  43677. You bring your history and you read it in your own terms.%@NL@%
  43678. %@CR:READINCarter1   @%%@NL@%
  43679.                                                    Angela Carter (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  43680.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  43681. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43682. %@NL@%
  43683. %@NL@%
  43684. %@2@%Readers are of two sorts: one who carefully goes through a%@EH@%
  43685. book, and the other who as carefully lets the book go through him.%@NL@%
  43686. %@CR:READINJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  43687.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  43688.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  43689. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43690. %@NL@%
  43691. %@NL@%
  43692. %@2@%Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself or, like the%@EH@%
  43693. ambitious, for instruction. No, read in order to live.%@NL@%
  43694. %@CR:READINFlaubert  @%%@NL@%
  43695.                                               Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880)%@NL@%
  43696.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  43697. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43698. %@NL@%
  43699. %@NL@%
  43700. %@2@%A man ought to read just as his inclination leads him; for%@EH@%
  43701. what he reads as a task will do him little good.%@NL@%
  43702. %@CR:READINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  43703.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  43704.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  43705. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43706. %@NL@%
  43707. %@NL@%
  43708. %@2@%Education  . . .  has produced a vast population able to read%@EH@%
  43709. but unable to distinguish what is worth reading.%@NL@%
  43710. %@CR:READINTrevelyan @%%@NL@%
  43711.                                                G. M. Trevelyan (1876-1962)%@NL@%
  43712.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  43713. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43714. %@NL@%
  43715. %@NL@%
  43716. %@2@%As writers become more numerous, it is natural for readers%@EH@%
  43717. to become more indolent.%@NL@%
  43718. %@CR:READINGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  43719.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  43720.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  43721. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43722. %@NL@%
  43723. %@NL@%
  43724. %@2@%I took a course in speed reading, learning to read straight%@EH@%
  43725. down the middle of the page, and was able to read %@AI@%War and Peace%@AE@%
  43726. in twenty minutes. It's about Russia.%@NL@%
  43727. %@CR:READINAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  43728.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  43729.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  43730. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43731. %@NL@%
  43732. %@NL@%
  43733. %@2@%To read between the lines was easier than to follow the text.%@NL@%
  43734. %@CR:READINJames2    @%%@NL@%
  43735.                                                    Henry James (1843-1916)%@NL@%
  43736.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  43737. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43738. %@NL@%
  43739. %@NL@%
  43740. %@2@%Choose an author as you choose a friend.%@NL@%
  43741. %@CR:READINDillon    @%%@NL@%
  43742.                         Wentworth Dillon, Earl of Roscommon (c. 1633-1685)%@NL@%
  43743.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  43744. %@AS@%                                                                   Reading%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43745. %@NL@%
  43746. %@NL@%
  43747. %@NL@%
  43748. %@1@%%@AS@%Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43749. %@CR:REAGAN          @%%@NL@%
  43750. %@2@%%@QR:Ronald Reagan@%A triumph of the embalmer's art.%@NL@%
  43751. %@CR:REAGANVidal     @%%@NL@%
  43752.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  43753.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  43754. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43755. %@NL@%
  43756. %@NL@%
  43757. %@2@%People have an image of me that I might recklessly get us into%@EH@%
  43758. a war.%@NL@%
  43759. %@CR:REAGANReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  43760.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  43761.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43762. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43763. %@NL@%
  43764. %@NL@%
  43765. %@2@%Ronald Reagan has violated every principle for which America%@EH@%
  43766. stands. He denies the jurisdiction of the World Court; he acts
  43767. without consulting Congress and in opposition to the advice of
  43768. US allies. Serving as judge, jury and executioner, he orders military
  43769. strikes that kill civilians . . .  The President has no legal power
  43770. to order US forces to murder indiscriminately and to terrorize
  43771. those he styles his enemies. Such acts constitute high crimes and
  43772. misdemeanors. Reagan's subversion of the principles of truth and
  43773. the rule of law is the greatest threat facing the American people
  43774. and the world.%@NL@%
  43775. %@CR:REAGANClark2    @%%@NL@%
  43776.                                                     Ramsay Clark (b. 1927)%@NL@%
  43777.                                                 former US Attorney General%@NL@%
  43778. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43779. %@NL@%
  43780. %@NL@%
  43781. %@2@%As the age of television progresses the Reagans will be the%@EH@%
  43782. rule, not the exception. To be perfect for television is all a
  43783. President has to be these days.%@NL@%
  43784. %@CR:REAGANVidal     @%%@NL@%
  43785.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  43786.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  43787. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43788. %@NL@%
  43789. %@NL@%
  43790. %@2@%You've got to be careful quoting Ronald Reagan, because when%@EH@%
  43791. you quote him accurately it's called mud-slinging.%@NL@%
  43792. %@CR:REAGANMondale   @%%@NL@%
  43793.                                                Walter F. Mondale (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  43794.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  43795. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43796. %@NL@%
  43797. %@NL@%
  43798. %@2@%I've always believed there is a certain divine scheme of things.%@EH@%
  43799. I'm not quite able to explain how my election happened or why I'm
  43800. here, apart from believing it is part of God's plan for me.%@NL@%
  43801. %@CR:REAGANReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  43802.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  43803.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43804.                              on attaining governorship of California, 1966%@NL@%
  43805. %@AS@%                                                             Ronald Reagan%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43806. %@NL@%
  43807. %@NL@%
  43808. %@NL@%
  43809. %@1@%%@AS@%Realism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43810. %@CR:REALISM         @%%@NL@%
  43811. %@2@%%@QR:Realism@%You may be sure that when a man begins to call himself a "realist,"%@EH@%
  43812. he is preparing to do something he is secretly ashamed of doing.%@NL@%
  43813. %@CR:REALISHarris    @%%@NL@%
  43814.                                               Sydney J. Harris (1917-1986)%@NL@%
  43815.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  43816. %@AS@%                                                                   Realism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43817. %@NL@%
  43818. %@NL@%
  43819. %@2@%When you have got an elephant by the hind legs and he is trying%@EH@%
  43820. to run away, it's best to let him run.%@NL@%
  43821. %@CR:REALISLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  43822.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  43823.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43824. %@AS@%                                                                   Realism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43825. %@NL@%
  43826. %@NL@%
  43827. %@2@%It is folly to expect men to do all that they may reasonably%@EH@%
  43828. be expected to do.%@NL@%
  43829. %@CR:REALISWhately   @%%@NL@%
  43830.                                                Richard Whately (1787-1863)%@NL@%
  43831.                                                       Archbishop of Dublin%@NL@%
  43832. %@AS@%                                                                   Realism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43833. %@NL@%
  43834. %@NL@%
  43835. %@2@%Reality is something you rise above.%@NL@%
  43836. %@CR:REALISMinnelli  @%%@NL@%
  43837.                                                    Liza Minnelli (b. 1946)%@NL@%
  43838.                                                           American actress%@NL@%
  43839. %@AS@%                                                                   Realism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43840. %@NL@%
  43841. %@NL@%
  43842. %@NL@%
  43843. %@1@%%@AS@%Reason%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43844. %@CR:REASON          @%%@NL@%
  43845. %@2@%See:%@QR:Reason@%%@NL@%
  43846.      Hunger: %@AB@%Greek proverb%@AE@%%@BO:          13cc56@%%@NL@%
  43847.      Love: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:          18089c@%%@NL@%
  43848.      Parents: %@AB@%Brown%@AE@%%@BO:          1cc142@%%@NL@%
  43849.      Prejudice: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          1fe9ac@%%@NL@%
  43850. %@NL@%
  43851. %@2@%My own mind is my own church.%@NL@%
  43852. %@CR:REASONPaine     @%%@NL@%
  43853.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  43854.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  43855. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43856. %@NL@%
  43857. %@NL@%
  43858.      %@2@%Sure, he, that made us with such large discourse,%@NL@%
  43859.      Looking before and after, gave us not%@NL@%
  43860.      That capability and godlike reason,%@NL@%
  43861.      To fust in us unused.%@NL@%
  43862. %@CR:REASONShakespear@%%@NL@%
  43863.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43864.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  43865.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  43866. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43867. %@NL@%
  43868. %@NL@%
  43869. %@2@%People are governed by the head; a kind heart is of little%@EH@%
  43870. value in chess.%@NL@%
  43871. %@CR:REASONChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  43872.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  43873.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  43874. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43875. %@NL@%
  43876. %@NL@%
  43877. %@2@%%@AI@%Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connait point.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43878. The heart has its reasons which reason does not know.%@NL@%
  43879. %@CR:REASONPascal    @%%@NL@%
  43880.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  43881.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  43882. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43883. %@NL@%
  43884. %@NL@%
  43885. %@2@%Reason is and ought to be the slave of the passions and can%@EH@%
  43886. never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them.%@NL@%
  43887. %@CR:REASONHume      @%%@NL@%
  43888.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  43889.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  43890. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43891. %@NL@%
  43892. %@NL@%
  43893. %@2@%If you can engage people's pride, love, pity, ambition (or%@EH@%
  43894. whatever is their prevailing passion) on your side, you need not
  43895. fear what their reason can do against you.%@NL@%
  43896. %@CR:REASONChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  43897.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  43898.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  43899. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43900. %@NL@%
  43901. %@NL@%
  43902. %@2@%Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned%@EH@%
  43903. errors.%@NL@%
  43904. %@CR:REASONHuxley2   @%%@NL@%
  43905.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  43906.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  43907. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43908. %@NL@%
  43909. %@NL@%
  43910. %@2@%"It stands to reason" is a formula that gives its user the%@EH@%
  43911. unfair advantage of at once invoking reason and refusing to listen
  43912. to it.%@NL@%
  43913. %@CR:REASONFowler    @%%@NL@%
  43914.                                                   H. W. Fowler (1858-1933)%@NL@%
  43915.                                                      British lexicographer%@NL@%
  43916. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43917. %@NL@%
  43918. %@NL@%
  43919. %@2@%I'll not listen to reason . . .  Reason always means what someone%@EH@%
  43920. else has got to say.%@NL@%
  43921. %@CR:REASONGaskell   @%%@NL@%
  43922.                                     Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell (1810-1865)%@NL@%
  43923.                                               English novelist, biographer%@NL@%
  43924. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43925. %@NL@%
  43926. %@NL@%
  43927. %@2@%I am sick of reasonable people: they see all the reasons for%@EH@%
  43928. being lazy and doing nothing.%@NL@%
  43929. %@CR:REASONShaw      @%%@NL@%
  43930.                                                      The Secretary, %@AI@%Geneva%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43931.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  43932.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  43933. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43934. %@NL@%
  43935. %@NL@%
  43936. %@2@%If the animals had reason, they would act just as ridiculous%@EH@%
  43937. as we menfolks do.%@NL@%
  43938. %@CR:REASONBillings  @%%@NL@%
  43939.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  43940.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  43941. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43942. %@NL@%
  43943. %@NL@%
  43944. %@2@%There is much to suggest that when human beings acquired the%@EH@%
  43945. powers of conscious attention and rational thought they became
  43946. so fascinated with these new tools that they forgot all else,
  43947. like chickens hypnotized with their beaks to a chalk line.%@NL@%
  43948. %@CR:REASONWatts1    @%%@NL@%
  43949.                                                                A. E. Watts%@NL@%
  43950. %@AS@%                                                                    Reason%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43951. %@NL@%
  43952. %@NL@%
  43953. %@NL@%
  43954. %@1@%%@AS@%Rebellion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  43955. %@CR:REBELLION       @%%@NL@%
  43956. %@2@%See:%@QR:Rebellion@%%@NL@%
  43957.      %@AB@%Revolution%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          22a220@%%@NL@%
  43958. %@NL@%
  43959. %@2@%A hungry man is an angry man.%@NL@%
  43960. %@CR:REBELLHowell    @%%@NL@%
  43961.                                                   James Howell (1594-1666)%@NL@%
  43962.                                                   English diplomat, writer%@NL@%
  43963. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43964. %@NL@%
  43965. %@NL@%
  43966. %@2@%A populace never rebels from passion for attack, but from impatience%@EH@%
  43967. of suffering.%@NL@%
  43968. %@CR:REBELLBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  43969.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  43970.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  43971. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43972. %@NL@%
  43973. %@NL@%
  43974. %@2@%I hold it that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good%@EH@%
  43975. thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the
  43976. physical.%@NL@%
  43977. %@CR:REBELLJefferson @%%@NL@%
  43978.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  43979.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  43980. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43981. %@NL@%
  43982. %@NL@%
  43983. %@2@%Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to god.%@NL@%
  43984. %@CR:REBELLBradshaw  @%%@NL@%
  43985.                                                  John Bradshaw (1602-1659)%@NL@%
  43986.                                                   English lawyer, regicide%@NL@%
  43987. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43988. %@NL@%
  43989. %@NL@%
  43990. %@2@%No one can go on being a rebel too long without turning into%@EH@%
  43991. an autocrat.%@NL@%
  43992. %@CR:REBELLDurrell2  @%%@NL@%
  43993.                                                 Lawrence Durrell (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  43994.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  43995. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  43996. %@NL@%
  43997. %@NL@%
  43998. %@2@%Insurrection. An unsuccessful revolution; disaffection's failure%@EH@%
  43999. to substitute misrule for bad government.%@NL@%
  44000. %@CR:REBELLBierce    @%%@NL@%
  44001.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  44002.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44003. %@AS@%                                                                 Rebellion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44004. %@NL@%
  44005. %@NL@%
  44006. %@NL@%
  44007. %@1@%%@AS@%Recession%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44008. %@CR:RECESSION       @%%@NL@%
  44009. %@2@%See:%@QR:Recession@%%@NL@%
  44010.      Unemployment: %@AB@%Truman%@AE@%%@BO:          29aab7@%%@NL@%
  44011. %@NL@%
  44012. %@2@%Most of us have stopped using silver every day.%@NL@%
  44013. %@CR:RECESSThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  44014.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  44015.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  44016. %@AS@%                                                                 Recession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44017. %@NL@%
  44018. %@NL@%
  44019. %@2@%These dark days will be worth all they cost us if they teach%@EH@%
  44020. us that our true destiny is not to be ministered unto but to minister
  44021. to ourselves and to our fellow men.%@NL@%
  44022. %@CR:RECESSRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  44023.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  44024.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  44025. %@AS@%                                                                 Recession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44026. %@NL@%
  44027. %@NL@%
  44028. %@NL@%
  44029. %@1@%%@AS@%Recklessness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44030. %@CR:RECKLESSNESS    @%%@NL@%
  44031. %@2@%%@QR:Recklessness@%Always goes as if he had a spare neck in his pocket.%@NL@%
  44032. %@CR:RECKLESurtees   @%%@NL@%
  44033.                                                  R. S. Surtees (1803-1864)%@NL@%
  44034.                                                  English sporting novelist%@NL@%
  44035. %@AS@%                                                              Recklessness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44036. %@NL@%
  44037. %@NL@%
  44038. %@2@%We run carelessly to the precipice, after we have put something%@EH@%
  44039. before us to prevent ourselves from seeing it.%@NL@%
  44040. %@CR:RECKLEPascal    @%%@NL@%
  44041.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  44042.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  44043. %@AS@%                                                              Recklessness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44044. %@NL@%
  44045. %@NL@%
  44046. %@NL@%
  44047. %@1@%%@AS@%Reform%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44048. %@CR:REFORM          @%%@NL@%
  44049. %@2@%See:%@QR:Reform@%%@NL@%
  44050.      Change: %@AB@%Hooker%@AE@%%@BO:           59386@%%@NL@%
  44051.      Revolution: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          22ccb9@%%@NL@%
  44052. %@NL@%
  44053. %@2@%Why, Sir, most schemes of political improvement are very laughable%@EH@%
  44054. things.%@NL@%
  44055. %@CR:REFORMJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  44056.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  44057.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  44058. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44059. %@NL@%
  44060. %@NL@%
  44061. %@2@%Every reform was once a private opinion.%@NL@%
  44062. %@CR:REFORMEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  44063.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  44064.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  44065. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44066. %@NL@%
  44067. %@NL@%
  44068. %@2@%In England we have come to rely upon a comfortable time-lag%@EH@%
  44069. of fifty years or a century intervening between the perception
  44070. that something ought to be done and a serious attempt to do it.%@NL@%
  44071. %@CR:REFORMWells     @%%@NL@%
  44072.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  44073.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  44074. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44075. %@NL@%
  44076. %@NL@%
  44077. %@2@%You cannot fight against the future. Time is on our side.%@NL@%
  44078. %@CR:REFORMGladstone @%%@NL@%
  44079.                                        William Ewald Gladstone (1809-1898)%@NL@%
  44080.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  44081. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44082. %@NL@%
  44083. %@NL@%
  44084. %@2@%Every reform is only a mask under cover of which a more terrible%@EH@%
  44085. reform, which dares not yet name itself, advances.%@NL@%
  44086. %@CR:REFORMEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  44087.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  44088.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  44089. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44090. %@NL@%
  44091. %@NL@%
  44092. %@2@%Moderate reformers always hate those who go beyond them.%@NL@%
  44093. %@CR:REFORMFroude    @%%@NL@%
  44094.                                                   J. A. Froude (1818-1894)%@NL@%
  44095.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  44096. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44097. %@NL@%
  44098. %@NL@%
  44099. %@2@%All reformers are bachelors.%@NL@%
  44100. %@CR:REFORMMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  44101.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  44102.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  44103. %@AS@%                                                                    Reform%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44104. %@NL@%
  44105. %@NL@%
  44106. %@NL@%
  44107. %@1@%%@AS@%Regret%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44108. %@CR:REGRET          @%%@NL@%
  44109. %@2@%%@QR:Regret@%     %@AI@%Nessun maggior dolore,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44110.      %@AI@%Che ricordarsi del tempo felice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44111.      %@AI@%Nella miseria.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44112. %@NL@%
  44113. %@2@%There is no greater sorrow than to recall a happy time in the
  44114. midst of wretchedness.%@NL@%
  44115. %@CR:REGRETDante     @%%@NL@%
  44116.                                                 'Inferno,' %@AI@%Divina Commedia%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44117.                                                          Dante (1265-1321)%@NL@%
  44118.                                                               Italian poet%@NL@%
  44119. %@AS@%                                                                    Regret%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44120. %@NL@%
  44121. %@NL@%
  44122. %@2@%It's no use asking people if they regret things. It would be%@EH@%
  44123. like asking King Lear if he regretted dividing up his kingdom.%@NL@%
  44124. %@CR:REGRETMuggeridge@%%@NL@%
  44125.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  44126.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  44127. %@AS@%                                                                    Regret%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44128. %@NL@%
  44129. %@NL@%
  44130. %@2@%Regret is a woman's natural food,  -  she thrives upon it.%@NL@%
  44131. %@CR:REGRETPinero    @%%@NL@%
  44132.                                              Sir Arthur Pinero (1855-1934)%@NL@%
  44133.                                        British actor, playwright, essayist%@NL@%
  44134. %@AS@%                                                                    Regret%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44135. %@NL@%
  44136. %@NL@%
  44137. %@2@%My one regret in life is that I am not someone else.%@NL@%
  44138. %@CR:REGRETAllen4    @%%@NL@%
  44139.                                                      Woody Allen (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  44140.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  44141. %@AS@%                                                                    Regret%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44142. %@NL@%
  44143. %@NL@%
  44144. %@2@%Hindsight is always 20:20.%@NL@%
  44145. %@CR:REGRETWilder1   @%%@NL@%
  44146.                                                     Billy Wilder (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  44147.                                                   American writer-director%@NL@%
  44148. %@AS@%                                                                    Regret%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44149. %@NL@%
  44150. %@NL@%
  44151. %@NL@%
  44152. %@1@%%@AS@%Religion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44153. %@CR:RELIGION        @%%@NL@%
  44154. %@2@%See:%@QR:Religion@%%@NL@%
  44155.      %@AB@%Christianity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           62d9c@%%@NL@%
  44156.      Faith: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           e0003@%%@NL@%
  44157.      God: %@AB@%Conrad%@AE@%%@BO:          10ee11@%%@NL@%
  44158.      Success: %@AB@%Barrie%@AE@%%@BO:          271fb9@%%@NL@%
  44159.      Superstition: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          2777cf@%%@NL@%
  44160.      Tolerance: %@AB@%Lunn%@AE@%%@BO:          28d786@%%@NL@%
  44161. %@NL@%
  44162. %@2@%Times consecrates; and what is grey with age becomes religion.%@NL@%
  44163. %@CR:RELIGIColeridge @%%@NL@%
  44164.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  44165.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  44166. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44167. %@NL@%
  44168. %@NL@%
  44169. %@2@%If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how%@EH@%
  44170. would men believe and adore!%@NL@%
  44171. %@CR:RELIGIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  44172.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  44173.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  44174. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44175. %@NL@%
  44176. %@NL@%
  44177. %@2@%All religions begin with a revolt against morality, and perish%@EH@%
  44178. when morality conquers them.%@NL@%
  44179. %@CR:RELIGIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44180.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44181.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44182. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44183. %@NL@%
  44184. %@NL@%
  44185. %@2@%The true meaning of religion is thus not simply morality but%@EH@%
  44186. morality touched by emotion.%@NL@%
  44187. %@CR:RELIGIArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  44188.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  44189.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  44190. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44191. %@NL@%
  44192. %@NL@%
  44193. %@2@%From the age of fifteen, dogma has been the fundamental principle%@EH@%
  44194. of my religion: I know no other religion; I cannot enter into the
  44195. idea of any other sort of religion; religion, as a mere sentiment,
  44196. is to me a dream and a mockery.%@NL@%
  44197. %@CR:RELIGINewman1   @%%@NL@%
  44198.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  44199.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  44200. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44201. %@NL@%
  44202. %@NL@%
  44203. %@2@%The truth of religion is in its ritual and the truth of dogma%@EH@%
  44204. is in its poetry.%@NL@%
  44205. %@CR:RELIGIPowys     @%%@NL@%
  44206.                                              John Cowper Powys (1872-1963)%@NL@%
  44207.                                                       British author, poet%@NL@%
  44208. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44209. %@NL@%
  44210. %@NL@%
  44211. %@2@%Men are not made religious by performing certain actions which%@EH@%
  44212. are externally good, but they must first have righteous principles,
  44213. and then they will not fail to perform virtuous actions.%@NL@%
  44214. %@CR:RELIGILuther    @%%@NL@%
  44215.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  44216.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  44217. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44218. %@NL@%
  44219. %@NL@%
  44220. %@2@%Religion's in the heart, not in the knees.%@NL@%
  44221. %@CR:RELIGIJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  44222.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  44223.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  44224. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44225. %@NL@%
  44226. %@NL@%
  44227. %@2@%I never sleep comfortably except when I am at sermon or when%@EH@%
  44228. I pray to God.%@NL@%
  44229. %@CR:RELIGIRabelais  @%%@NL@%
  44230.                                                       Rabelais (1494-1553)%@NL@%
  44231.                                                    French humanist, author%@NL@%
  44232. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44233. %@NL@%
  44234. %@NL@%
  44235. %@2@%If you are going to have religion at all, it is better to have%@EH@%
  44236. it tough - blood and nails and vinegar.%@NL@%
  44237. %@CR:RELIGIChadwick  @%%@NL@%
  44238.                                                    Owen Chadwick (b. 1916)%@NL@%
  44239.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  44240. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44241. %@NL@%
  44242. %@NL@%
  44243. %@2@%Religion would not have any enemies if it were not an enemy%@EH@%
  44244. to their vices.%@NL@%
  44245. %@CR:RELIGIMassillon @%%@NL@%
  44246.                                        Jean-Baptiste Massillon (1663-1742)%@NL@%
  44247.                                                            French preacher%@NL@%
  44248. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44249. %@NL@%
  44250. %@NL@%
  44251. %@2@%Most men's anger against religion is as if two men should quarrel%@EH@%
  44252. for a lady they neither of them care for.%@NL@%
  44253. %@CR:RELIGISavile    @%%@NL@%
  44254.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  44255.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  44256. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44257. %@NL@%
  44258. %@NL@%
  44259. %@2@%Irreligion. The principal one of the great faiths of the world.%@NL@%
  44260. %@CR:RELIGIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  44261.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  44262.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44263. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44264. %@NL@%
  44265. %@NL@%
  44266. %@2@%We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough%@EH@%
  44267. to make us love one another.%@NL@%
  44268. %@CR:RELIGISwift     @%%@NL@%
  44269.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  44270.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  44271. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44272. %@NL@%
  44273. %@NL@%
  44274. %@2@%Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they%@EH@%
  44275. do it from religious conviction.%@NL@%
  44276. %@CR:RELIGIPascal    @%%@NL@%
  44277.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  44278.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  44279. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44280. %@NL@%
  44281. %@NL@%
  44282. %@2@%Men will wrangle for religion; write for it, fight for it;%@EH@%
  44283. die for it; anything but live for it.%@NL@%
  44284. %@CR:RELIGIColton    @%%@NL@%
  44285.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  44286.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  44287. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44288. %@NL@%
  44289. %@NL@%
  44290. %@2@%I count religion but a childish toy,%@EH@%
  44291. And hold there is no sin but ignorance.%@NL@%
  44292. %@CR:RELIGIMarlowe   @%%@NL@%
  44293.                                            Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)%@NL@%
  44294.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  44295. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44296. %@NL@%
  44297. %@NL@%
  44298. %@2@%Men despise religion; they hate it, and fear it is true.%@NL@%
  44299. %@CR:RELIGIPascal    @%%@NL@%
  44300.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  44301.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  44302. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44303. %@NL@%
  44304. %@NL@%
  44305. %@2@%People who feel themselves to be exiles in this world are mightily%@EH@%
  44306. inclined to believe themselves citizens of another.%@NL@%
  44307. %@CR:RELIGISantayana @%%@NL@%
  44308.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  44309.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  44310. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44311. %@NL@%
  44312. %@NL@%
  44313.      %@2@%And lips say "God be pitiful,"%@NL@%
  44314.      Who ne'er said "God be praised."%@NL@%
  44315. %@CR:RELIGIBrowning1 @%%@NL@%
  44316.                                     Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)%@NL@%
  44317.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  44318. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44319. %@NL@%
  44320. %@NL@%
  44321. %@2@%What I mean by a religious person is one who conceives himself%@EH@%
  44322. or herself to be the instrument of some purpose in the universe which
  44323. is a high purpose, and is the motive power of evolution, that is of a
  44324. continual ascent in organisation and power of life, and extension of life.%@NL@%
  44325. %@CR:RELIGIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44326.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44327.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44328. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44329. %@NL@%
  44330. %@NL@%
  44331. %@2@%After coming into contact with a religious man I always feel%@EH@%
  44332. I must wash my hands.%@NL@%
  44333. %@CR:RELIGINietzsche @%%@NL@%
  44334.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  44335.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  44336. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44337. %@NL@%
  44338. %@NL@%
  44339. %@2@%I have noticed all my life that many people think they have%@EH@%
  44340. religion when they are troubled with dyspepsia.%@NL@%
  44341. %@CR:RELIGIIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  44342.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  44343.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  44344. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44345. %@NL@%
  44346. %@NL@%
  44347. %@2@%Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of%@EH@%
  44348. a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the
  44349. %@AI@%opium%@AE@% of the people%@NL@%
  44350. %@CR:RELIGIMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  44351.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  44352.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  44353. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44354. %@NL@%
  44355. %@NL@%
  44356. %@2@%It is beyond our power to explain either the prosperity of%@EH@%
  44357. the wicked or the afflictions of the righteous.%@NL@%
  44358. %@CR:RELIGIMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  44359.                                                                     Talmud%@NL@%
  44360. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44361. %@NL@%
  44362. %@NL@%
  44363. %@2@%Nobody can deny but religion is a comfort to the distressed,%@EH@%
  44364. a cordial to the sick, and sometimes a restraint on the wicked;
  44365. therefore, whoever would laugh or argue it out of the world, without
  44366. giving some equivalent for it, ought to be treated as a common
  44367. enemy.%@NL@%
  44368. %@CR:RELIGIMontagu   @%%@NL@%
  44369.                                      Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762)%@NL@%
  44370.                                      English society figure, letter writer%@NL@%
  44371. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44372. %@NL@%
  44373. %@NL@%
  44374. %@2@%It is necessary for men to be deceived in religion.%@NL@%
  44375. %@CR:RELIGIVarro     @%%@NL@%
  44376.                                         Marcus Terentius Varro (116-27 BC)%@NL@%
  44377.                                                               Roman writer%@NL@%
  44378. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44379. %@NL@%
  44380. %@NL@%
  44381. %@2@%Religions die when they are proved to be true. Science is the%@EH@%
  44382. record of dead religions.%@NL@%
  44383. %@CR:RELIGIWilde     @%%@NL@%
  44384.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  44385.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  44386. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44387. %@NL@%
  44388. %@NL@%
  44389. %@2@%Where it is a duty to worship the sun it is pretty sure to%@EH@%
  44390. be a crime to examine the laws of heat.%@NL@%
  44391. %@CR:RELIGIMorley2   @%%@NL@%
  44392.                                              John, Lord Morley (1838-1923)%@NL@%
  44393.                                         English writer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  44394. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44395. %@NL@%
  44396. %@NL@%
  44397. %@2@%Religion has made an honest woman of the supernatural, and%@EH@%
  44398. we won't have it kicking over the traces again.%@NL@%
  44399. %@CR:RELIGIFry       @%%@NL@%
  44400.                                                  Christopher Fry (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  44401.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  44402. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44403. %@NL@%
  44404. %@NL@%
  44405. %@2@%The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world%@EH@%
  44406. were all considered by the people as eqully true; by the philosopher
  44407. as equally false; and by the magistrate as equally useful.%@NL@%
  44408. %@CR:RELIGIGibbon    @%%@NL@%
  44409.                                                  Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)%@NL@%
  44410.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  44411. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44412. %@NL@%
  44413. %@NL@%
  44414. %@2@%Religion may in most of its forms be defined as the belief%@EH@%
  44415. that the gods are on the side of the Government.%@NL@%
  44416. %@CR:RELIGIRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  44417.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  44418.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  44419. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44420. %@NL@%
  44421. %@NL@%
  44422. %@2@%Government is impossible without a religion: that is, without%@EH@%
  44423. a body of common assumptions. The open mind never acts.%@NL@%
  44424. %@CR:RELIGIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44425.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44426.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44427. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44428. %@NL@%
  44429. %@NL@%
  44430. %@2@%As nations improve, so do their gods.%@NL@%
  44431. %@CR:RELIGILichtenber@%%@NL@%
  44432.                                              G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799)%@NL@%
  44433.                                                   German physicist, writer%@NL@%
  44434. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44435. %@NL@%
  44436. %@NL@%
  44437. %@2@%All religions are founded on the fear of the many and the cleverness%@EH@%
  44438. of the few.%@NL@%
  44439. %@CR:RELIGIStendhal  @%%@NL@%
  44440.                                                       Stendhal (1783-1842)%@NL@%
  44441.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  44442. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44443. %@NL@%
  44444. %@NL@%
  44445. %@2@%Man is a being born to believe. And if no Church comes forward%@EH@%
  44446. with its title-deeds of truth  . . .  to guide him, he will find
  44447. altars and idols in his own heart and his own imagination.%@NL@%
  44448. %@CR:RELIGIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  44449.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  44450.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  44451. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44452. %@NL@%
  44453. %@NL@%
  44454. %@2@%A maker of idols is never an idolater.%@NL@%
  44455. %@CR:RELIGIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  44456.                                                            Chinese proverb%@NL@%
  44457. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44458. %@NL@%
  44459. %@NL@%
  44460. %@2@%All the sweetness of religion is conveyed to the world by the%@EH@%
  44461. hands of story-tellers and imagemakers. Without their fictions
  44462. the truths of religion would for the multitude be neither intelligible
  44463. nor even apprehensible; and the prophets would prophesy and the
  44464. teachers teach in vain.%@NL@%
  44465. %@CR:RELIGIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44466.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44467.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44468. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44469. %@NL@%
  44470. %@NL@%
  44471. %@2@%The more facts a religion takes account of, the greater is%@EH@%
  44472. its victory, and that is why religions appeal to Puritan temperaments.%@NL@%
  44473. %@CR:RELIGIRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  44474.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  44475.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  44476. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44477. %@NL@%
  44478. %@NL@%
  44479. %@2@%The fashion just now is a Roman Catholic frame of mind with%@EH@%
  44480. an agnostic conscience: you get the medieval picturesqueness of
  44481. the one with the modern conveniences of the other.%@NL@%
  44482. %@CR:RELIGIMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  44483.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  44484.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  44485. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44486. %@NL@%
  44487. %@NL@%
  44488. %@2@%Impiety. Your irreverence toward my diety.%@NL@%
  44489. %@CR:RELIGIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  44490.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  44491.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44492. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44493. %@NL@%
  44494. %@NL@%
  44495. %@2@%It matters little what profession, whether of religion or irreligion,%@EH@%
  44496. a man may make, provided only he follows it out with charitable
  44497. inconsistency, and without insisting on it to the bitter end.%@NL@%
  44498. %@CR:RELIGIButler4   @%%@NL@%
  44499.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  44500.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  44501. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44502. %@NL@%
  44503. %@NL@%
  44504. %@2@%Religion has done love a great service by making it a sin.%@NL@%
  44505. %@CR:RELIGIFrance    @%%@NL@%
  44506.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  44507.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  44508. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44509. %@NL@%
  44510. %@NL@%
  44511. %@2@%Every religion of the beautiful ends in orgy.%@NL@%
  44512. %@CR:RELIGIDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  44513.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  44514.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  44515. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44516. %@NL@%
  44517. %@NL@%
  44518. %@2@%Religion is by no means a proper subject of conversation in%@EH@%
  44519. a mixed company.%@NL@%
  44520. %@CR:RELIGIChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  44521.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  44522.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  44523. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44524. %@NL@%
  44525. %@NL@%
  44526. %@2@%Religion is a way of walking, not a way of talking.%@NL@%
  44527. %@CR:RELIGIInge      @%%@NL@%
  44528.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  44529.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  44530. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44531. %@NL@%
  44532. %@NL@%
  44533. %@2@%The religion of one age is the literary entertainment of the%@EH@%
  44534. next.%@NL@%
  44535. %@CR:RELIGIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  44536.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  44537.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  44538. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44539. %@NL@%
  44540. %@NL@%
  44541. %@2@%Religion. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining to Ignorance%@EH@%
  44542. the nature of the Unknowable.%@NL@%
  44543. %@CR:RELIGIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  44544.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  44545.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44546. %@AS@%                                                                  Religion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44547. %@NL@%
  44548. %@NL@%
  44549. %@NL@%
  44550. %@1@%%@AS@%Repentance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44551. %@CR:REPENTANCE      @%%@NL@%
  44552. %@2@%%@QR:Repentance@%Even in the shadow of death, two and two do not make six.%@NL@%
  44553. %@CR:REPENTTolstoy   @%%@NL@%
  44554.                                                    Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)%@NL@%
  44555.                                              Russian novelist, philosopher%@NL@%
  44556.       on his deathbed, answering pleas that he should return to the Church%@NL@%
  44557. %@AS@%                                                                Repentance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44558. %@NL@%
  44559. %@NL@%
  44560. %@2@%You cannot repent too soon, because you do not know how soon%@EH@%
  44561. it may be too late.%@NL@%
  44562. %@CR:REPENTFuller2   @%%@NL@%
  44563.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  44564.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  44565. %@AS@%                                                                Repentance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44566. %@NL@%
  44567. %@NL@%
  44568. %@2@%Most people repent of their sins by thanking God they ain't%@EH@%
  44569. so wicked as their neighbors.%@NL@%
  44570. %@CR:REPENTBillings  @%%@NL@%
  44571.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  44572.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  44573. %@AS@%                                                                Repentance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44574. %@NL@%
  44575. %@NL@%
  44576. %@2@%Repentance is but want of power to sin.%@NL@%
  44577. %@CR:REPENTDryden    @%%@NL@%
  44578.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  44579.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  44580. %@AS@%                                                                Repentance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44581. %@NL@%
  44582. %@NL@%
  44583. %@2@%It is much easier to repent of sins that we have committed%@EH@%
  44584. than to repent of those we intend to commit.%@NL@%
  44585. %@CR:REPENTBillings  @%%@NL@%
  44586.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  44587.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  44588. %@AS@%                                                                Repentance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44589. %@NL@%
  44590. %@NL@%
  44591. %@NL@%
  44592. %@1@%%@AS@%Repression%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44593. %@CR:REPRESSION      @%%@NL@%
  44594. %@2@%See:%@QR:Repression@%%@NL@%
  44595.      Liberty: %@AB@%Cromwell%@AE@%%@BO:          1750a9@%%@NL@%
  44596.      Opinion: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          1c554d@%%@NL@%
  44597.      %@AB@%Oppression%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c6529@%%@NL@%
  44598. %@NL@%
  44599. %@2@%Southern Rhodesia is only being turned into a police State%@EH@%
  44600. in the sense that policemen are being given greater authority to
  44601. safeguard the fundamental liberties of the people.%@NL@%
  44602. %@CR:REPRESWelensky  @%%@NL@%
  44603.                                                 Sir Roy Welensky (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  44604.                                       Rhodesian politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  44605. %@AS@%                                                                Repression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44606. %@NL@%
  44607. %@NL@%
  44608. %@2@%We can never be sure that the opinion we are endeavouring to%@EH@%
  44609. stifle is a false opinion; and even if we were sure, stifling it
  44610. would be an evil still.%@NL@%
  44611. %@CR:REPRESMill      @%%@NL@%
  44612.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  44613.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  44614. %@AS@%                                                                Repression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44615. %@NL@%
  44616. %@NL@%
  44617. %@2@%Whenever we take away the liberties of those whom we hate we%@EH@%
  44618. are opening the way to loss of liberty for those we love.%@NL@%
  44619. %@CR:REPRESWilkie    @%%@NL@%
  44620.                                              Wendell L. Wilkie (1892-1944)%@NL@%
  44621.                                   American lawyer, businessman, politician%@NL@%
  44622. %@AS@%                                                                Repression%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44623. %@NL@%
  44624. %@NL@%
  44625. %@NL@%
  44626. %@1@%%@AS@%Reproach%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44627. %@CR:REPROACH        @%%@NL@%
  44628. %@2@%%@QR:Reproach@%They have a right to censure that have a heart to help.%@NL@%
  44629. %@CR:REPROAPenn      @%%@NL@%
  44630.                                                   William Penn (1644-1718)%@NL@%
  44631.                                  religious leader, founder of Pennsylvania%@NL@%
  44632. %@AS@%                                                                  Reproach%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44633. %@NL@%
  44634. %@NL@%
  44635. %@2@%There is luxury in self-reproach. When we blame ourselves we%@EH@%
  44636. feel no one else has a right to blame us.%@NL@%
  44637. %@CR:REPROAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  44638.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  44639.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  44640. %@AS@%                                                                  Reproach%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44641. %@NL@%
  44642. %@NL@%
  44643. %@NL@%
  44644. %@1@%%@AS@%Reputation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44645. %@CR:REPUTATION      @%%@NL@%
  44646. %@2@%See:%@QR:Reputation@%%@NL@%
  44647.      Fame: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           e1b22@%%@NL@%
  44648.      Gossip: %@AB@%Congreve%@AE@%%@BO:          114a6b@%; %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:          1145f9@%; %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:          1142db@%; %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          114768@%%@NL@%
  44649.      Philanthropy: %@AB@%Billings%@AE@%%@BO:          1d846a@%%@NL@%
  44650. %@NL@%
  44651. %@2@%What people say behind your back is your standing in the community.%@NL@%
  44652. %@CR:REPUTAHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  44653.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  44654.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  44655. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44656. %@NL@%
  44657. %@NL@%
  44658. %@2@%The great difficulty is first to win a reputation; the next%@EH@%
  44659. to keep it while you live; and the next to preserve it after you
  44660. die.%@NL@%
  44661. %@CR:REPUTAHaydon    @%%@NL@%
  44662.                                                Benjamin Haydon (1786-1846)%@NL@%
  44663.                                                             British artist%@NL@%
  44664. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44665. %@NL@%
  44666. %@NL@%
  44667. %@2@%Character is much easier kept than recovered.%@NL@%
  44668. %@CR:REPUTAPaine     @%%@NL@%
  44669.                                                   Thomas Paine (1737-1809)%@NL@%
  44670.                                                      Anglo-American writer%@NL@%
  44671. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44672. %@NL@%
  44673. %@NL@%
  44674. %@2@%Many a man's reputation would not know his character if they%@EH@%
  44675. met on the street.%@NL@%
  44676. %@CR:REPUTAHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  44677.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  44678.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44679. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44680. %@NL@%
  44681. %@NL@%
  44682. %@2@%How many people live on the reputation of the reputation they%@EH@%
  44683. might have made.%@NL@%
  44684. %@CR:REPUTAHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  44685.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  44686.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  44687. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44688. %@NL@%
  44689. %@NL@%
  44690. %@2@%Many men and woman enjoy popular esteem, not because they are%@EH@%
  44691. known, but because they are unknown.%@NL@%
  44692. %@CR:REPUTAChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  44693.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  44694.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  44695. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44696. %@NL@%
  44697. %@NL@%
  44698. %@2@%Often women are virtuous because they value their reputation%@EH@%
  44699. and prefer not to be disturbed.%@NL@%
  44700. %@CR:REPUTALaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  44701.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  44702.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  44703. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44704. %@NL@%
  44705. %@NL@%
  44706. %@2@%Reputation, reputation, reputation! O, I have lost my reputation!%@EH@%
  44707. I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is bestial.%@NL@%
  44708. %@CR:REPUTAShakespear@%%@NL@%
  44709.                                                            Cassio, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44710.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  44711.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  44712. %@AS@%                                                                Reputation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44713. %@NL@%
  44714. %@NL@%
  44715. %@NL@%
  44716. %@1@%%@AS@%Resignation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44717. %@CR:RESIGNATION     @%%@NL@%
  44718. %@2@%See:%@QR:Resignation@%%@NL@%
  44719.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Ferber%@AE@%%@BO:           11225@%%@NL@%
  44720.      Blindness: %@AB@%Milton%@AE@%%@BO:           43095@%%@NL@%
  44721.      Death: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           9aa06@%%@NL@%
  44722.      Death: Dying: %@AB@%Landor%@AE@%%@BO:           9c862@%%@NL@%
  44723.      Optimism: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          1c76b9@%%@NL@%
  44724. %@NL@%
  44725. %@2@%Mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable,%@EH@%
  44726. than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they
  44727. are accustomed.%@NL@%
  44728. %@CR:RESIGNJefferson @%%@NL@%
  44729.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  44730.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  44731. %@AS@%                                                               Resignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44732. %@NL@%
  44733. %@NL@%
  44734. %@2@%I can imagine no more comfortable frame of mind for the conduct%@EH@%
  44735. of life than a humorous resignation.%@NL@%
  44736. %@CR:RESIGNMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  44737.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  44738.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  44739. %@AS@%                                                               Resignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44740. %@NL@%
  44741. %@NL@%
  44742. %@2@%A calm despair, without angry convulsions or reproaches directed%@EH@%
  44743. at heaven, is the essence of wisdom.%@NL@%
  44744. %@CR:RESIGNVigny     @%%@NL@%
  44745.                                                Alfred de Vigny (1797-1863)%@NL@%
  44746.                                           French poet, novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  44747. %@AS@%                                                               Resignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44748. %@NL@%
  44749. %@NL@%
  44750. %@2@%What cannot be cured must be endured.%@NL@%
  44751. %@CR:RESIGNRabelais  @%%@NL@%
  44752.                                                       Rabelais (1494-1553)%@NL@%
  44753.                                                    French humanist, author%@NL@%
  44754. %@AS@%                                                               Resignation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44755. %@NL@%
  44756. %@NL@%
  44757. %@NL@%
  44758. %@1@%%@AS@%Resolve%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44759. %@CR:RESOLVE         @%%@NL@%
  44760. %@2@%See:%@QR:Resolve@%%@NL@%
  44761.      Whimsy: %@AB@%Herford%@AE@%%@BO:          2b0ab3@%%@NL@%
  44762. %@NL@%
  44763.      %@2@%What reinforcement we may gain from hope;%@NL@%
  44764.      If not, what resolution from despair.%@NL@%
  44765. %@CR:RESOLVMilton    @%%@NL@%
  44766.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  44767.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  44768. %@AS@%                                                                   Resolve%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44769. %@NL@%
  44770. %@NL@%
  44771. %@2@%A person under the firm persuasion that he can command resources%@EH@%
  44772. virtually has them.%@NL@%
  44773. %@CR:RESOLVLivy      @%%@NL@%
  44774.                                                         Livy (59 BC-17 AD)%@NL@%
  44775.                                                            Roman historian%@NL@%
  44776. %@AS@%                                                                   Resolve%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44777. %@NL@%
  44778. %@NL@%
  44779. %@2@%If I repeat "My will be done," with the necessary degree%@EH@%
  44780. of faith and persistency, the chances are that, sooner or later
  44781. and somehow or other, I shall get what I want.%@NL@%
  44782. %@CR:RESOLVHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  44783.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  44784.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  44785. %@AS@%                                                                   Resolve%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44786. %@NL@%
  44787. %@NL@%
  44788. %@NL@%
  44789. %@1@%%@AS@%Respectability%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44790. %@CR:RESPECTABILITY  @%%@NL@%
  44791. %@2@%See:%@QR:Respectability@%%@NL@%
  44792.      Goodness: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          112eee@%%@NL@%
  44793.      Reputation: %@AB@%Chamfort%@AE@%%@BO:          226a10@%%@NL@%
  44794.      Snobbery: %@AB@%Peacock%@AE@%%@BO:          25bbd7@%%@NL@%
  44795. %@NL@%
  44796. %@2@% The more things a man is ashamed of, the more respectable%@EH@%
  44797. he is.%@NL@%
  44798. %@CR:RESPECShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44799.                                                   Tanner, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44800.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44801.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44802. %@AS@%                                                            Respectability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44803. %@NL@%
  44804. %@NL@%
  44805. %@2@%Vanity is the cause of a great deal of virtue in man; the vainest%@EH@%
  44806. are those who like to be thought respectable.%@NL@%
  44807. %@CR:RESPECPinero    @%%@NL@%
  44808.                                              Sir Arthur Pinero (1855-1934)%@NL@%
  44809.                                        British actor, playwright, essayist%@NL@%
  44810. %@AS@%                                                            Respectability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44811. %@NL@%
  44812. %@NL@%
  44813. %@2@%Men have to do some awfully mean things to keep up their respectability.%@NL@%
  44814. %@CR:RESPECShaw      @%%@NL@%
  44815.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  44816.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  44817. %@AS@%                                                            Respectability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44818. %@NL@%
  44819. %@NL@%
  44820. %@2@%Virtue has never been as respectable as money.%@NL@%
  44821. %@CR:RESPECTwain     @%%@NL@%
  44822.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  44823.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  44824. %@AS@%                                                            Respectability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44825. %@NL@%
  44826. %@NL@%
  44827. %@NL@%
  44828. %@1@%%@AS@%Retirement%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44829. %@CR:RETIREMENT      @%%@NL@%
  44830. %@2@%%@QR:Retirement@%Fear no more the heart o' the sun,%@NL@%
  44831.      Nor the furious winter's rages;%@NL@%
  44832.      Thou thy worldly task hast done,%@NL@%
  44833.      Home art gone and ta'en thy wages.%@NL@%
  44834. %@CR:RETIREShakespear@%%@NL@%
  44835.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  44836.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  44837. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44838. %@NL@%
  44839. %@NL@%
  44840. %@2@%Have you ever been out for a late autumn walk in the closing%@EH@%
  44841. part of the afternoon, and suddenly looked up to realize that the
  44842. leaves have practically all gone? And the sun has set and the
  44843. day gone before you knew it - and with that a cold wind blows
  44844. across the landscape? That's retirement.%@NL@%
  44845. %@CR:RETIRELeacock   @%%@NL@%
  44846.                                                Stephen Leacock (1869-1944)%@NL@%
  44847.                                               Canadian humorist, economist%@NL@%
  44848. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44849. %@NL@%
  44850. %@NL@%
  44851. %@2@%Retirement is the ugliest word in the language.%@NL@%
  44852. %@CR:RETIREHemingway @%%@NL@%
  44853.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  44854.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  44855. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44856. %@NL@%
  44857. %@NL@%
  44858. %@2@%Few men of action have been able to make a graceful exit at%@EH@%
  44859. the appropriate time.%@NL@%
  44860. %@CR:RETIREMuggeridge@%%@NL@%
  44861.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  44862.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  44863. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44864. %@NL@%
  44865. %@NL@%
  44866. %@2@%Americans hardly ever retire from business: they are either%@EH@%
  44867. carried out feet first or they jump from a window.%@NL@%
  44868. %@CR:RETIREGoodhart2 @%%@NL@%
  44869.                                        Professor A. L.Goodhart (1891-1978)%@NL@%
  44870.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  44871. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44872. %@NL@%
  44873. %@NL@%
  44874. %@2@%When a man retires and time is no longer a matter of urgent%@EH@%
  44875. importance, his colleagues generally present him with a clock.%@NL@%
  44876. %@CR:RETIRESherriff  @%%@NL@%
  44877.                                                 R. C. Sherriff (1896-1975)%@NL@%
  44878.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  44879. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44880. %@NL@%
  44881. %@NL@%
  44882. %@2@%Eating's going to be a whole new ballgame. I may even have%@EH@%
  44883. to buy a new pair of trousers.%@NL@%
  44884. %@CR:RETIREPiggot    @%%@NL@%
  44885.                                                    Lester Piggot (b. 1935)%@NL@%
  44886.                                                    British champion jockey%@NL@%
  44887.                                                          on his retirement%@NL@%
  44888. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44889. %@NL@%
  44890. %@NL@%
  44891. %@2@%Retirement from the concert world is like giving up smoking.%@EH@%
  44892. You have got to finish completely.%@NL@%
  44893. %@CR:RETIREGigli     @%%@NL@%
  44894.                                                Beniamino Gigli (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  44895.                                                              Italian tenor%@NL@%
  44896. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44897. %@NL@%
  44898. %@NL@%
  44899. %@2@%Lord Tyrawley and I have been dead these two years, but we%@EH@%
  44900. don't choose to have it known.%@NL@%
  44901. %@CR:RETIREChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  44902.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  44903.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  44904. %@AS@%                                                                Retirement%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44905. %@NL@%
  44906. %@NL@%
  44907. %@NL@%
  44908. %@1@%%@AS@%Revenge%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44909. %@CR:REVENGE         @%%@NL@%
  44910. %@2@%%@QR:Revenge@%If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not%@EH@%
  44911. laugh? if you poison us, do we not die? and if you wrong us, shall
  44912. we not revenge?%@NL@%
  44913. %@CR:REVENGShakespear@%%@NL@%
  44914.                                            Shylock, %@AI@%The Merchant of Venice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44915.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  44916.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  44917. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44918. %@NL@%
  44919. %@NL@%
  44920. %@2@%You slap my cheek and I'll turn it. But you slap my wife or%@EH@%
  44921. my children, boy, and I'll %@AI@%put you on the floor!%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44922. %@CR:REVENGRobison   @%%@NL@%
  44923.                                                          Dr. James Robison%@NL@%
  44924.                                          American TV religious personality%@NL@%
  44925. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44926. %@NL@%
  44927. %@NL@%
  44928. %@2@%Revenge is a kind of wild justice, which the more a man's nature%@EH@%
  44929. runs to, the more ought law to weed it out.%@NL@%
  44930. %@CR:REVENGBacon     @%%@NL@%
  44931.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  44932.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  44933. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44934. %@NL@%
  44935. %@NL@%
  44936. %@2@%Revenge is often like biting a dog because the dog bit you.%@NL@%
  44937. %@CR:REVENGOMalley   @%%@NL@%
  44938.                                                Austin O'Malley (1858-1932)%@NL@%
  44939.                                                   American oculist, writer%@NL@%
  44940. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44941. %@NL@%
  44942. %@NL@%
  44943. %@2@%Nothing is more costly, nothing is more sterile, than vengeance.%@NL@%
  44944. %@CR:REVENGChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  44945.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  44946.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  44947. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44948. %@NL@%
  44949. %@NL@%
  44950.      %@2@%And reassembling our afflicted powers,%@NL@%
  44951.      Consult how we may henceforth most offend.%@NL@%
  44952. %@CR:REVENGMilton    @%%@NL@%
  44953.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  44954.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  44955. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44956. %@NL@%
  44957. %@NL@%
  44958. %@2@%The devil himself has not yet created a suitable vengeance%@EH@%
  44959. for the blood of a slain infant.%@NL@%
  44960. %@CR:REVENGBegin     @%%@NL@%
  44961.                                                   Menachem Begin (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  44962.                                         Israeli politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  44963. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44964. %@NL@%
  44965. %@NL@%
  44966. %@2@%A man that studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green.%@NL@%
  44967. %@CR:REVENGBacon     @%%@NL@%
  44968.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  44969.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  44970. %@AS@%                                                                   Revenge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44971. %@NL@%
  44972. %@NL@%
  44973. %@NL@%
  44974. %@1@%%@AS@%Revolution%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  44975. %@CR:REVOLUTION      @%%@NL@%
  44976. %@2@%See:%@QR:Revolution@%%@NL@%
  44977.      Civilization: %@AB@%Ellis%@AE@%%@BO:           6ed82@%%@NL@%
  44978.      %@AB@%Rebellion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          21d792@%%@NL@%
  44979.      Women: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          2bec2c@%%@NL@%
  44980. %@NL@%
  44981.      %@2@%The old order changeth, yielding place to new,%@NL@%
  44982.      And God fulfils himself in many ways.%@NL@%
  44983. %@CR:REVOLUTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  44984.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  44985.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  44986. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44987. %@NL@%
  44988. %@NL@%
  44989. %@2@%A revolution is an opinion backed by bayonets.%@NL@%
  44990. %@CR:REVOLUNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  44991.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  44992.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  44993. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  44994. %@NL@%
  44995. %@NL@%
  44996. %@2@%How much the greatest event it is that ever happened in the%@EH@%
  44997. world! and how much the best!%@NL@%
  44998. %@CR:REVOLUFox       @%%@NL@%
  44999.                                              Charles James Fox (1749-1806)%@NL@%
  45000.                                                    English Whig politician%@NL@%
  45001.                                                of the fall of the Bastille%@NL@%
  45002. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45003. %@NL@%
  45004. %@NL@%
  45005. %@2@%If there's no dancing, count me out.%@NL@%
  45006. %@CR:REVOLUGoldman   @%%@NL@%
  45007.                                                   Emma Goldman (1869-1940)%@NL@%
  45008.                                                         American anarchist%@NL@%
  45009.                                                  of the Russian Revolution%@NL@%
  45010. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45011. %@NL@%
  45012. %@NL@%
  45013. %@2@%Inferiors revolt in order that they may be equal, and equals%@EH@%
  45014. that they may be superior. Such is the state of mind which creates
  45015. revolutions.%@NL@%
  45016. %@CR:REVOLUAristotle @%%@NL@%
  45017.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  45018.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  45019. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45020. %@NL@%
  45021. %@NL@%
  45022. %@2@%Revolutions have never lightened the burden of tyranny: they%@EH@%
  45023. have only shifted it to another shoulder.%@NL@%
  45024. %@CR:REVOLUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45025.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45026.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45027. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45028. %@NL@%
  45029. %@NL@%
  45030. %@2@%When the people contend for their liberty they seldom get anything%@EH@%
  45031. by their victory but new masters.%@NL@%
  45032. %@CR:REVOLUSavile    @%%@NL@%
  45033.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  45034.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  45035. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45036. %@NL@%
  45037. %@NL@%
  45038. %@2@%Every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime%@EH@%
  45039. of a new bureaucracy.%@NL@%
  45040. %@CR:REVOLUKafka     @%%@NL@%
  45041.                                                    Franz Kafka (1883-1924)%@NL@%
  45042.                                        German novelist, short story writer%@NL@%
  45043. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45044. %@NL@%
  45045. %@NL@%
  45046. %@2@%The philosophers have only %@AI@%interpreted%@AE@% the world. The point,%@EH@%
  45047. however, is to %@AI@%change%@AE@% it.%@NL@%
  45048. %@CR:REVOLUMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  45049.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  45050.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  45051. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45052. %@NL@%
  45053. %@NL@%
  45054. %@2@%I wanted to change the world. But I have found that the only%@EH@%
  45055. thing one can be sure of changing is oneself.%@NL@%
  45056. %@CR:REVOLUHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  45057.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  45058.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  45059. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45060. %@NL@%
  45061. %@NL@%
  45062. %@2@%The only way to regenerate the world is to do the thing which%@EH@%
  45063. lies nearest us, and not hunt after grand, far-fetched ones for
  45064. ourselves.%@NL@%
  45065. %@CR:REVOLUKingsley1 @%%@NL@%
  45066.                                               Charles Kingsley (1819-1875)%@NL@%
  45067.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  45068. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45069. %@NL@%
  45070. %@NL@%
  45071. %@2@%He who would reform himself must first reform society.%@NL@%
  45072. %@CR:REVOLUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45073.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45074.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45075. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45076. %@NL@%
  45077. %@NL@%
  45078. %@2@%If we were to promise people nothing better than only revolution,%@EH@%
  45079. they would scratch their heads and say: "Is it not better to have
  45080. good goulash?"%@NL@%
  45081. %@CR:REVOLUKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  45082.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  45083.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  45084. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45085. %@NL@%
  45086. %@NL@%
  45087. %@2@%Revolution is not a dinner party, nor an essay, nor a painting,%@EH@%
  45088. nor a piece of embroidery; it cannot be advanced softly, gradually,
  45089. carefully, considerately, respectfully, politely, plainly and modestly.%@NL@%
  45090. %@CR:REVOLUMaoZedong @%%@NL@%
  45091.                                                     Mao Zedong (1893-1976)%@NL@%
  45092.                                  founder of the People's Republic of China%@NL@%
  45093. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45094. %@NL@%
  45095. %@NL@%
  45096. %@2@%I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this%@EH@%
  45097. guilty land will never be purged away but with Blood.%@NL@%
  45098. %@CR:REVOLUBrown2    @%%@NL@%
  45099.                                                     John Brown (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  45100.                                                      American abolitionist%@NL@%
  45101.                                        written on the day of his execution%@NL@%
  45102. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45103. %@NL@%
  45104. %@NL@%
  45105. %@2@%The surest guide to the correctness of the path that women%@EH@%
  45106. take is %@AI@%joy in the struggle.%@AE@% Revolution is the festival of the
  45107. oppressed.%@NL@%
  45108. %@CR:REVOLUGreer     @%%@NL@%
  45109.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  45110.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  45111. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45112. %@NL@%
  45113. %@NL@%
  45114. %@2@%I have been ever of opinion that revolutions are not to be%@EH@%
  45115. evaded.%@NL@%
  45116. %@CR:REVOLUDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  45117.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  45118.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  45119. %@AS@%                                                                Revolution%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45120. %@NL@%
  45121. %@NL@%
  45122. %@NL@%
  45123. %@1@%%@AS@%Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45124. %@CR:REVOLUTIONARIES @%%@NL@%
  45125. %@2@%See:%@QR:Revolutionaries@%%@NL@%
  45126.      Vocation: %@AB@%Moliere%@AE@%%@BO:          2a6515@%%@NL@%
  45127. %@NL@%
  45128. %@2@%We are dead men on furlough.%@NL@%
  45129. %@CR:REVOLULenin     @%%@NL@%
  45130.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  45131.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  45132. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45133. %@NL@%
  45134. %@NL@%
  45135. %@2@%I am thirty-three - the age of the good sans-culotte Jesus;%@EH@%
  45136. an age fatal to revolutionists.%@NL@%
  45137. %@CR:REVOLUDesmoulins@%%@NL@%
  45138.                                             Camille Desmoulins (1760-1794)%@NL@%
  45139.                                           French journalist, revolutionary%@NL@%
  45140. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45141. %@NL@%
  45142. %@NL@%
  45143. %@2@%It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.%@NL@%
  45144. %@CR:REVOLUIbarruri  @%%@NL@%
  45145.                   Dolores Ibarruri,  %@AB@%La Pasionaria%@AE@% (1895-1989)%@NL@%
  45146.                                                             Valencia, 1936%@NL@%
  45147. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45148. %@NL@%
  45149. %@NL@%
  45150. %@2@%He that goeth about to persuade a multitude that they are not%@EH@%
  45151. so well governed as they ought to be shall never want attentive
  45152. and favourable hearers.%@NL@%
  45153. %@CR:REVOLUHooker    @%%@NL@%
  45154.                                                 Richard Hooker (1554-1600)%@NL@%
  45155.                                                         English theologian%@NL@%
  45156. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45157. %@NL@%
  45158. %@NL@%
  45159. %@2@%Revolutionary movements attract those who are not good enough%@EH@%
  45160. for established institutions as well as those who are too good
  45161. for them.%@NL@%
  45162. %@CR:REVOLUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45163.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45164.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45165. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45166. %@NL@%
  45167. %@NL@%
  45168. %@2@%The traditional figures of revolution, Rousseau, Karl Marx,%@EH@%
  45169. Lenin and others, were no great emancipators of women and were
  45170. themselves chauvinist. They left their wives slaving over a hot
  45171. stove.%@NL@%
  45172. %@CR:REVOLUOppenheim @%%@NL@%
  45173.                                                  Sally Oppenheim (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  45174.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  45175. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45176. %@NL@%
  45177. %@NL@%
  45178. %@2@%Those who speak of revolution without making it real in their%@EH@%
  45179. own daily lives talk with a corpse in their mouths.%@NL@%
  45180. %@CR:REVOLUVaneigem  @%%@NL@%
  45181.                                                   Raoul Vaneigem (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  45182.                                                 Belgian political theorist%@NL@%
  45183. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45184. %@NL@%
  45185. %@NL@%
  45186. %@2@%A man who has had his dinner is never a revolutionist: his%@EH@%
  45187. politics are all talk.%@NL@%
  45188. %@CR:REVOLUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45189.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45190.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45191. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45192. %@NL@%
  45193. %@NL@%
  45194. %@2@%To be a revolutionary you have to be a human being. You have%@EH@%
  45195. to care about people who have no power.%@NL@%
  45196. %@CR:REVOLUFonda     @%%@NL@%
  45197.                                                       Jane Fonda (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  45198.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  45199. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45200. %@NL@%
  45201. %@NL@%
  45202. %@2@%Revolutionaries do not make revolutions. The revolutionaries%@EH@%
  45203. are those who know when power is lying in the street and then they
  45204. can pick it up. Armed uprising by itself has never yet led to
  45205. revolution.%@NL@%
  45206. %@CR:REVOLUArendt    @%%@NL@%
  45207.                                                  Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)%@NL@%
  45208.                                             American political philosopher%@NL@%
  45209. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45210. %@NL@%
  45211. %@NL@%
  45212. %@2@%Every revolutionary ends up by becoming either an oppressor%@EH@%
  45213. or a heretic.%@NL@%
  45214. %@CR:REVOLUCamus1    @%%@NL@%
  45215.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  45216.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  45217. %@AS@%                                                           Revolutionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45218. %@NL@%
  45219. %@NL@%
  45220. %@NL@%
  45221. %@1@%%@AS@%The Rich%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45222. %@CR:THERICH         @%%@NL@%
  45223. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Rich@%%@NL@%
  45224.      Funerals: %@AB@%Dobell%@AE@%%@BO:          10157d@%%@NL@%
  45225.      Independence: %@AB@%Churchill%@AE@%%@BO:          14a1aa@%%@NL@%
  45226.      The Law: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          16c322@%; %@AB@%Goldsmith%@AE@%%@BO:          16c488@%%@NL@%
  45227.      %@AB@%Millionaires%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a6108@%%@NL@%
  45228.      Poverty: %@AB@%Bagehot%@AE@%%@BO:          1f6c76@%; %@AB@%Saki%@AE@%%@BO:          1f7148@%%@NL@%
  45229.      %@AB@%Wealth%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2acbba@%%@NL@%
  45230. %@NL@%
  45231. %@2@%He must have killed a lot of men to have made so much money.%@NL@%
  45232. %@CR:THERICMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  45233.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  45234.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  45235. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45236. %@NL@%
  45237. %@NL@%
  45238. %@2@%Anyone who makes a lot of money quickly must be pretty crooked - honest%@EH@%
  45239. pushing away at the grindstone never made anyone a bomb.%@NL@%
  45240. %@CR:THERICRiceDavies@%%@NL@%
  45241.                                                Mandy Rice-Davies (b. 1944)%@NL@%
  45242.                               call-girl in British political scandal, 1963%@NL@%
  45243. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45244. %@NL@%
  45245. %@NL@%
  45246. %@2@%He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent.%@NL@%
  45247. %@CR:THERICBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  45248.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  45249. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45250. %@NL@%
  45251. %@NL@%
  45252. %@2@%If Heaven had looked upon riches to be a valuable thing, it%@EH@%
  45253. would not have given them to such a scoundrel.%@NL@%
  45254. %@CR:THERICSwift     @%%@NL@%
  45255.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  45256.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  45257. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45258. %@NL@%
  45259. %@NL@%
  45260. %@2@%God shows his contempt for wealth by the kind of person he%@EH@%
  45261. selects to receive it.%@NL@%
  45262. %@CR:THERICOMalley   @%%@NL@%
  45263.                                                Austin O'Malley (1858-1932)%@NL@%
  45264.                                                   American oculist, writer%@NL@%
  45265. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45266. %@NL@%
  45267. %@NL@%
  45268.      %@2@%O, what a world of vile, ill-favoured faults,%@NL@%
  45269.      Looks handsome in three hundred pounds a year.%@NL@%
  45270. %@CR:THERICShakespear@%%@NL@%
  45271.                                           Anne, %@AI@%The Merry Wives of Windsor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45272.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  45273.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  45274. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45275. %@NL@%
  45276. %@NL@%
  45277. %@2@%Gold lends a touch of beauty even to the ugly.%@NL@%
  45278. %@CR:THERICBoileau   @%%@NL@%
  45279.                                                Nicolas Boileau (1636-1711)%@NL@%
  45280.                                                        French poet, critic%@NL@%
  45281. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45282. %@NL@%
  45283. %@NL@%
  45284. %@2@%To suppose, as we all suppose, that we could be rich and not%@EH@%
  45285. behave as the rich behave, is like supposing that we could drink
  45286. all day and stay sober.%@NL@%
  45287. %@CR:THERICSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  45288.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  45289.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  45290. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45291. %@NL@%
  45292. %@NL@%
  45293. %@2@%The rich never feel so good as when they are speaking of their%@EH@%
  45294. possessions as responsibilities.%@NL@%
  45295. %@CR:THERICLynd      @%%@NL@%
  45296.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  45297.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  45298. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45299. %@NL@%
  45300. %@NL@%
  45301.      %@2@%Come, let us pity those who are better off then we are.%@NL@%
  45302.      Come, my friend, and remember that the rich have butlers and no 
  45303. friends,%@NL@%
  45304.      And we have friends and no butlers.%@NL@%
  45305. %@CR:THERICPound     @%%@NL@%
  45306.                                                     Ezra Pound (1885-1972)%@NL@%
  45307.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  45308. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45309. %@NL@%
  45310. %@NL@%
  45311. %@2@%The wretchedness of being rich is that you live with rich people.%@NL@%
  45312. %@CR:THERICSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  45313.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  45314.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  45315. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45316. %@NL@%
  45317. %@NL@%
  45318. %@2@%The jests of the rich are ever successful.%@NL@%
  45319. %@CR:THERICGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  45320.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  45321.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  45322. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45323. %@NL@%
  45324. %@NL@%
  45325. %@2@%Heiresses are never jilted.%@NL@%
  45326. %@CR:THERICMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  45327.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  45328.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  45329. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45330. %@NL@%
  45331. %@NL@%
  45332. %@2@%The greatest luxury of riches is, that they enable you to escape%@EH@%
  45333. so much good advice. The rich are always advising the poor, but
  45334. the poor seldom venture to return the compliment.%@NL@%
  45335. %@CR:THERICHelps     @%%@NL@%
  45336.                                               Sir Arthur Helps (1813-1875)%@NL@%
  45337.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  45338. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45339. %@NL@%
  45340. %@NL@%
  45341. %@2@%I honestly wouldn't spend another winter in England, if I were%@EH@%
  45342. you.%@NL@%
  45343. %@CR:THERICBentley   @%%@NL@%
  45344.                                          befurred lady to shivering beggar%@NL@%
  45345.                                                Nicolas Bentley (1907-1978)%@NL@%
  45346.                                          British artist, author, publisher%@NL@%
  45347. %@AS@%                                                                  The Rich%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45348. %@NL@%
  45349. %@NL@%
  45350. %@NL@%
  45351. %@1@%%@AS@%The Right%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45352. %@CR:THERIGHT        @%%@NL@%
  45353. %@2@%%@QR:The Right@%What we have to fear is the emergence from beneath, not from%@EH@%
  45354. above, of some new energetic organisation which will say, "Britain
  45355. is a great country, kill the blacks and the Jews, replace this
  45356. weak government with a strong one. Let's smarten ourselves up and
  45357. wear a uniform." For it will be Big Brother shouting these words.
  45358. But, having read %@AI@%Nineteen Eighty-Four,%@AE@% he'll be too cunning
  45359. to call himself Big Brother.%@NL@%
  45360. %@CR:THERIGBurgess1  @%%@NL@%
  45361.                                                  Anthony Burgess (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  45362.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  45363. %@AS@%                                                                 The Right%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45364. %@NL@%
  45365. %@NL@%
  45366. %@2@%McCarthyism is Americanism with its sleeves rolled.%@NL@%
  45367. %@CR:THERIGMcCarthy1 @%%@NL@%
  45368.                                                Joseph McCarthy (1908-1957)%@NL@%
  45369.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  45370. %@AS@%                                                                 The Right%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45371. %@NL@%
  45372. %@NL@%
  45373. %@2@%They'll nail anyone who ever scratched his ass during the National%@EH@%
  45374. Anthem.%@NL@%
  45375. %@CR:THERIGBogart    @%%@NL@%
  45376.                                                Humphrey Bogart (1899-1957)%@NL@%
  45377.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  45378.                                    of the Un-American Activities Committee%@NL@%
  45379. %@AS@%                                                                 The Right%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45380. %@NL@%
  45381. %@NL@%
  45382. %@2@%Any time a politician tells you "The Russians are coming,"%@EH@%
  45383. hang on to your wallet. It's just another raid on the treasury.%@NL@%
  45384. %@CR:THERIGVidal     @%%@NL@%
  45385.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  45386.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  45387. %@AS@%                                                                 The Right%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45388. %@NL@%
  45389. %@NL@%
  45390. %@2@%I have a feeling that at any time about three million Americans%@EH@%
  45391. can be had for any militant reaction against Law, decency, the
  45392. Constitution, the Supreme Court, compassion and the rule of reason.%@NL@%
  45393. %@CR:THERIGGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  45394.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  45395.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  45396. %@AS@%                                                                 The Right%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45397. %@NL@%
  45398. %@NL@%
  45399. %@NL@%
  45400. %@1@%%@AS@%Rock 'n' Roll%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45401. %@CR:ROCKANDROLL     @%%@NL@%
  45402. %@2@%%@QR:Rock 'n' Roll@%Rock 'n' roll is part of a pest to undermine the morals of%@EH@%
  45403. the youth of our nation. It is sexualistic, unmoralistic and  . . . 
  45404. brings people of both races together.%@NL@%
  45405. %@CR:ROCKANNAWCC     @%%@NL@%
  45406.                               North Alabama White Citizens' Council, 1950s%@NL@%
  45407. %@AS@%                                                             Rock 'n' Roll%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45408. %@NL@%
  45409. %@NL@%
  45410. %@NL@%
  45411. %@1@%%@AS@%Romance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45412. %@CR:ROMANCE         @%%@NL@%
  45413. %@2@%See:%@QR:Romance@%%@NL@%
  45414.      Italy: %@AB@%Bulwer-Lytton%@AE@%%@BO:          15bb78@%%@NL@%
  45415.      Marriage: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          19759b@%%@NL@%
  45416. %@NL@%
  45417. %@2@%Romance is a love affair in other than domestic surroundings.%@NL@%
  45418. %@CR:ROMANCRaleigh2  @%%@NL@%
  45419.                                             Sir Walter Raleigh (1861-1922)%@NL@%
  45420.                                                           British academic%@NL@%
  45421. %@AS@%                                                                   Romance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45422. %@NL@%
  45423. %@NL@%
  45424. %@2@%Is not this the true romantic feeling - not to desire to%@EH@%
  45425. escape life, but to prevent life from escaping you?%@NL@%
  45426. %@CR:ROMANCWolfe2    @%%@NL@%
  45427.                                                   Thomas Wolfe (1900-1938)%@NL@%
  45428.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  45429. %@AS@%                                                                   Romance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45430. %@NL@%
  45431. %@NL@%
  45432. %@2@%Romance, like the rabbit at the dog track, is the elusive,%@EH@%
  45433. fake, and never attained reward which, for the benefit and amusement
  45434. of our masters, keeps us running and thinking in safe circles.%@NL@%
  45435. %@CR:ROMANCJones1    @%%@NL@%
  45436.                                                    Beverly Jones (b. 1927)%@NL@%
  45437.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  45438. %@AS@%                                                                   Romance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45439. %@NL@%
  45440. %@NL@%
  45441. %@2@%Nothing spoils a romance so much as a sense of humour in the%@EH@%
  45442. woman.%@NL@%
  45443. %@CR:ROMANCWilde     @%%@NL@%
  45444.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  45445.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  45446. %@AS@%                                                                   Romance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45447. %@NL@%
  45448. %@NL@%
  45449. %@NL@%
  45450. %@1@%%@AS@%Royalty%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45451. %@CR:ROYALTY         @%%@NL@%
  45452. %@2@%See:%@QR:Royalty@%%@NL@%
  45453.      Death: Dying: %@AB@%Tennyson%@AE@%%@BO:           9dcdf@%%@NL@%
  45454.      Flattery: %@AB@%King Louis XIV%@AE@%%@BO:           f1eb5@%%@NL@%
  45455.      Glory: %@AB@%Marlowe%@AE@%%@BO:          10cec3@%%@NL@%
  45456.      Tyranny: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          298f45@%%@NL@%
  45457. %@NL@%
  45458. %@2@%Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.%@NL@%
  45459. %@CR:ROYALTShakespear@%%@NL@%
  45460.                                           King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry IV part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45461.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  45462.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  45463. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45464. %@NL@%
  45465. %@NL@%
  45466. %@2@%Royalty is a government in which the attention of the nation%@EH@%
  45467. is concentrated on one person doing interesting actions.%@NL@%
  45468. %@CR:ROYALTBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  45469.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  45470.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  45471. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45472. %@NL@%
  45473. %@NL@%
  45474. %@2@%Kings are not born; they are made by universal hallucination.%@NL@%
  45475. %@CR:ROYALTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45476.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45477.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45478. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45479. %@NL@%
  45480. %@NL@%
  45481. %@2@%A king is a thing men have made for their own sakes, for quietness'%@EH@%
  45482. sake. Just as if in a family one man is appointed to buy the meat.%@NL@%
  45483. %@CR:ROYALTSelden    @%%@NL@%
  45484.                                                    John Selden (1584-1654)%@NL@%
  45485.                                                  English jurist, statesman%@NL@%
  45486. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45487. %@NL@%
  45488. %@NL@%
  45489. %@2@%Royalty is but a feather in a man's cap; let children enjoy%@EH@%
  45490. their rattle.%@NL@%
  45491. %@CR:ROYALTCromwell  @%%@NL@%
  45492.                                                Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)%@NL@%
  45493.                                                  Lord Protector of England%@NL@%
  45494. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45495. %@NL@%
  45496. %@NL@%
  45497. %@2@%And what, in a mean man, I should call folly, is in your majesty%@EH@%
  45498. remarkable wisdom.%@NL@%
  45499. %@CR:ROYALTMassinger @%%@NL@%
  45500.                                               Philip Massinger (1583-1640)%@NL@%
  45501.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  45502. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45503. %@NL@%
  45504. %@NL@%
  45505. %@2@%Everyone likes flattery; and when you come to Royalty you should%@EH@%
  45506. lay it on with a trowel.%@NL@%
  45507. %@CR:ROYALTDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  45508.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  45509.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  45510. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45511. %@NL@%
  45512. %@NL@%
  45513. %@2@%Must! Is must a word to be addressed to princes? Little man,%@EH@%
  45514. little man! thy father, if he had been alive, durst not have used
  45515. that word.%@NL@%
  45516. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45517.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  45518.                                                            to Robert Cecil%@NL@%
  45519. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45520. %@NL@%
  45521. %@NL@%
  45522. %@2@%I know the song ["There was an old man and he had an old%@EH@%
  45523. sow"] and I can make all those noises at home but I cannot do
  45524. them with a tiara on.%@NL@%
  45525. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45526.                                               Queen Elizabeth II (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  45527.                                      of Great Britain and Northern Ireland%@NL@%
  45528. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45529. %@NL@%
  45530. %@NL@%
  45531. %@2@%A careless song, with a little nonsense now and then, does%@EH@%
  45532. not misbecome the monarch.%@NL@%
  45533. %@CR:ROYALTWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  45534.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  45535.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  45536. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45537. %@NL@%
  45538. %@NL@%
  45539. %@2@%My only excuse for being so various is that I appear as "chymist,%@EH@%
  45540. fiddler, statesman and buffoon" entirely by request.%@NL@%
  45541. %@CR:ROYALTPrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  45542.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  45543. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45544. %@NL@%
  45545. %@NL@%
  45546. %@2@%Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation.%@NL@%
  45547. %@CR:ROYALTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45548.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45549.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45550. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45551. %@NL@%
  45552. %@NL@%
  45553. %@2@%It has been said, not truly, but with a possible approximation%@EH@%
  45554. to truth, that in 1802 every hereditary monarch was insane.%@NL@%
  45555. %@CR:ROYALTBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  45556.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  45557.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  45558. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45559. %@NL@%
  45560. %@NL@%
  45561.      %@2@%Royalty is a neurosis.%@NL@%
  45562.      Get well soon.%@NL@%
  45563. %@CR:ROYALTMitchell1 @%%@NL@%
  45564.                                                  Adrian Mitchell (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  45565.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  45566.                                     verse addressed to the Prince of Wales%@NL@%
  45567. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45568. %@NL@%
  45569. %@NL@%
  45570. %@2@%All the time I feel I must justify my existence.%@NL@%
  45571. %@CR:ROYALTPrinceOfWa@%%@NL@%
  45572.                                         Charles, Prince of Wales (b. 1948)%@NL@%
  45573. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45574. %@NL@%
  45575. %@NL@%
  45576. %@2@%Altogether the cost to the state of the monarchy is probably%@EH@%
  45577. not less than two million pounds a year - as much as Omo and
  45578. Daz spend on advertising.%@NL@%
  45579. %@CR:ROYALTSampson   @%%@NL@%
  45580.                                                  Anthony Sampson (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  45581.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  45582.                                                                       1965%@NL@%
  45583. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45584. %@NL@%
  45585. %@NL@%
  45586. %@2@%The brood of that dutiful and pleasant gentlewoman Elizabeth%@EH@%
  45587. II and her immediate connections is now distending the country
  45588. with a brand-new brazen aristocracy; a nouveau ancien regime.%@NL@%
  45589. %@CR:ROYALTSampson   @%%@NL@%
  45590.                                                        New Statesman, 1986%@NL@%
  45591. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45592. %@NL@%
  45593. %@NL@%
  45594.      %@2@%The royal refugee our breed restores%@NL@%
  45595.      With foreign courtiers and with foreign whores,%@NL@%
  45596.      And carefully repeopled us again%@NL@%
  45597.      Throughout his lazy, long, lascivious reign.%@NL@%
  45598. %@CR:ROYALTDefoe     @%%@NL@%
  45599.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  45600.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  45601.                                                   of Charles II of England%@NL@%
  45602. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45603. %@NL@%
  45604. %@NL@%
  45605. %@2@%Though God hath raised me high, yet this I count the glory%@EH@%
  45606. of my crown: that I have reigned with your loves.%@NL@%
  45607. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45608.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  45609. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45610. %@NL@%
  45611. %@NL@%
  45612. %@2@%We live in what virtually amounts to a museum - which does%@EH@%
  45613. not happen to a lot of people.%@NL@%
  45614. %@CR:ROYALTPrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  45615.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  45616. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45617. %@NL@%
  45618. %@NL@%
  45619. %@2@%Oh, do turn it off, it is so embarrassing unless one is there - like%@EH@%
  45620. hearing the Lord's Prayer when playing canasta.%@NL@%
  45621. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45622.                                Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother/ (b. 1900)%@NL@%
  45623.                     of the National Anthem played at a televised Cup Final%@NL@%
  45624. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45625. %@NL@%
  45626. %@NL@%
  45627. %@2@%If you find you are to be presented to the Queen, do not rush%@EH@%
  45628. up to her. She will eventually be brought around to you, like a
  45629. dessert trolley at a good restaurant.%@NL@%
  45630. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45631.                                      advice in the %@AI@%Los Angeles Times%@AE@%, 1983%@NL@%
  45632. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45633. %@NL@%
  45634. %@NL@%
  45635. %@2@%I never see any home cooking. All I get is fancy stuff.%@NL@%
  45636. %@CR:ROYALTPrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  45637.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  45638. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45639. %@NL@%
  45640. %@NL@%
  45641. %@2@%I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have%@EH@%
  45642. the heart and stomach of a king, and of a king of England too.%@NL@%
  45643. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45644.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  45645. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45646. %@NL@%
  45647. %@NL@%
  45648. %@2@%Don't forget your great guns, which are the most respectable%@EH@%
  45649. arguments of the rights of kings.%@NL@%
  45650. %@CR:ROYALTFrederickt@%%@NL@%
  45651.                                 Frederick the Great of Prussia (1712-1786)%@NL@%
  45652. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45653. %@NL@%
  45654. %@NL@%
  45655. %@2@%Divine right of kings means the divine right of anyone who%@EH@%
  45656. can get uppermost.%@NL@%
  45657. %@CR:ROYALTSpencer   @%%@NL@%
  45658.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  45659.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  45660. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45661. %@NL@%
  45662. %@NL@%
  45663. %@2@%I cannot be indifferent to the assassination of a member of%@EH@%
  45664. my profession. We should be obliged to shut up business if we,
  45665. the Kings, were to consider the assassination of Kings as of no
  45666. consequence at all.%@NL@%
  45667. %@CR:ROYALTEdwardVII @%%@NL@%
  45668.                                                King Edward VII (1841-1910)%@NL@%
  45669.                             refusing to recognize the Karageorgevic regime%@NL@%
  45670.                               in Serbia after the murder of King Alexander%@NL@%
  45671.                                     and the extermination of the Obrenovic%@NL@%
  45672.                                                              dynasty, 1903%@NL@%
  45673. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45674. %@NL@%
  45675. %@NL@%
  45676. %@2@%War is the trade of kings.%@NL@%
  45677. %@CR:ROYALTDryden    @%%@NL@%
  45678.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  45679.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  45680. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45681. %@NL@%
  45682. %@NL@%
  45683. %@2@%My people and I have come to an agreement which satisfies us%@EH@%
  45684. both. They are to say what they please, and I am to do what I please.%@NL@%
  45685. %@CR:ROYALTFrederickt@%%@NL@%
  45686.                                 Frederick the Great of Prussia (1712-1786)%@NL@%
  45687. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45688. %@NL@%
  45689. %@NL@%
  45690. %@2@%A king is not allowed the luxury of a good character. Our country%@EH@%
  45691. has produced millions of blameless greengrocers, but not one blameless
  45692. monarch.%@NL@%
  45693. %@CR:ROYALTShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45694.                                                King Magnus, %@AI@%The Apple Cart%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45695.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45696.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45697. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45698. %@NL@%
  45699. %@NL@%
  45700. %@2@%I do not oppose, it is my duty not to oppose; but observe that%@EH@%
  45701. I warn.%@NL@%
  45702. %@CR:ROYALTBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  45703.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  45704.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  45705.                   national statement by a British constitutional sovereign%@NL@%
  45706. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45707. %@NL@%
  45708. %@NL@%
  45709. %@2@%I am your anointed Queen. I will never be by violence constrained%@EH@%
  45710. to do anything. I thank God I am endued with such qualities that
  45711. if I were turned out of the Realm in my petticoat I were able
  45712. to live in any place in Christome.%@NL@%
  45713. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45714.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  45715. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45716. %@NL@%
  45717. %@NL@%
  45718. %@2@%There is not a single crowned head in Europe whose talents%@EH@%
  45719. or merit would entitle him to be elected a vestryman by the people
  45720. of any parish in America.%@NL@%
  45721. %@CR:ROYALTJefferson @%%@NL@%
  45722.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  45723.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  45724. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45725. %@NL@%
  45726. %@NL@%
  45727. %@2@%I now quit altogether public affairs, and I lay down my burden.%@NL@%
  45728. %@CR:ROYALTEdwardVIII@%%@NL@%
  45729.                                               King Edward VIII (1894-1972)%@NL@%
  45730.                                                          abdication speech%@NL@%
  45731. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45732. %@NL@%
  45733. %@NL@%
  45734.      %@2@%Here lies our Sovereign Lord, the King%@NL@%
  45735.      Whose word no man relies on:%@NL@%
  45736.      He never says a foolish thing%@NL@%
  45737.      Nor ever does a wise one.%@NL@%
  45738. %@CR:ROYALTWilmot    @%%@NL@%
  45739.                                 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680)%@NL@%
  45740.                                                     English courtier, poet%@NL@%
  45741.                             written on the door of Charles II's bedchamber%@NL@%
  45742. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45743. %@NL@%
  45744. %@NL@%
  45745. %@2@%A prince who will not undergo the difficulty of understanding%@EH@%
  45746. must undergo the danger of trusting.%@NL@%
  45747. %@CR:ROYALTSavile    @%%@NL@%
  45748.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  45749.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  45750. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45751. %@NL@%
  45752. %@NL@%
  45753. %@2@%Put not your trust in princes.%@NL@%
  45754. %@CR:ROYALTBiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  45755.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  45756. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45757. %@NL@%
  45758. %@NL@%
  45759. %@2@%All my possessions for a moment of time.%@NL@%
  45760. %@CR:ROYALTQueenEliza@%%@NL@%
  45761.                                              Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603)%@NL@%
  45762.                                                                 last words%@NL@%
  45763. %@AS@%                                                                   Royalty%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45764. %@NL@%
  45765. %@NL@%
  45766. %@NL@%
  45767. %@1@%%@AS@%The Russians%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45768. %@CR:THERUSSIANS     @%%@NL@%
  45769. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Russians@%%@NL@%
  45770.      The Right: %@AB@%Vidal%@AE@%%@BO:          22f49b@%%@NL@%
  45771.      %@AB@%The USSR%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29e401@%%@NL@%
  45772. %@NL@%
  45773. %@2@%They came to the court balls dropping pearls and vermin.%@NL@%
  45774. %@CR:THERUSMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  45775.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  45776.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  45777. %@AS@%                                                              The Russians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45778. %@NL@%
  45779. %@NL@%
  45780. %@2@%Let it be clearly udnerstood that the Russian is a delightful%@EH@%
  45781. person till he tucks in his shirt.%@NL@%
  45782. %@CR:THERUSKipling   @%%@NL@%
  45783.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  45784.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  45785. %@AS@%                                                              The Russians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45786. %@NL@%
  45787. %@NL@%
  45788. %@2@%I don't know a good Russian from a bad Russian. I can tell%@EH@%
  45789. a good Frenchman from a bad Frenchman. I can tell a good Italian
  45790. from a bad Italian. I know a good Greek when I see one. But I
  45791. don't understand the Russians.%@NL@%
  45792. %@CR:THERUSRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  45793.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  45794.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  45795. %@AS@%                                                              The Russians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45796. %@NL@%
  45797. %@NL@%
  45798. %@2@%It's easier for a Russian to become an atheist than for anyone%@EH@%
  45799. else in the world.%@NL@%
  45800. %@CR:THERUSDostoievsk@%%@NL@%
  45801.                                             Feodor Dostoievski (1821-1881)%@NL@%
  45802.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  45803. %@AS@%                                                              The Russians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45804. %@NL@%
  45805. %@NL@%
  45806. %@NL@%
  45807. %@1@%%@AS@%Sacrifice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45808. %@CR:SACRIFICE       @%%@NL@%
  45809. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sacrifice@%%@NL@%
  45810.      Capitalism: %@AB@%Lenin%@AE@%%@BO:           5179a@%%@NL@%
  45811.      Manners: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          19101f@%%@NL@%
  45812.      Self-denial: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          2467bd@%%@NL@%
  45813.      Women: %@AB@%Maugham%@AE@%%@BO:          2bdaf2@%%@NL@%
  45814. %@NL@%
  45815. %@2@%The whole point of a sacrifice is that you give up something%@EH@%
  45816. you never really wanted in the first place. People are doing it
  45817. around you all the time. They give up their careers, say - or
  45818. their beliefs - or sex.%@NL@%
  45819. %@CR:SACRIFOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  45820.                                                  Jimmy, %@AI@%Look Back in Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45821.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  45822.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  45823. %@AS@%                                                                 Sacrifice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45824. %@NL@%
  45825. %@NL@%
  45826. %@2@%The two things that worthless people sacrifice everything for%@EH@%
  45827. are happiness and freedom, and their punishment is that they get
  45828. both only to find that they have no capacity for the happiness
  45829. and no use for the freedom.%@NL@%
  45830. %@CR:SACRIFShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45831.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45832.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45833. %@AS@%                                                                 Sacrifice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45834. %@NL@%
  45835. %@NL@%
  45836. %@2@%Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his friends%@EH@%
  45837. for his life.%@NL@%
  45838. %@CR:SACRIFThorpe    @%%@NL@%
  45839.                                                    Jeremy Thorpe (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  45840.                                                 British Liberal politician%@NL@%
  45841.      following a Cabinet reorganization by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan%@NL@%
  45842. %@AS@%                                                                 Sacrifice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45843. %@NL@%
  45844. %@NL@%
  45845. %@2@%Sacrifice is a form of bargaining.%@NL@%
  45846. %@CR:SACRIFJackson3  @%%@NL@%
  45847.                                               Holbrook Jackson (1874-1948)%@NL@%
  45848.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  45849. %@AS@%                                                                 Sacrifice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45850. %@NL@%
  45851. %@NL@%
  45852.      %@2@%Too long a sacrifice%@NL@%
  45853.      Can make a stone of the heart.%@NL@%
  45854. %@CR:SACRIFYeats     @%%@NL@%
  45855.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  45856.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  45857. %@AS@%                                                                 Sacrifice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45858. %@NL@%
  45859. %@NL@%
  45860. %@NL@%
  45861. %@1@%%@AS@%Sainthood%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45862. %@CR:SAINTHOOD       @%%@NL@%
  45863. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sainthood@%%@NL@%
  45864.      The Devil: %@AB@%Cowper%@AE@%%@BO:           a883a@%%@NL@%
  45865.      Fame: %@AB@%Geldof%@AE@%%@BO:           e25b0@%%@NL@%
  45866.      Martyrdom: %@AB@%Bible, Psalms%@AE@%%@BO:          19b4e3@%; %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          19b603@%%@NL@%
  45867.      Persecution: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:          1d5d4f@%%@NL@%
  45868. %@NL@%
  45869. %@2@%Saint. A dead sinner revised and edited.%@NL@%
  45870. %@CR:SAINTHBierce    @%%@NL@%
  45871.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  45872.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  45873. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45874. %@NL@%
  45875. %@NL@%
  45876. %@2@%The only difference between the saint and the sinner is that%@EH@%
  45877. every saint has a past and every sinner has a future.%@NL@%
  45878. %@CR:SAINTHWilde     @%%@NL@%
  45879.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  45880.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  45881. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45882. %@NL@%
  45883. %@NL@%
  45884. %@2@%The fifty to eighty years required to see a candidate through%@EH@%
  45885. to sainthood can exhaust the time and money of the sponsors.%@NL@%
  45886. %@CR:SAINTHSuenens   @%%@NL@%
  45887.                                     Cardinal Leon-Joseph Suenens (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  45888.                                                       Belgian ecclesiastic%@NL@%
  45889. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45890. %@NL@%
  45891. %@NL@%
  45892. %@2@%Being a saint, which I'm not, is a pain, to be honest.%@NL@%
  45893. %@CR:SAINTHGeldof    @%%@NL@%
  45894.                                                       Bob Geldof (b. 1954)%@NL@%
  45895.                                                        Irish rock musician%@NL@%
  45896. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45897. %@NL@%
  45898. %@NL@%
  45899. %@2@%Saints should always be judged guilty until they are proved%@EH@%
  45900. innocent.%@NL@%
  45901. %@CR:SAINTHOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  45902.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  45903.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  45904. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45905. %@NL@%
  45906. %@NL@%
  45907. %@2@%I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have%@EH@%
  45908. kept the faith.%@NL@%
  45909. %@CR:SAINTHSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  45910.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  45911.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  45912. %@AS@%                                                                 Sainthood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45913. %@NL@%
  45914. %@NL@%
  45915. %@NL@%
  45916. %@1@%%@AS@%Salesmen%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45917. %@CR:SALESMEN        @%%@NL@%
  45918. %@2@%%@QR:Salesmen@%For a salesman there is no rock bottom to the life. He don't%@EH@%
  45919. put a bolt to a nut, he don't tell you the law or give you medicine.
  45920. He's a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a
  45921. shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back - that's an
  45922. earthquake. And then you get yourself a couple of spots on your
  45923. hat, and you're finished . . .  A salesman is got to dream, boy.
  45924. It comes with the territory.%@NL@%
  45925. %@CR:SALESMMiller1   @%%@NL@%
  45926.                                                    Arthur Miller (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  45927.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  45928. %@AS@%                                                                  Salesmen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45929. %@NL@%
  45930. %@NL@%
  45931. %@2@%Nothing is as irritating as the fellow that chats pleasantly%@EH@%
  45932. while he's overcharging you.%@NL@%
  45933. %@CR:SALESMHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  45934.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  45935.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  45936. %@AS@%                                                                  Salesmen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45937. %@NL@%
  45938. %@NL@%
  45939.      %@2@%Bold knaves thrive without one grain of sense,%@NL@%
  45940.      But good men starve for want of impudence.%@NL@%
  45941. %@CR:SALESMDryden    @%%@NL@%
  45942.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  45943.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  45944. %@AS@%                                                                  Salesmen%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45945. %@NL@%
  45946. %@NL@%
  45947. %@NL@%
  45948. %@1@%%@AS@%Salvation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45949. %@CR:SALVATION       @%%@NL@%
  45950. %@2@%See:%@QR:Salvation@%%@NL@%
  45951.      Self-defense: %@AB@%Savile%@AE@%%@BO:          245cf0@%%@NL@%
  45952. %@NL@%
  45953. %@2@%The salvation of the world depends on the men who will not%@EH@%
  45954. take evil good-humouredly, and whose laughter destroys the fool
  45955. instead of encouraging him.%@NL@%
  45956. %@CR:SALVATShaw      @%%@NL@%
  45957.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  45958.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  45959. %@AS@%                                                                 Salvation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45960. %@NL@%
  45961. %@NL@%
  45962. %@2@%No one can be redeemed by another. No God and no saint is able%@EH@%
  45963. to shield a man from the consequence of his evil doings. Every
  45964. one of us must become his own redeemer.%@NL@%
  45965. %@CR:SALVATSubhadraBh@%%@NL@%
  45966.                                              Subhadra Bhikshu (b. d. 1917)%@NL@%
  45967.                                     author of %@AB@%The Buddhist Way%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45968. %@AS@%                                                                 Salvation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45969. %@NL@%
  45970. %@NL@%
  45971. %@2@%He who created us without our help will not save us without%@EH@%
  45972. our consent.%@NL@%
  45973. %@CR:SALVATSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  45974.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  45975.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  45976. %@AS@%                                                                 Salvation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45977. %@NL@%
  45978. %@NL@%
  45979. %@2@%Human salvation lies in the hands of the creatively maladjusted.%@NL@%
  45980. %@CR:SALVATKing3     @%%@NL@%
  45981.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  45982.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  45983. %@AS@%                                                                 Salvation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45984. %@NL@%
  45985. %@NL@%
  45986. %@NL@%
  45987. %@1@%%@AS@%Satire%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  45988. %@CR:SATIRE          @%%@NL@%
  45989. %@2@%%@QR:Satire@%Ridicule is the best test of truth.%@NL@%
  45990. %@CR:SATIREChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  45991.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  45992.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  45993. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  45994. %@NL@%
  45995. %@NL@%
  45996. %@2@%Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover%@EH@%
  45997. everybody's face but their own.%@NL@%
  45998. %@CR:SATIRESwift     @%%@NL@%
  45999.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  46000.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  46001. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46002. %@NL@%
  46003. %@NL@%
  46004. %@2@%We audiences have tasted our own blood and liked it.%@NL@%
  46005. %@CR:SATIREBrien     @%%@NL@%
  46006.                                                       Alan Brien (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  46007.                                               British novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  46008. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46009. %@NL@%
  46010. %@NL@%
  46011. %@2@%It is difficult not to write satire.%@NL@%
  46012. %@CR:SATIREJuvenal   @%%@NL@%
  46013.                                                        Juvenal (c. 40-130)%@NL@%
  46014.                                                         Roman satiric poet%@NL@%
  46015. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46016. %@NL@%
  46017. %@NL@%
  46018. %@2@%Strange! that a Man who has wit enough to write a Satire should%@EH@%
  46019. have folly enough to publish it.%@NL@%
  46020. %@CR:SATIREFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  46021.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  46022.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  46023. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46024. %@NL@%
  46025. %@NL@%
  46026. %@2@%"My Lord - I must live" - once said a wretched author%@EH@%
  46027. of satire to a minister who had reproached him for following so
  46028. degrading a profession. "I fail to see why," replied the Great
  46029. Man coldly.%@NL@%
  46030. %@CR:SATIRERousseau  @%%@NL@%
  46031.                                          Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)%@NL@%
  46032.                               Swiss-French philosopher, political theorist%@NL@%
  46033. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46034. %@NL@%
  46035. %@NL@%
  46036. %@2@%The true end of satire is the amendment of vices by correction.%@NL@%
  46037. %@CR:SATIREDryden    @%%@NL@%
  46038.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  46039.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  46040. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46041. %@NL@%
  46042. %@NL@%
  46043. %@2@%Satire, though it may exaggerate the vice it lashes, is not%@EH@%
  46044. justified in creating it in order that it may be lashed.%@NL@%
  46045. %@CR:SATIRETrollope  @%%@NL@%
  46046.                                               Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)%@NL@%
  46047.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  46048. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46049. %@NL@%
  46050. %@NL@%
  46051. %@2@%Satire is the last flicker of originality in a passing epoch%@EH@%
  46052. as it faces the onrush of staleness and boredom. Freshness has
  46053. gone; bitterness remains.%@NL@%
  46054. %@CR:SATIREWhitehead @%%@NL@%
  46055.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  46056.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  46057. %@AS@%                                                                    Satire%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46058. %@NL@%
  46059. %@NL@%
  46060. %@NL@%
  46061. %@1@%%@AS@%Scandal%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46062. %@CR:SCANDAL         @%%@NL@%
  46063. %@2@%See:%@QR:Scandal@%%@NL@%
  46064.      %@AB@%Gossip%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1131b5@%%@NL@%
  46065.      Tea: %@AB@%Fielding%@AE@%%@BO:          27effd@%%@NL@%
  46066. %@NL@%
  46067. %@2@%An event has happened, upon which it is difficult to speak,%@EH@%
  46068. and impossible to be silent.%@NL@%
  46069. %@CR:SCANDABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  46070.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  46071.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  46072. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46073. %@NL@%
  46074. %@NL@%
  46075. %@2@%A stink is still worse for the stirring.%@NL@%
  46076. %@CR:SCANDACervantes @%%@NL@%
  46077.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  46078.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  46079. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46080. %@NL@%
  46081. %@NL@%
  46082. %@2@%Many of the scandals that I have seen have begun from glossing%@EH@%
  46083. over unpleasant facts.%@NL@%
  46084. %@CR:SCANDAChandos   @%%@NL@%
  46085.                                                   Lord Chandos (1893-1972)%@NL@%
  46086.                                          British industrialist, politician%@NL@%
  46087. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46088. %@NL@%
  46089. %@NL@%
  46090. %@2@%History is made in the class struggle and not in bed.%@NL@%
  46091. %@CR:SCANDAMitchell2 @%%@NL@%
  46092.                                                              Alex Mitchell%@NL@%
  46093.                                               British left-wing journalist%@NL@%
  46094.             following deposition of leader of Workers' Revolutionary Party%@NL@%
  46095.                                                      and sex scandal, 1985%@NL@%
  46096. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46097. %@NL@%
  46098. %@NL@%
  46099.      %@2@%%@AI@%Le scandale du monde est ce qui fait l'offense,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46100.      %@AI@%Et ce n'est pas pecher que pecher en silence.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46101. %@NL@%
  46102. %@2@%It is the public scandal that offends; to sin in secret is
  46103. no sin at all.%@NL@%
  46104. %@CR:SCANDAMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  46105.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  46106.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  46107. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46108. %@NL@%
  46109. %@NL@%
  46110. %@2@%Scandal is merely the compassionate allowance which the gay%@EH@%
  46111. make to the humdrum. Think how many blameless lives are brightened
  46112. by the blazing indiscretions of other people.%@NL@%
  46113. %@CR:SCANDAMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  46114.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  46115.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  46116. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46117. %@NL@%
  46118. %@NL@%
  46119. %@2@%The malice of a good thing is the barb that makes it stick.%@NL@%
  46120. %@CR:SCANDASheridan  @%%@NL@%
  46121.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  46122.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  46123. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46124. %@NL@%
  46125. %@NL@%
  46126. %@2@%Gossip is charming! History is merely gossip. But scandal is%@EH@%
  46127. gossip made tedious by morality.%@NL@%
  46128. %@CR:SCANDAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  46129.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  46130.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  46131. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46132. %@NL@%
  46133. %@NL@%
  46134. %@2@%Nobody looks at the sun except at an eclipse.%@NL@%
  46135. %@CR:SCANDASeneca    @%%@NL@%
  46136.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  46137.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  46138. %@AS@%                                                                   Scandal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46139. %@NL@%
  46140. %@NL@%
  46141. %@NL@%
  46142. %@1@%%@AS@%Scholarship%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46143. %@CR:SCHOLARSHIP     @%%@NL@%
  46144. %@2@%See:%@QR:Scholarship@%%@NL@%
  46145.      %@AB@%Learning%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          170f3e@%%@NL@%
  46146. %@NL@%
  46147. %@2@%The ink of the scholar is more sacred than the blood of the%@EH@%
  46148. martyr.%@NL@%
  46149. %@CR:SCHOLAMuhammad  @%%@NL@%
  46150.                                                      Muhammad (c. 570-632)%@NL@%
  46151.                                                           founder of Islam%@NL@%
  46152. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46153. %@NL@%
  46154. %@NL@%
  46155. %@2@%Opposing one species of superstition to another, set them a%@EH@%
  46156. quarrelling; while we ourselves, during their fury and contention,
  46157. happily make our escape into the calm, though obscure, regions
  46158. of philosophy.%@NL@%
  46159. %@CR:SCHOLAHume      @%%@NL@%
  46160.                                                     David Hume (1711-1776)%@NL@%
  46161.                                            Scottish philosopher, historian%@NL@%
  46162. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46163. %@NL@%
  46164. %@NL@%
  46165. %@2@%The world's great men have not commonly been great scholars,%@EH@%
  46166. nor great scholars great men.%@NL@%
  46167. %@CR:SCHOLAHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  46168.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  46169.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  46170. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46171. %@NL@%
  46172. %@NL@%
  46173. %@2@%He was a rake among scholars, and a scholar among rakes.%@NL@%
  46174. %@CR:SCHOLAMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  46175.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  46176.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  46177.                                                      of Sir Richard Steele%@NL@%
  46178. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46179. %@NL@%
  46180. %@NL@%
  46181. %@2@%His studies were pursued but never effectually overtaken.%@NL@%
  46182. %@CR:SCHOLAWells     @%%@NL@%
  46183.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  46184.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  46185. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46186. %@NL@%
  46187. %@NL@%
  46188. %@2@%I cannot forgive a scholar his homeless despondency.%@NL@%
  46189. %@CR:SCHOLAEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  46190.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  46191.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  46192. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46193. %@NL@%
  46194. %@NL@%
  46195.      %@2@%There mark what ills the scholar's life assail:%@NL@%
  46196.      Toil, envy, want, the patron, and the gaol.%@NL@%
  46197. %@CR:SCHOLAJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  46198.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  46199.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  46200. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46201. %@NL@%
  46202. %@NL@%
  46203. %@2@%Of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness%@EH@%
  46204. of the flesh.%@NL@%
  46205. %@CR:SCHOLABibleEccle@%%@NL@%
  46206.                                                        Bible, Ecclesiastes%@NL@%
  46207. %@AS@%                                                               Scholarship%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46208. %@NL@%
  46209. %@NL@%
  46210. %@NL@%
  46211. %@1@%%@AS@%School%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46212. %@CR:SCHOOL          @%%@NL@%
  46213. %@2@%See:%@QR:School@%%@NL@%
  46214.      %@AB@%Education%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c0bd6@%%@NL@%
  46215.      Power: %@AB@%Walpole%@AE@%%@BO:          1f91fa@%%@NL@%
  46216.      %@AB@%Private Education%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2046ea@%%@NL@%
  46217.      %@AB@%Students%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          26f625@%%@NL@%
  46218.      %@AB@%Teachers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          27f2ab@%%@NL@%
  46219.      %@AB@%University%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29ce12@%%@NL@%
  46220. %@NL@%
  46221. %@2@%The founding fathers in their wisdom decided that children%@EH@%
  46222. were an unnatural strain on parents. So they provided jails called
  46223. schools, equipped with tortures called education. School is where
  46224. you go between when your parents can't take you and industry can't
  46225. take you.%@NL@%
  46226. %@CR:SCHOOLUpdike    @%%@NL@%
  46227.                                                      John Updike (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  46228.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  46229. %@AS@%                                                                    School%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46230. %@NL@%
  46231. %@NL@%
  46232. %@2@%Thou hast most traitorously corrupted the youth of the realm%@EH@%
  46233. in erecting a grammar school.%@NL@%
  46234. %@CR:SCHOOLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  46235.                                            Jack Cade, %@AI@%King Henry VI part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46236.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  46237.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  46238. %@AS@%                                                                    School%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46239. %@NL@%
  46240. %@NL@%
  46241. %@2@%What are schools for if not indoctrination against Communism?%@NL@%
  46242. %@CR:SCHOOLNixon     @%%@NL@%
  46243.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  46244.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  46245. %@AS@%                                                                    School%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46246. %@NL@%
  46247. %@NL@%
  46248. %@2@%I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.%@NL@%
  46249. %@CR:SCHOOLTwain     @%%@NL@%
  46250.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  46251.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  46252. %@AS@%                                                                    School%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46253. %@NL@%
  46254. %@NL@%
  46255. %@NL@%
  46256. %@1@%%@AS@%Science%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46257. %@CR:SCIENCE         @%%@NL@%
  46258. %@2@%See:%@QR:Science@%%@NL@%
  46259.      The Cosmos: %@AB@%Lamb%@AE@%%@BO:           85b75@%%@NL@%
  46260.      Knowledge: %@AB@%Sockman%@AE@%%@BO:          168b58@%%@NL@%
  46261.      Religion: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          222be6@%%@NL@%
  46262.      %@AB@%Technology%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2821bb@%%@NL@%
  46263. %@NL@%
  46264.      %@2@%We vivisect the nightingale%@NL@%
  46265.      To probe the secret of his note.%@NL@%
  46266. %@CR:SCIENCAldrich   @%%@NL@%
  46267.                                          Thomas Bailey Aldrich (1836-1907)%@NL@%
  46268.                                                    American writer, editor%@NL@%
  46269. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46270. %@NL@%
  46271. %@NL@%
  46272. %@2@%The universe is full of magical things, patiently waiting for%@EH@%
  46273. our wits to grow sharper.%@NL@%
  46274. %@CR:SCIENCPhilpotts @%%@NL@%
  46275.                                                 Eden Philpotts (1862-1960)%@NL@%
  46276.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46277. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46278. %@NL@%
  46279. %@NL@%
  46280. %@2@%I seem to have been only a boy playing on the seashore, and%@EH@%
  46281. diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a
  46282. prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay
  46283. all undiscovered before me.%@NL@%
  46284. %@CR:SCIENCNewton    @%%@NL@%
  46285.                                               Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)%@NL@%
  46286.                                           English mathematician, physicist%@NL@%
  46287. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46288. %@NL@%
  46289. %@NL@%
  46290.      %@2@%The marble index of a mind for ever%@NL@%
  46291.      Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.%@NL@%
  46292. %@CR:SCIENCWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  46293.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  46294.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46295.                                                      of a statue of Newton%@NL@%
  46296. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46297. %@NL@%
  46298. %@NL@%
  46299.      %@2@%Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night;%@NL@%
  46300.      God said "Let Newton be!" and all was light.%@NL@%
  46301. %@CR:SCIENCPope      @%%@NL@%
  46302.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  46303.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46304. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46305. %@NL@%
  46306. %@NL@%
  46307.      %@2@%It did not last: the Devil, howling "Ho%@NL@%
  46308.      Let Einstein be!" restored the status quo.%@NL@%
  46309. %@CR:SCIENCSquire    @%%@NL@%
  46310.                                                    John Squire (1884-1958)%@NL@%
  46311.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46312. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46313. %@NL@%
  46314. %@NL@%
  46315. %@2@%I am actually not at all a man of science, not an observer,%@EH@%
  46316. not an experimenter, not a thinker. I am by temperament nothing
  46317. but a conquistador - an adventurer.%@NL@%
  46318. %@CR:SCIENCFreud     @%%@NL@%
  46319.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  46320.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  46321. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46322. %@NL@%
  46323. %@NL@%
  46324. %@2@%In everything that relates to science, I am a whole Encyclopaedia%@EH@%
  46325. behind the rest of the world.%@NL@%
  46326. %@CR:SCIENCLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  46327.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  46328.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  46329. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46330. %@NL@%
  46331. %@NL@%
  46332. %@2@%When I am in the company of scientists I feel like a curate%@EH@%
  46333. who has strayed into a drawing room full of dukes.%@NL@%
  46334. %@CR:SCIENCAuden     @%%@NL@%
  46335.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  46336.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  46337. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46338. %@NL@%
  46339. %@NL@%
  46340. %@2@%We are much beholden to Machiavel and others, that write what%@EH@%
  46341. men do, and not what they ought to do.%@NL@%
  46342. %@CR:SCIENCBacon     @%%@NL@%
  46343.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  46344.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  46345. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46346. %@NL@%
  46347. %@NL@%
  46348. %@2@%Science commits suicide when it adopts a creed.%@NL@%
  46349. %@CR:SCIENCHuxley2   @%%@NL@%
  46350.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  46351.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  46352. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46353. %@NL@%
  46354. %@NL@%
  46355. %@2@%Science knows only one commandment: contribute to science.%@NL@%
  46356. %@CR:SCIENCBrecht    @%%@NL@%
  46357.                                                 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)%@NL@%
  46358.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  46359. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46360. %@NL@%
  46361. %@NL@%
  46362. %@2@%Creativity in science could be described as the act of putting%@EH@%
  46363. two and two together to make five.%@NL@%
  46364. %@CR:SCIENCKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  46365.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  46366.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46367. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46368. %@NL@%
  46369. %@NL@%
  46370. %@2@%We have the idea that if a thing can be done, then it ought%@EH@%
  46371. to be done. That if something has been invented, then we must use
  46372. it. We don't stop to think of the possible consequences of its
  46373. use.%@NL@%
  46374. %@CR:SCIENCPriestley @%%@NL@%
  46375.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  46376.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  46377. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46378. %@NL@%
  46379. %@NL@%
  46380. %@2@%In the arts of life man invents nothing; but in the arts of%@EH@%
  46381. death he outdoes Nature herself, and produces by chemistry and
  46382. machinery all the slaughter of plague, pestilence, and famine.%@NL@%
  46383. %@CR:SCIENCShaw      @%%@NL@%
  46384.                                                The Devil, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46385.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  46386.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  46387. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46388. %@NL@%
  46389. %@NL@%
  46390. %@2@%There are no such things as applied sciences, only applications%@EH@%
  46391. of science.%@NL@%
  46392. %@CR:SCIENCPasteur   @%%@NL@%
  46393.                                                  Louis Pasteur (1822-1895)%@NL@%
  46394.                                                             French chemist%@NL@%
  46395. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46396. %@NL@%
  46397. %@NL@%
  46398. %@2@%Science is a collection of successful recipes.%@NL@%
  46399. %@CR:SCIENCValery    @%%@NL@%
  46400.                                                    Paul Valery (1871-1945)%@NL@%
  46401.                                                      French poet, essayist%@NL@%
  46402. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46403. %@NL@%
  46404. %@NL@%
  46405. %@2@%The true worth of a researcher lies in pursuing what he did%@EH@%
  46406. not seek in his experiment as well as what he sought.%@NL@%
  46407. %@CR:SCIENCBernard1  @%%@NL@%
  46408.                                                 Claude Bernard (1813-1878)%@NL@%
  46409.                                                        French physiologist%@NL@%
  46410. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46411. %@NL@%
  46412. %@NL@%
  46413. %@2@%Aristotle could have avoided the mistake of thinking that women%@EH@%
  46414. have fewer teeth than men by the simple device of asking Mrs Aristotle
  46415. to open her mouth.%@NL@%
  46416. %@CR:SCIENCRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  46417.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  46418.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  46419. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46420. %@NL@%
  46421. %@NL@%
  46422. %@2@%The progress of science is strewn, like an ancient desert trail,%@EH@%
  46423. with the bleached skeleton of discarded theories which once seemed
  46424. to possess eternal life.%@NL@%
  46425. %@CR:SCIENCKoestler  @%%@NL@%
  46426.                                                Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)%@NL@%
  46427.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46428. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46429. %@NL@%
  46430. %@NL@%
  46431. %@2@%The great tragedy of science - the slaying of a beautiful%@EH@%
  46432. theory by an ugly fact.%@NL@%
  46433. %@CR:SCIENCHuxley2   @%%@NL@%
  46434.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  46435.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  46436. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46437. %@NL@%
  46438. %@NL@%
  46439. %@2@%All science is dominated by the idea of approximation.%@NL@%
  46440. %@CR:SCIENCRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  46441.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  46442.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  46443. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46444. %@NL@%
  46445. %@NL@%
  46446. %@2@%Science is organised knowledge.%@NL@%
  46447. %@CR:SCIENCSpencer   @%%@NL@%
  46448.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  46449.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  46450. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46451. %@NL@%
  46452. %@NL@%
  46453. %@2@%The world, which took but six days to make, is like to take%@EH@%
  46454. us six thousand years to make out.%@NL@%
  46455. %@CR:SCIENCBrowne1   @%%@NL@%
  46456.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  46457.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  46458. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46459. %@NL@%
  46460. %@NL@%
  46461. %@2@%The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it%@EH@%
  46462. is comprehensible.%@NL@%
  46463. %@CR:SCIENCEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  46464.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  46465.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  46466. %@AS@%                                                                   Science%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46467. %@NL@%
  46468. %@NL@%
  46469. %@NL@%
  46470. %@1@%%@AS@%Scotland%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46471. %@CR:SCOTLAND        @%%@NL@%
  46472. %@2@%See:%@QR:Scotland@%%@NL@%
  46473.      Argument: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:           26ba6@%%@NL@%
  46474. %@NL@%
  46475. %@2@%That garret of the earth - that knuckle-end of England - that%@EH@%
  46476. land of Calvin, oat-cakes, and sulphur.%@NL@%
  46477. %@CR:SCOTLASmith8    @%%@NL@%
  46478.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  46479.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  46480. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46481. %@NL@%
  46482. %@NL@%
  46483. %@2@%A land of meanness, sophistry and lust.%@NL@%
  46484. %@CR:SCOTLAByron2    @%%@NL@%
  46485.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  46486.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46487. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46488. %@NL@%
  46489. %@NL@%
  46490. %@2@%The beauty of Scotland is that it is big enough to be important%@EH@%
  46491. in the UK and small enough for everyone to know everyone else.%@NL@%
  46492. %@CR:SCOTLAYoung4    @%%@NL@%
  46493.                                                   George Younger (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  46494.                                           Scottish Conservative politician%@NL@%
  46495. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46496. %@NL@%
  46497. %@NL@%
  46498. %@2@%If the Scotch knew enough to go in when it rained, they would%@EH@%
  46499. never get any outdoor exercise.%@NL@%
  46500. %@CR:SCOTLAFord3     @%%@NL@%
  46501.                                                    Simeon Ford (1855-1933)%@NL@%
  46502.                                                          American hotelier%@NL@%
  46503. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46504. %@NL@%
  46505. %@NL@%
  46506. %@2@%The noblest prospect that a Scotchman ever sees is the high%@EH@%
  46507. road, that leads him to England.%@NL@%
  46508. %@CR:SCOTLAJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  46509.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  46510.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  46511. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46512. %@NL@%
  46513. %@NL@%
  46514. %@2@%In all my travels I never met with any one Scotchman but what%@EH@%
  46515. was a man of sense. I believe everybody of that country that has
  46516. any, leaves it as fast as they can.%@NL@%
  46517. %@CR:SCOTLALockier   @%%@NL@%
  46518.                                            Dr. Francis Lockier (1667-1740)%@NL@%
  46519.                                            English prelate, man of letters%@NL@%
  46520. %@AS@%                                                                  Scotland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46521. %@NL@%
  46522. %@NL@%
  46523. %@NL@%
  46524. %@1@%%@AS@%The Scots%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46525. %@CR:THESCOTS        @%%@NL@%
  46526. %@2@%%@QR:The Scots@%There are few more impressive sights in the world than a Scotsman%@EH@%
  46527. on the make.%@NL@%
  46528. %@CR:THESCOBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  46529.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  46530.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  46531. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46532. %@NL@%
  46533. %@NL@%
  46534. %@2@%I have been trying all my life to like Scotchmen, and am obliged%@EH@%
  46535. to desist from the experiment in despair.%@NL@%
  46536. %@CR:THESCOLamb1     @%%@NL@%
  46537.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  46538.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  46539. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46540. %@NL@%
  46541. %@NL@%
  46542. %@2@%Much  . . .  may be made of a Scotchman, if he be %@AI@%caught%@AE@% young.%@NL@%
  46543. %@CR:THESCOJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  46544.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  46545.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  46546. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46547. %@NL@%
  46548. %@NL@%
  46549. %@2@%As Dr Johnson never said, is there any Scotsman without charm?%@NL@%
  46550. %@CR:THESCOBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  46551.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  46552.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  46553. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46554. %@NL@%
  46555. %@NL@%
  46556. %@2@%It requires a surgical operation to get a joke well into a%@EH@%
  46557. Scotch understanding. The only idea of wit, or rather that inferior
  46558. variety of the electric talent which prevails occasionally in
  46559. the North, and which, under the name of "Wut," is so infinitely
  46560. distressing to people of good taste, is laughing immoderately at
  46561. stated intervals.%@NL@%
  46562. %@CR:THESCOSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  46563.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  46564.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  46565. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46566. %@NL@%
  46567. %@NL@%
  46568. %@2@%Their learning is like bread in a besieged town: every man%@EH@%
  46569. gets a little, but no man gets a full meal.%@NL@%
  46570. %@CR:THESCOJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  46571.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  46572.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  46573. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46574. %@NL@%
  46575. %@NL@%
  46576. %@2@%I've sometimes thought that the difference between the Scotch%@EH@%
  46577. and the English is that the Scotch are hard in all other respects
  46578. but soft with women, and the English are hard with women and soft
  46579. in all other respects.%@NL@%
  46580. %@CR:THESCOBarrie1   @%%@NL@%
  46581.                                                   J. M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  46582.                                                        Scottish playwright%@NL@%
  46583. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46584. %@NL@%
  46585. %@NL@%
  46586. %@2@%Minds like ours, my dear James, must always be above national%@EH@%
  46587. prejudices, and in all companies it gives me true pleasure to declare
  46588. that, as a people, the English are very little indeed inferior
  46589. to the Scotch.%@NL@%
  46590. %@CR:THESCOWilson4   @%%@NL@%
  46591.                                                    John Wilson (1785-1854)%@NL@%
  46592.                                                       Scottish philosopher%@NL@%
  46593. %@AS@%                                                                 The Scots%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46594. %@NL@%
  46595. %@NL@%
  46596. %@NL@%
  46597. %@1@%%@AS@%The Sea%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46598. %@CR:THESEA          @%%@NL@%
  46599. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Sea@%%@NL@%
  46600.      Piety: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          1dbdfc@%%@NL@%
  46601. %@NL@%
  46602. %@2@%They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in%@EH@%
  46603. great waters, these see the works of the Lord and his wonders in
  46604. the deep.%@NL@%
  46605. %@CR:THESEABiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  46606.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  46607. %@AS@%                                                                   The Sea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46608. %@NL@%
  46609. %@NL@%
  46610. %@2@%To me, the sea is like a person - like a child that I've%@EH@%
  46611. known a long time. It sounds crazy, I know, but when I swim in
  46612. the sea I talk to it. I never feel alone when I'm out there.%@NL@%
  46613. %@CR:THESEAEderle    @%%@NL@%
  46614.                                                  Gertrude Ederle (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  46615.                                                           American swimmer%@NL@%
  46616.        30 years after becoming the first woman to swim the English Channel%@NL@%
  46617. %@AS@%                                                                   The Sea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46618. %@NL@%
  46619. %@NL@%
  46620.      %@2@%for whatever we lose (like a you or a me)%@NL@%
  46621.      it's always ourselves we find in the sea.%@NL@%
  46622. %@CR:THESEAcummings  @%%@NL@%
  46623.                                                 e. e. cummings (1894-1962)%@NL@%
  46624.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  46625. %@AS@%                                                                   The Sea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46626. %@NL@%
  46627. %@NL@%
  46628. %@2@%The sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been%@EH@%
  46629. the accomplice of human restlessness.%@NL@%
  46630. %@CR:THESEAConrad    @%%@NL@%
  46631.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  46632.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  46633. %@AS@%                                                                   The Sea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46634. %@NL@%
  46635. %@NL@%
  46636. %@2@%The snotgreen sea. The scrotumtightening sea.%@NL@%
  46637. %@CR:THESEAJoyce     @%%@NL@%
  46638.                                                    James Joyce (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  46639.                                                             Irish novelist%@NL@%
  46640. %@AS@%                                                                   The Sea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46641. %@NL@%
  46642. %@NL@%
  46643. %@NL@%
  46644. %@1@%%@AS@%Seasons%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46645. %@CR:SEASONS         @%%@NL@%
  46646. %@2@%%@QR:Seasons@%January grey is here,%@NL@%
  46647.      Like a sexton by her grave;%@NL@%
  46648.      February bears the bier,%@NL@%
  46649.      March with grief doth howl and rave,%@NL@%
  46650.      And April weeps - but, O ye hours!%@NL@%
  46651.      Follow with May's fairest flowers.%@NL@%
  46652. %@CR:SEASONShelley   @%%@NL@%
  46653.                                                         %@AI@%Dirge for the Year%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46654.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  46655.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46656. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46657. %@NL@%
  46658. %@NL@%
  46659.      %@2@%April, April,%@NL@%
  46660.      Laugh thy girlish laughter;%@NL@%
  46661.      Then, the moment after,%@NL@%
  46662.      Weep thy girlish tears.%@NL@%
  46663. %@CR:SEASONWatson    @%%@NL@%
  46664.                                             Sir William Watson (1858-1935)%@NL@%
  46665.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  46666. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46667. %@NL@%
  46668. %@NL@%
  46669. %@2@%Winter lingered so long in the lap of Spring that it occasioned%@EH@%
  46670. a great deal of talk.%@NL@%
  46671. %@CR:SEASONNye       @%%@NL@%
  46672.                                               Bill(E. W.)  Nye (1850-1896)%@NL@%
  46673.                                       American journalist, humorous writer%@NL@%
  46674. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46675. %@NL@%
  46676. %@NL@%
  46677.      %@2@%Like a lovely woman late for her appointment%@NL@%
  46678.      She's suddenly here, taking us unawares,%@NL@%
  46679.      So beautifully annihilating expectation%@NL@%
  46680.      That we applaud her punctual arrival.%@NL@%
  46681. %@CR:SEASONBullett   @%%@NL@%
  46682.                                                 Gerald Bullett (1893-1958)%@NL@%
  46683.                                                       British author, poet%@NL@%
  46684.                                                                  of Spring%@NL@%
  46685. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46686. %@NL@%
  46687. %@NL@%
  46688.      %@2@%Summer set lip to earth's bosom bare%@NL@%
  46689.      And left the flushed print in a poppy there.%@NL@%
  46690. %@CR:SEASONThompson1 @%%@NL@%
  46691.                                               Francis Thompson (1859-1907)%@NL@%
  46692.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46693. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46694. %@NL@%
  46695. %@NL@%
  46696.      %@2@%Autumn wins you best by this, its mute%@NL@%
  46697.      Appeal to sympathy for its decay.%@NL@%
  46698. %@CR:SEASONBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  46699.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  46700.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46701. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46702. %@NL@%
  46703. %@NL@%
  46704.      %@2@%Winter is icummen in,%@NL@%
  46705.      Lhude sing Goddamm.%@NL@%
  46706.      Raineth drop and staineth slop,%@NL@%
  46707.      And how the wind doth ramm!%@NL@%
  46708.      Sing: Goddamm.%@NL@%
  46709. %@CR:SEASONPound     @%%@NL@%
  46710.                                                     Ezra Pound (1885-1972)%@NL@%
  46711.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  46712. %@AS@%                                                                   Seasons%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46713. %@NL@%
  46714. %@NL@%
  46715. %@NL@%
  46716. %@1@%%@AS@%Secrets%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46717. %@CR:SECRETS         @%%@NL@%
  46718. %@2@%See:%@QR:Secrets@%%@NL@%
  46719.      Gossip: %@AB@%Colton%@AE@%%@BO:          114bea@%%@NL@%
  46720.      Lovers: %@AB@%Behn%@AE@%%@BO:          18728d@%%@NL@%
  46721.      Pleasure: %@AB@%Bible, Ecclesiastes%@AE@%%@BO:          1df3f3@%%@NL@%
  46722. %@NL@%
  46723. %@2@%Two things a man cannot hide: that he is drunk, and that he%@EH@%
  46724. is in love.%@NL@%
  46725. %@CR:SECRETAntiphanes@%%@NL@%
  46726.                                             Antiphanes (b. 4th century BC)%@NL@%
  46727.                                                        Athenian playwright%@NL@%
  46728. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46729. %@NL@%
  46730. %@NL@%
  46731. %@2@%Whoever wishes to keep a secret must hide the fact that he%@EH@%
  46732. possesses one.%@NL@%
  46733. %@CR:SECRETGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  46734.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  46735.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  46736. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46737. %@NL@%
  46738. %@NL@%
  46739. %@2@%If you wish to preserve your secret, wrap it up in frankness.%@NL@%
  46740. %@CR:SECRETSmith2    @%%@NL@%
  46741.                                                Alexander Smith (1830-1867)%@NL@%
  46742.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  46743. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46744. %@NL@%
  46745. %@NL@%
  46746. %@2@%How can we expect someone else to keep our secret if we have%@EH@%
  46747. not been able to keep it ourselves?%@NL@%
  46748. %@CR:SECRETLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  46749.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  46750.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  46751. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46752. %@NL@%
  46753. %@NL@%
  46754. %@2@%The vanity of being known to be trusted with a secret is generally%@EH@%
  46755. one of the chief motives to disclose it.%@NL@%
  46756. %@CR:SECRETJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  46757.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  46758.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  46759. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46760. %@NL@%
  46761. %@NL@%
  46762. %@2@%I have the most perfect confidence in your indiscretion.%@NL@%
  46763. %@CR:SECRETSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  46764.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  46765.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  46766. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46767. %@NL@%
  46768. %@NL@%
  46769. %@2@%There are some occasions when a man must tell half his secret,%@EH@%
  46770. in order to conceal the rest.%@NL@%
  46771. %@CR:SECRETChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  46772.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  46773.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  46774. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46775. %@NL@%
  46776. %@NL@%
  46777. %@2@%Everybody knows that corruption thrives in secret places  . . . %@EH@%
  46778. and we believe it a fair presumption that secrecy means impropriety.%@NL@%
  46779. %@CR:SECRETWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  46780.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  46781.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  46782. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46783. %@NL@%
  46784. %@NL@%
  46785. %@2@%Everything secret degenerates . . .  nothing is safe that does%@EH@%
  46786. not show how it can bear discussion and publicity.%@NL@%
  46787. %@CR:SECRETActon     @%%@NL@%
  46788.                                                     Lord Acton (1834-1902)%@NL@%
  46789.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  46790. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46791. %@NL@%
  46792. %@NL@%
  46793. %@2@%Secrecy, being an instrument of conspiracy, ought never to%@EH@%
  46794. be the system of a regular government.%@NL@%
  46795. %@CR:SECRETBentham   @%%@NL@%
  46796.                                                 Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)%@NL@%
  46797.                            English philosopher, political theorist, jurist%@NL@%
  46798. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46799. %@NL@%
  46800. %@NL@%
  46801. %@2@%The great, terrible, important powers of the world, like social%@EH@%
  46802. caste and religious domination, always rest on secrets. A man is
  46803. born on the wrong side of the street and can therefore never enter
  46804. into certain drawing rooms, even though he be in every way superior
  46805. to everyone in those drawing rooms. When you try to find out what
  46806. the difference is between him and the rest, and why he is accursed,
  46807. you find that the reason is a secret. It is a secret that a certain
  46808. kind of straw hat is damnable. Little boys know these things about
  46809. other little boys. The world is written over with mysterious 
  46810. tramp-languages
  46811. and symbols of Masonic hieroglyphics.%@NL@%
  46812. %@CR:SECRETChapman1  @%%@NL@%
  46813.                                                 Arthur Chapman (1873-1935)%@NL@%
  46814.                                                      American poet, author%@NL@%
  46815. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46816. %@NL@%
  46817. %@NL@%
  46818. %@2@%There are no secrets better kept than the secrets that everybody%@EH@%
  46819. guesses.%@NL@%
  46820. %@CR:SECRETShaw      @%%@NL@%
  46821.                                           Crofts, %@AI@%Mrs. Warren's Profession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46822.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  46823.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  46824. %@AS@%                                                                   Secrets%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46825. %@NL@%
  46826. %@NL@%
  46827. %@NL@%
  46828. %@1@%%@AS@%Sects%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46829. %@CR:SECTS           @%%@NL@%
  46830. %@2@%%@QR:Sects@%Fanatics have their dreams, wherewith they weave%@NL@%
  46831.      A paradise for a sect.%@NL@%
  46832. %@CR:SECTS Keats     @%%@NL@%
  46833.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  46834.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46835. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46836. %@NL@%
  46837. %@NL@%
  46838. %@2@%'Tis a strange thing, Sam, that among us people can't agree%@EH@%
  46839. the whole week because they go different ways upon Sundays.%@NL@%
  46840. %@CR:SECTS Farquhar  @%%@NL@%
  46841.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  46842.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  46843. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46844. %@NL@%
  46845. %@NL@%
  46846. %@2@%Most people have some sort of religion. At least they know%@EH@%
  46847. which church they're staying away from.%@NL@%
  46848. %@CR:SECTS Erskine2  @%%@NL@%
  46849.                                                   John Erskine (1879-1951)%@NL@%
  46850.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  46851. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46852. %@NL@%
  46853. %@NL@%
  46854. %@2@%See how these Christians love one another.%@NL@%
  46855. %@CR:SECTS Tertullian@%%@NL@%
  46856.                                                    Tertullian (c. 160-240)%@NL@%
  46857.                                                           Roman theologian%@NL@%
  46858. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46859. %@NL@%
  46860. %@NL@%
  46861. %@2@% It is becoming impossible for those who mix at all with their%@EH@%
  46862. fellow-men to believe that the grace of God is distributed 
  46863. denominationally.%@NL@%
  46864. %@CR:SECTS Inge      @%%@NL@%
  46865.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  46866.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  46867. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46868. %@NL@%
  46869. %@NL@%
  46870.      %@2@%And when religious sects ran mad,%@NL@%
  46871.      He held, in spite of all their learning,%@NL@%
  46872.      That if a man's belief is bad,%@NL@%
  46873.      It will not be improved by burning.%@NL@%
  46874. %@CR:SECTS Praed     @%%@NL@%
  46875.                                       Winthrop Mackworth Praed (1802-1839)%@NL@%
  46876.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  46877. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46878. %@NL@%
  46879. %@NL@%
  46880. %@2@%Every sect is a moral check on its neighbour. Competition is%@EH@%
  46881. as wholesome in religion as in commerce.%@NL@%
  46882. %@CR:SECTS Landor    @%%@NL@%
  46883.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  46884.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  46885. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46886. %@NL@%
  46887. %@NL@%
  46888. %@2@%All sects seem to me to be right in what they assert, and wrong%@EH@%
  46889. in what they deny.%@NL@%
  46890. %@CR:SECTS Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  46891.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  46892.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  46893. %@AS@%                                                                     Sects%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46894. %@NL@%
  46895. %@NL@%
  46896. %@NL@%
  46897. %@1@%%@AS@%Seduction%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  46898. %@CR:SEDUCTION       @%%@NL@%
  46899. %@2@%See:%@QR:Seduction@%%@NL@%
  46900.      Self-image: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          2486ef@%%@NL@%
  46901. %@NL@%
  46902. %@2@%The difference between rape and ecstasy is salesmanship.%@NL@%
  46903. %@CR:SEDUCTThomson2  @%%@NL@%
  46904.                                           Lord Thomsonof Fleet (1894-1976)%@NL@%
  46905.                                               Canadian newspaper publisher%@NL@%
  46906. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46907. %@NL@%
  46908. %@NL@%
  46909. %@2@%A wise woman never yields by appointment. It should always%@EH@%
  46910. be an unforeseen happiness.%@NL@%
  46911. %@CR:SEDUCTStendhal  @%%@NL@%
  46912.                                                       Stendhal (1783-1842)%@NL@%
  46913.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  46914. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46915. %@NL@%
  46916. %@NL@%
  46917. %@2@%The resistance of a woman is not always proof of her virtue,%@EH@%
  46918. but more often of her experience.%@NL@%
  46919. %@CR:SEDUCTLenclos   @%%@NL@%
  46920.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  46921.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  46922. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46923. %@NL@%
  46924. %@NL@%
  46925. %@2@%By keeping men off, you keep them on.%@NL@%
  46926. %@CR:SEDUCTGay       @%%@NL@%
  46927.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  46928.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  46929. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46930. %@NL@%
  46931. %@NL@%
  46932.      %@2@%Had we but world enough, and time,%@NL@%
  46933.      This coyness, lady, were no crime.%@NL@%
  46934. %@CR:SEDUCTMarvell   @%%@NL@%
  46935.                                                 Andrew Marvell (1621-1678)%@NL@%
  46936.                                                  English metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  46937. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46938. %@NL@%
  46939. %@NL@%
  46940. %@2@%In order to avoid being called a flirt, she always yielded%@EH@%
  46941. easily.%@NL@%
  46942. %@CR:SEDUCTTalleyrand@%%@NL@%
  46943.                                      Charles, Count Talleyrand (1754-1838)%@NL@%
  46944.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  46945. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46946. %@NL@%
  46947. %@NL@%
  46948. %@2@%Men lose more conquests by their own awkwardness than by any%@EH@%
  46949. virtue in the woman.%@NL@%
  46950. %@CR:SEDUCTLenclos   @%%@NL@%
  46951.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  46952.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  46953. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46954. %@NL@%
  46955. %@NL@%
  46956. %@2@%If men knew all that women think, they'd be twenty times more%@EH@%
  46957. daring.%@NL@%
  46958. %@CR:SEDUCTKarr      @%%@NL@%
  46959.                                                  Alphonse Karr (1808-1890)%@NL@%
  46960.                                                French journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  46961. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46962. %@NL@%
  46963. %@NL@%
  46964. %@2@%Men who do not make advances to women are apt to become victims%@EH@%
  46965. to women who make advances to them%@NL@%
  46966. %@CR:SEDUCTBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  46967.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  46968.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  46969. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46970. %@NL@%
  46971. %@NL@%
  46972. %@2@%Older women are best because they always think they may be%@EH@%
  46973. doing it for the last time.%@NL@%
  46974. %@CR:SEDUCTFleming   @%%@NL@%
  46975.                                                    Ian Fleming (1908-1964)%@NL@%
  46976.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46977. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46978. %@NL@%
  46979. %@NL@%
  46980. %@2@%The trouble with Ian is that he gets off with women because%@EH@%
  46981. he can't get on with them.%@NL@%
  46982. %@CR:SEDUCTLehmann   @%%@NL@%
  46983.                                                 Rosamond Lehmann (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  46984.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  46985.                                                             of Ian Fleming%@NL@%
  46986. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46987. %@NL@%
  46988. %@NL@%
  46989. %@2@%To succeed with the opposite sex, tell her you're impotent.%@EH@%
  46990. She can't wait to disprove it.%@NL@%
  46991. %@CR:SEDUCTGrant1    @%%@NL@%
  46992.                                                     Cary Grant (1904-1986)%@NL@%
  46993.                                                  Anglo-American film actor%@NL@%
  46994. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  46995. %@NL@%
  46996. %@NL@%
  46997. %@2@%He in a few minutes ravished this fair creature, or at least%@EH@%
  46998. would have ravished her, if she had not, by a timely compliance,
  46999. prevented him.%@NL@%
  47000. %@CR:SEDUCTFielding  @%%@NL@%
  47001.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  47002.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  47003. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47004. %@NL@%
  47005. %@NL@%
  47006.      %@2@%Weep not for little Leonie,%@NL@%
  47007.      Abducted by a French Marquis!%@NL@%
  47008.      Though loss of honour was a wrench,%@NL@%
  47009.      Just think how it's improved her%@NL@%
  47010.      French.%@NL@%
  47011. %@CR:SEDUCTGraham2   @%%@NL@%
  47012.                                                   Harry Graham (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  47013.                                                   British author, rhymster%@NL@%
  47014. %@AS@%                                                                 Seduction%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47015. %@NL@%
  47016. %@NL@%
  47017. %@NL@%
  47018. %@1@%%@AS@%Self%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47019. %@CR:SELF            @%%@NL@%
  47020. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self@%%@NL@%
  47021.      Appearances: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:           239bf@%%@NL@%
  47022.      %@AB@%Egoism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c2c20@%%@NL@%
  47023. %@NL@%
  47024. %@2@%We are all serving a life-sentence in the dungeon of self.%@NL@%
  47025. %@CR:SELF  Connolly  @%%@NL@%
  47026.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  47027.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  47028. %@AS@%                                                                      Self%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47029. %@NL@%
  47030. %@NL@%
  47031.      %@2@%Man who man would be,%@NL@%
  47032.      Must rule the empire of himself.%@NL@%
  47033. %@CR:SELF  Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  47034.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  47035.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  47036. %@AS@%                                                                      Self%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47037. %@NL@%
  47038. %@NL@%
  47039. %@2@%It is  . . .  amusing to find oneself thought to be very different%@EH@%
  47040. from what one is, especially as one knows that one cannot really
  47041. be at all like what one imagines oneself to be. It is a sort of
  47042. trinity - three persons in one ass.%@NL@%
  47043. %@CR:SELF  Bridges   @%%@NL@%
  47044.                                                 Robert Bridges (1844-1930)%@NL@%
  47045.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  47046. %@AS@%                                                                      Self%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47047. %@NL@%
  47048. %@NL@%
  47049. %@2@%Most human beings use their public life like a visiting card.%@EH@%
  47050. They show it to others and say, This is me. The others take the
  47051. card and think to themselves, If you say so. But most human beings
  47052. have another life too, a gray one, lurking in the darkness, torturing
  47053. us, a life we try to hide like an ugly sin.%@NL@%
  47054. %@CR:SELF  Lorca     @%%@NL@%
  47055.                                          Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)%@NL@%
  47056.                                              Spanish lyric poet, dramatist%@NL@%
  47057. %@AS@%                                                                      Self%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47058. %@NL@%
  47059. %@NL@%
  47060. %@NL@%
  47061. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-confidence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47062. %@CR:SELFCONFIDENCE  @%%@NL@%
  47063. %@2@%%@QR:Self-confidence@%I have yet to encounter that common myth of weak men, an insurmountable%@EH@%
  47064. barrier.%@NL@%
  47065. %@CR:SELFCOAllen3    @%%@NL@%
  47066.                                                    J. L. Allen (1849-1925)%@NL@%
  47067.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  47068. %@AS@%                                                           Self-confidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47069. %@NL@%
  47070. %@NL@%
  47071. %@2@%Those who believe that they are exclusively in the right are%@EH@%
  47072. generally those who achieve something.%@NL@%
  47073. %@CR:SELFCOHuxley1   @%%@NL@%
  47074.                                                  Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)%@NL@%
  47075.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47076. %@AS@%                                                           Self-confidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47077. %@NL@%
  47078. %@NL@%
  47079. %@2@%Self-confidence is the first requisite to great undertakings.%@NL@%
  47080. %@CR:SELFCOJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  47081.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  47082.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  47083. %@AS@%                                                           Self-confidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47084. %@NL@%
  47085. %@NL@%
  47086. %@2@%I wish I was as cocksure of anything as Tom Macaulay is of%@EH@%
  47087. everything.%@NL@%
  47088. %@CR:SELFCOMelbourne @%%@NL@%
  47089.                                                 Lord Melbourne (1779-1848)%@NL@%
  47090.                                          English statesman, Prime Minister%@NL@%
  47091. %@AS@%                                                           Self-confidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47092. %@NL@%
  47093. %@NL@%
  47094. %@2@%Without self-confidence we are as babes in the cradle. And%@EH@%
  47095. how can we generate this imponderable quality, which is yet so
  47096. invaluable, most quickly? By thinking that other people are inferior
  47097. to oneself. By feeling that one has some innate superiority - it
  47098. may be wealth, or rank, a straight nose, or the portrait of a
  47099. grandfather by Romney - for there is no end to the pathetic
  47100. devices of the human imagination - over other people.%@NL@%
  47101. %@CR:SELFCOWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  47102.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  47103.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  47104. %@AS@%                                                           Self-confidence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47105. %@NL@%
  47106. %@NL@%
  47107. %@NL@%
  47108. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-control%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47109. %@CR:SELFCONTROL     @%%@NL@%
  47110. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-control@%%@NL@%
  47111.      Self-denial: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:          2461fb@%%@NL@%
  47112.      Writers: %@AB@%Boileau%@AE@%%@BO:          2c93c8@%%@NL@%
  47113. %@NL@%
  47114. %@2@%When angry, count four; when very angry, swear.%@NL@%
  47115. %@CR:SELFCOTwain     @%%@NL@%
  47116.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  47117.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  47118. %@AS@%                                                              Self-control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47119. %@NL@%
  47120. %@NL@%
  47121. %@2@%He that would govern others, first should be the master of%@EH@%
  47122. himself.%@NL@%
  47123. %@CR:SELFCOMassinger @%%@NL@%
  47124.                                               Philip Massinger (1583-1640)%@NL@%
  47125.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  47126. %@AS@%                                                              Self-control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47127. %@NL@%
  47128. %@NL@%
  47129.      %@2@%O! it is excellent%@NL@%
  47130.      To have a giant's strength, but it is tyrannous%@NL@%
  47131.      To use it like a giant.%@NL@%
  47132. %@CR:SELFCOShakespear@%%@NL@%
  47133.                                              Isabella, %@AI@%Measure for Measure%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47134.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  47135.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  47136. %@AS@%                                                              Self-control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47137. %@NL@%
  47138. %@NL@%
  47139. %@2@%Remember that there is always a limit to self-indulgence, but%@EH@%
  47140. none to self-restraint.%@NL@%
  47141. %@CR:SELFCOGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  47142.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  47143.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  47144. %@AS@%                                                              Self-control%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47145. %@NL@%
  47146. %@NL@%
  47147. %@NL@%
  47148. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-deception%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47149. %@CR:SELFDECEPTION   @%%@NL@%
  47150. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-deception@%%@NL@%
  47151.      Love: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          180738@%%@NL@%
  47152.      Recklessness: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:          21e793@%%@NL@%
  47153.      Self-knowledge: %@AB@%Conrad%@AE@%%@BO:          2495d9@%%@NL@%
  47154.      Suckers: %@AB@%Demosthenes%@AE@%%@BO:          2737ea@%%@NL@%
  47155. %@NL@%
  47156. %@2@%It is in the ability to deceive oneself that one shows the%@EH@%
  47157. greatest talent.%@NL@%
  47158. %@CR:SELFDEFrance    @%%@NL@%
  47159.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  47160.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  47161. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47162. %@NL@%
  47163. %@NL@%
  47164. %@2@%We lie loudest when we lie to ourselves.%@NL@%
  47165. %@CR:SELFDEHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  47166.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  47167.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  47168. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47169. %@NL@%
  47170. %@NL@%
  47171. %@2@%We like to be deceived.%@NL@%
  47172. %@CR:SELFDEPascal    @%%@NL@%
  47173.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  47174.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  47175. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47176. %@NL@%
  47177. %@NL@%
  47178. %@2@%The surest way to be deceived is to consider oneself cleverer%@EH@%
  47179. than others.%@NL@%
  47180. %@CR:SELFDELaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  47181.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  47182.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  47183. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47184. %@NL@%
  47185. %@NL@%
  47186. %@2@%We are never deceived; we deceive ourselves.%@NL@%
  47187. %@CR:SELFDEGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  47188.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  47189.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  47190. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47191. %@NL@%
  47192. %@NL@%
  47193. %@2@%Most of our platitudes notwithstanding, self-deception remains%@EH@%
  47194. the most difficult deception. The tricks that work on others count
  47195. for nothing in that very well-lit back alley where one keeps assignations
  47196. with oneself: no winning smiles will do here, no prettily drawn
  47197. lists of good intentions.%@NL@%
  47198. %@CR:SELFDEDidion    @%%@NL@%
  47199.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  47200.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  47201. %@AS@%                                                            Self-deception%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47202. %@NL@%
  47203. %@NL@%
  47204. %@NL@%
  47205. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-defense%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47206. %@CR:SELFDEFENSE     @%%@NL@%
  47207. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-defense@%%@NL@%
  47208.      Apologies: %@AB@%King Charles I%@AE@%%@BO:           23202@%%@NL@%
  47209.      Courtesy: %@AB@%Lucas%@AE@%%@BO:           88fe4@%%@NL@%
  47210.      Pity: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          1dc55c@%%@NL@%
  47211. %@NL@%
  47212. %@2@%To the question, What shall we do to be saved in this World?%@EH@%
  47213. there is no answer but this, Look to your Moat.%@NL@%
  47214. %@CR:SELFDESavile    @%%@NL@%
  47215.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  47216.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  47217. %@AS@%                                                              Self-defense%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47218. %@NL@%
  47219. %@NL@%
  47220. %@2@%Self-defence is nature's eldest law.%@NL@%
  47221. %@CR:SELFDEDryden    @%%@NL@%
  47222.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  47223.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  47224. %@AS@%                                                              Self-defense%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47225. %@NL@%
  47226. %@NL@%
  47227. %@2@%These animals are so treacherous that they defend themselves%@EH@%
  47228. against attacks!%@NL@%
  47229. %@CR:SELFDEDryden    @%%@NL@%
  47230.                                                          anonymous, France%@NL@%
  47231. %@AS@%                                                              Self-defense%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47232. %@NL@%
  47233. %@NL@%
  47234. %@NL@%
  47235. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-denial%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47236. %@CR:SELFDENIAL      @%%@NL@%
  47237. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-denial@%%@NL@%
  47238.      %@AB@%Drink: Abstinence%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           ba5fe@%%@NL@%
  47239.      Lust: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:          189ad3@%%@NL@%
  47240. %@NL@%
  47241. %@2@%Subdue your appetites, my dears, and you've conquered human%@EH@%
  47242. natur'.%@NL@%
  47243. %@CR:SELFDEDickens   @%%@NL@%
  47244.                                             Mr. Squeers, %@AI@%Nicholas Nickleby%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47245.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  47246.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  47247. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47248. %@NL@%
  47249. %@NL@%
  47250. %@2@%Self-denial is not a virtue; it is only the effect of prudence%@EH@%
  47251. on rascality.%@NL@%
  47252. %@CR:SELFDEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  47253.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  47254.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  47255. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47256. %@NL@%
  47257. %@NL@%
  47258. %@2@%Self-denial is the shining sore on the leprous body of Christianity.%@NL@%
  47259. %@CR:SELFDEHarris1   @%%@NL@%
  47260.                                                   Frank Harris (1856-1931)%@NL@%
  47261.                                   British journalist, novelist, biographer%@NL@%
  47262. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47263. %@NL@%
  47264. %@NL@%
  47265. %@2@%Most of us have suffered from a certain sort of lady who by%@EH@%
  47266. her perverse unselfishness gives more trouble than the selfish;
  47267. who almost clamours for the unpopular dish and scrambles for the
  47268. worst seat. Most of us have known parties or expeditions full of
  47269. this seething fuss of self-effacement.%@NL@%
  47270. %@CR:SELFDEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  47271.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  47272.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47273. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47274. %@NL@%
  47275. %@NL@%
  47276. %@2@%Self-sacrifice enables us to sacrifice other people without%@EH@%
  47277. blushing.%@NL@%
  47278. %@CR:SELFDEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  47279.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  47280.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  47281. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47282. %@NL@%
  47283. %@NL@%
  47284. %@2@%Abstainer. A weak man who yields to the temptation of denying%@EH@%
  47285. himself a pleasure.%@NL@%
  47286. %@CR:SELFDEBierce    @%%@NL@%
  47287.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  47288.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  47289. %@AS@%                                                               Self-denial%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47290. %@NL@%
  47291. %@NL@%
  47292. %@NL@%
  47293. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-destructiveness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47294. %@CR:SELFDESTRUCTIVEN@%%@NL@%
  47295. %@2@%%@QR:Self-destructiveness@%But I do nothing upon myself, and yet I am mine own Executioner.%@NL@%
  47296. %@CR:SELFDEDonne     @%%@NL@%
  47297.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  47298.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  47299. %@AS@%                                                      Self-destructiveness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47300. %@NL@%
  47301. %@NL@%
  47302. %@NL@%
  47303. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-doubt%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47304. %@CR:SELFDOUBT       @%%@NL@%
  47305. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-doubt@%%@NL@%
  47306.      Heroes: %@AB@%Hawthorne%@AE@%%@BO:          12af2c@%%@NL@%
  47307.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Hitler%@AE@%%@BO:          20979f@%%@NL@%
  47308. %@NL@%
  47309. %@2@%The actor who took the role of King Lear played the king as%@EH@%
  47310. though he expected someone to play the ace.%@NL@%
  47311. %@CR:SELFDOField     @%%@NL@%
  47312.                                                   Eugene Field (1850-1895)%@NL@%
  47313.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  47314. %@AS@%                                                                Self-doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47315. %@NL@%
  47316. %@NL@%
  47317. %@2@%He who undervalues himself is justly undervalued by others.%@NL@%
  47318. %@CR:SELFDOHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  47319.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  47320.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  47321. %@AS@%                                                                Self-doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47322. %@NL@%
  47323. %@NL@%
  47324. %@2@%It is easy - terribly easy - to shake a man's faith in%@EH@%
  47325. himself. To take advantage of that to break a man's spirit is devil's
  47326. work.%@NL@%
  47327. %@CR:SELFDOShaw      @%%@NL@%
  47328.                                                            Morell, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47329.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  47330.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  47331. %@AS@%                                                                Self-doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47332. %@NL@%
  47333. %@NL@%
  47334. %@2@%No man can make you feel inferior without your consent.%@NL@%
  47335. %@CR:SELFDORoosevelt1@%%@NL@%
  47336.                                              Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962)%@NL@%
  47337.              American columnist, lecturer, U.S. delegate at United Nations%@NL@%
  47338. %@AS@%                                                                Self-doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47339. %@NL@%
  47340. %@NL@%
  47341.      %@2@%No, when the fight begins within himself,%@NL@%
  47342.      A man's worth something.%@NL@%
  47343. %@CR:SELFDOBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  47344.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  47345.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  47346. %@AS@%                                                                Self-doubt%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47347. %@NL@%
  47348. %@NL@%
  47349. %@NL@%
  47350. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-image%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47351. %@CR:SELFIMAGE       @%%@NL@%
  47352. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-image@%%@NL@%
  47353.      Eloquence: %@AB@%Billings%@AE@%%@BO:           c555c@%%@NL@%
  47354.      Genius: %@AB@%Swift%@AE@%%@BO:          1091a3@%%@NL@%
  47355.      Innocence: %@AB@%Didion%@AE@%%@BO:          14ea18@%%@NL@%
  47356.      Self-doubt: %@AB@%Hazlitt%@AE@%%@BO:          2470c2@%; %@AB@%Roosevelt%@AE@%%@BO:          24744c@%%@NL@%
  47357.      %@AB@%Self-knowledge%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2491c9@%%@NL@%
  47358. %@NL@%
  47359. %@2@%I think it's one of the scars in our culture that we have too%@EH@%
  47360. high an opinion of ourselves. We align ourselves with the angels
  47361. instead of the higher primates.%@NL@%
  47362. %@CR:SELFIMCarter1   @%%@NL@%
  47363.                                                    Angela Carter (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  47364.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  47365. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47366. %@NL@%
  47367. %@NL@%
  47368. %@2@%Monkeys are superior to men in this: when a monkey looks into%@EH@%
  47369. a mirror, he sees a monkey.%@NL@%
  47370. %@CR:SELFIMChazal    @%%@NL@%
  47371.                                              Malcolm de Chazal (1902-1981)%@NL@%
  47372.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  47373. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47374. %@NL@%
  47375. %@NL@%
  47376. %@2@%The greatest magnifying glasses in the world are a man's own%@EH@%
  47377. eyes when they look upon his own person.%@NL@%
  47378. %@CR:SELFIMPope      @%%@NL@%
  47379.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  47380.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  47381. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47382. %@NL@%
  47383. %@NL@%
  47384. %@2@%You've no idea what a poor opinion I have of myself - and%@EH@%
  47385. how little I deserve it.%@NL@%
  47386. %@CR:SELFIMGilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  47387.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  47388.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  47389. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47390. %@NL@%
  47391. %@NL@%
  47392. %@2@%I have nothing to declare except my genius.%@NL@%
  47393. %@CR:SELFIMWilde     @%%@NL@%
  47394.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  47395.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  47396.                                                    at the New York customs%@NL@%
  47397. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47398. %@NL@%
  47399. %@NL@%
  47400. %@2@%The very purpose of existence is to reconcile the glowing opinion%@EH@%
  47401. we have of ourselves with the appalling things that other people
  47402. think about us.%@NL@%
  47403. %@CR:SELFIMCrisp     @%%@NL@%
  47404.                                                    Quentin Crisp (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  47405.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  47406. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47407. %@NL@%
  47408. %@NL@%
  47409. %@2@%It is terrible to destroy a person's picture of himself in%@EH@%
  47410. the interests of truth or some other abstraction.%@NL@%
  47411. %@CR:SELFIMLessing   @%%@NL@%
  47412.                                                    Doris Lessing (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  47413.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  47414. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47415. %@NL@%
  47416. %@NL@%
  47417. %@2@%Nothing is more depressing than the conviction that one is%@EH@%
  47418. not a hero.%@NL@%
  47419. %@CR:SELFIMMoore3    @%%@NL@%
  47420.                                                   George Moore (1852-1933)%@NL@%
  47421.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  47422. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47423. %@NL@%
  47424. %@NL@%
  47425. %@2@%There are few things that we so unwillingly give up, even in%@EH@%
  47426. advanced age, as the supposition that we still have the power of
  47427. ingratiating ourselves with the fair sex.%@NL@%
  47428. %@CR:SELFIMJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  47429.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  47430.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  47431. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47432. %@NL@%
  47433. %@NL@%
  47434. %@2@%The ablest man I ever met is the man%@EH@%
  47435. you think you are.%@NL@%
  47436. %@CR:SELFIMRoosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  47437.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  47438.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  47439. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47440. %@NL@%
  47441. %@NL@%
  47442. %@2@%To love oneself is the beginning of a life-long romance.%@NL@%
  47443. %@CR:SELFIMWilde     @%%@NL@%
  47444.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  47445.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  47446. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47447. %@NL@%
  47448. %@NL@%
  47449. %@2@%He that falls in love with himself, will have no rivals.%@NL@%
  47450. %@CR:SELFIMFranklin  @%%@NL@%
  47451.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  47452.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  47453. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47454. %@NL@%
  47455. %@NL@%
  47456. %@2@%Self-love seems so often unrequited.%@NL@%
  47457. %@CR:SELFIMPowell1   @%%@NL@%
  47458.                                                   Anthony Powell (b. 1905)%@NL@%
  47459.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  47460. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47461. %@NL@%
  47462. %@NL@%
  47463. %@2@%To have that sense of one's intrinsic worth which constitutes%@EH@%
  47464. self-respect is potentially to have everything: the ability to
  47465. discriminate, to love and to remain indifferent. To lack it is
  47466. to be locked within oneself, paradoxically incapable of either
  47467. love or indifference.%@NL@%
  47468. %@CR:SELFIMDidion    @%%@NL@%
  47469.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  47470.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  47471. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47472. %@NL@%
  47473. %@NL@%
  47474. %@2@%Self-respect - the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is%@EH@%
  47475. suspicious.%@NL@%
  47476. %@CR:SELFIMMencken   @%%@NL@%
  47477.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  47478.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  47479. %@AS@%                                                                Self-image%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47480. %@NL@%
  47481. %@NL@%
  47482. %@NL@%
  47483. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47484. %@CR:SELFKNOWLEDGE   @%%@NL@%
  47485. %@2@%See:%@QR:Self-knowledge@%%@NL@%
  47486.      Introspection: %@AB@%James%@AE@%%@BO:          1587b8@%%@NL@%
  47487.      %@AB@%Self-image%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          24772f@%%@NL@%
  47488. %@NL@%
  47489. %@2@%"Know thyself"? If I knew myself, I'd run away.%@NL@%
  47490. %@CR:SELFKNGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  47491.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  47492.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  47493. %@AS@%                                                            Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47494. %@NL@%
  47495. %@NL@%
  47496. %@2@%He knows the universe and does not know himself.%@NL@%
  47497. %@CR:SELFKNlaFontaine@%%@NL@%
  47498.                                            Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695)%@NL@%
  47499.                                                      French poet, fabulist%@NL@%
  47500. %@AS@%                                                            Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47501. %@NL@%
  47502. %@NL@%
  47503. %@2@%No man ever understands quite his own artful dodges to escape%@EH@%
  47504. from the grim shadow of self-knowledge.%@NL@%
  47505. %@CR:SELFKNConrad    @%%@NL@%
  47506.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  47507.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  47508. %@AS@%                                                            Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47509. %@NL@%
  47510. %@NL@%
  47511. %@2@%In other living creatures the ignorance of themselves is nature,%@EH@%
  47512. but in men it is a vice.%@NL@%
  47513. %@CR:SELFKNBoethius  @%%@NL@%
  47514.                                                         Boethius (480-525)%@NL@%
  47515.                                                          Roman philosopher%@NL@%
  47516. %@AS@%                                                            Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47517. %@NL@%
  47518. %@NL@%
  47519. %@2@%If people can be educated to see the lowly side of their own%@EH@%
  47520. natures, it may be hoped that they will also learn to understand
  47521. and to love their fellow men better. A little less hypocrisy and
  47522. a little more tolerance toward oneself can only have good results
  47523. in respect for our neighbor; for we are all too prone to transfer
  47524. to our fellows the injustice and violence we inflict upon our
  47525. own natures.%@NL@%
  47526. %@CR:SELFKNJung      @%%@NL@%
  47527.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  47528.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  47529. %@AS@%                                                            Self-knowledge%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47530. %@NL@%
  47531. %@NL@%
  47532. %@NL@%
  47533. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-pity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47534. %@CR:SELFPITY        @%%@NL@%
  47535. %@2@%%@QR:Self-pity@%The dupe of friendship, and the fool of love; have I not reason%@EH@%
  47536. to hate and to despise myself? Indeed I do; and chiefly for
  47537. not having hated and despised the world enough.%@NL@%
  47538. %@CR:SELFPIHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  47539.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  47540.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  47541. %@AS@%                                                                 Self-pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47542. %@NL@%
  47543. %@NL@%
  47544. %@2@%God put self-pity by the side of despair like the cure by the%@EH@%
  47545. side of the disease.%@NL@%
  47546. %@CR:SELFPICamus1    @%%@NL@%
  47547.                                                   Albert Camus (1913-1960)%@NL@%
  47548.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  47549. %@AS@%                                                                 Self-pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47550. %@NL@%
  47551. %@NL@%
  47552.      %@2@%I never saw a wild thing%@NL@%
  47553.      Sorry for itself.%@NL@%
  47554.      A small bird will drop frozen dead%@NL@%
  47555.      From a bough%@NL@%
  47556.      Without ever having felt sorry for itself.%@NL@%
  47557. %@CR:SELFPILawrence1 @%%@NL@%
  47558.                                                 D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)%@NL@%
  47559.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47560. %@AS@%                                                                 Self-pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47561. %@NL@%
  47562. %@NL@%
  47563. %@2@%Self-pity comes so naturally to all of us, that the most solid%@EH@%
  47564. happiness can be shaken by the compassion of a fool.%@NL@%
  47565. %@CR:SELFPIMaurois   @%%@NL@%
  47566.                                                  Andre Maurois (1885-1967)%@NL@%
  47567.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  47568. %@AS@%                                                                 Self-pity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47569. %@NL@%
  47570. %@NL@%
  47571. %@NL@%
  47572. %@1@%%@AS@%Self-sufficiency%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47573. %@CR:SELFSUFFICIENCY @%%@NL@%
  47574. %@2@%%@QR:Self-sufficiency@%The proverb warns that, "You should not bite the hand that%@EH@%
  47575. feeds you." But maybe you should, if it prevents you from feeding
  47576. yourself.%@NL@%
  47577. %@CR:SELFSUSzasz     @%%@NL@%
  47578.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  47579.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  47580. %@AS@%                                                          Self-sufficiency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47581. %@NL@%
  47582. %@NL@%
  47583. %@2@%Be thine own palace, or the world's thy jail.%@NL@%
  47584. %@CR:SELFSUDonne     @%%@NL@%
  47585.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  47586.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  47587. %@AS@%                                                          Self-sufficiency%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47588. %@NL@%
  47589. %@NL@%
  47590. %@NL@%
  47591. %@1@%%@AS@%Sense of Humor%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47592. %@CR:SENSEOFHUMOR    @%%@NL@%
  47593. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sense of Humor@%%@NL@%
  47594.      Comedy: %@AB@%Grey%@AE@%%@BO:           738f9@%%@NL@%
  47595.      God: %@AB@%Inge%@AE@%%@BO:          110be8@%%@NL@%
  47596.      %@AB@%Laughter%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          16ae8c@%%@NL@%
  47597. %@NL@%
  47598. %@2@%From the silence which prevails I conclude Lauderdale has been%@EH@%
  47599. making a joke.%@NL@%
  47600. %@CR:SENSEOSheridan  @%%@NL@%
  47601.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  47602.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  47603. %@AS@%                                                            Sense of Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47604. %@NL@%
  47605. %@NL@%
  47606. %@2@%Men will confess to treason, murder, arson, false teeth, or%@EH@%
  47607. a wig. How many of them will own up to a lack of humor?%@NL@%
  47608. %@CR:SENSEOColby     @%%@NL@%
  47609.                                                    F. M. Colby (1865-1925)%@NL@%
  47610.                                                  American editor, essayist%@NL@%
  47611. %@AS@%                                                            Sense of Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47612. %@NL@%
  47613. %@NL@%
  47614. %@2@%A sense of humour keen enough to show a man his own absurdities%@EH@%
  47615. will keep him from the commission of all sins, or nearly all, save
  47616. those that are worth committing.%@NL@%
  47617. %@CR:SENSEOButler4   @%%@NL@%
  47618.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  47619.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47620. %@AS@%                                                            Sense of Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47621. %@NL@%
  47622. %@NL@%
  47623. %@2@%To appreciate nonsense requires a serious interest in life.%@NL@%
  47624. %@CR:SENSEOBurgess2  @%%@NL@%
  47625.                                                 Gelett Burgess (1866-1951)%@NL@%
  47626.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  47627. %@AS@%                                                            Sense of Humor%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47628. %@NL@%
  47629. %@NL@%
  47630. %@NL@%
  47631. %@1@%%@AS@%Sensitivity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47632. %@CR:SENSITIVITY     @%%@NL@%
  47633. %@2@%%@QR:Sensitivity@%Some people are so sensitive that they feel snubbed if an epidemic%@EH@%
  47634. overlooks them.%@NL@%
  47635. %@CR:SENSITHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  47636.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  47637.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  47638. %@AS@%                                                               Sensitivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47639. %@NL@%
  47640. %@NL@%
  47641. %@2@%Man is much more sensitive to the contempt of others than to%@EH@%
  47642. contempt for himself.%@NL@%
  47643. %@CR:SENSITNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  47644.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  47645.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  47646. %@AS@%                                                               Sensitivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47647. %@NL@%
  47648. %@NL@%
  47649. %@2@%Exaggerated sensitiveness is an expression of the feeling of%@EH@%
  47650. inferiority.%@NL@%
  47651. %@CR:SENSITAdler     @%%@NL@%
  47652.                                                   Alfred Adler (1870-1937)%@NL@%
  47653.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  47654. %@AS@%                                                               Sensitivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47655. %@NL@%
  47656. %@NL@%
  47657. %@2@%It is axiomatic that we should all think of ourselves as being%@EH@%
  47658. more sensitive than other people because, when we are sensitive
  47659. in our dealing with others, we cannot be aware of it at the time:
  47660. conscious insensitivity is a self-contradiction.%@NL@%
  47661. %@CR:SENSITAuden     @%%@NL@%
  47662.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  47663.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  47664. %@AS@%                                                               Sensitivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47665. %@NL@%
  47666. %@NL@%
  47667. %@NL@%
  47668. %@1@%%@AS@%Sentimentality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47669. %@CR:SENTIMENTALITY  @%%@NL@%
  47670. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sentimentality@%%@NL@%
  47671.      Unhappiness: %@AB@%Burroughs%@AE@%%@BO:          29c003@%%@NL@%
  47672. %@NL@%
  47673. %@2@%Sentimentality is the emotional promiscuity of those who have%@EH@%
  47674. no sentiment.%@NL@%
  47675. %@CR:SENTIMMailer    @%%@NL@%
  47676.                                                    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  47677.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  47678. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47679. %@NL@%
  47680. %@NL@%
  47681. %@2@%Sentimentality is only sentiment that rubs you up the wrong%@EH@%
  47682. way.%@NL@%
  47683. %@CR:SENTIMMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  47684.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  47685.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  47686. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47687. %@NL@%
  47688. %@NL@%
  47689. %@2@%It is as healthy to enjoy sentiment as to enjoy jam.%@NL@%
  47690. %@CR:SENTIMChesterton@%%@NL@%
  47691.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  47692.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47693. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47694. %@NL@%
  47695. %@NL@%
  47696. %@2@%Sentimentality - that's what we call the sentiment we don't%@EH@%
  47697. share.%@NL@%
  47698. %@CR:SENTIMGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  47699.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  47700.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  47701. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47702. %@NL@%
  47703. %@NL@%
  47704. %@2@%A sentimentalist is simply one who desires to have the luxury%@EH@%
  47705. of an emotion without paying for it.%@NL@%
  47706. %@CR:SENTIMWilde     @%%@NL@%
  47707.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  47708.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  47709. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47710. %@NL@%
  47711. %@NL@%
  47712. %@2@%Sentimentality is a superstructure covering brutality.%@NL@%
  47713. %@CR:SENTIMJung      @%%@NL@%
  47714.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  47715.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  47716. %@AS@%                                                            Sentimentality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47717. %@NL@%
  47718. %@NL@%
  47719. %@NL@%
  47720. %@1@%%@AS@%Sex%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47721. %@CR:SEX             @%%@NL@%
  47722. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sex@%%@NL@%
  47723.      The English: %@AB@%Mikes%@AE@%%@BO:           ce537@%; %@AB@%Younger%@AE@%%@BO:           ce3b4@%%@NL@%
  47724.      Ennui: %@AB@%Pope%@AE@%%@BO:           cfb3a@%%@NL@%
  47725.      %@AB@%Masturbation%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19c734@%%@NL@%
  47726.      %@AB@%Orgasm%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c7ff8@%%@NL@%
  47727.      %@AB@%Orgies%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c8427@%%@NL@%
  47728.      %@AB@%Perversion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1d748d@%%@NL@%
  47729.      %@AB@%Promiscuity%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          206fc5@%%@NL@%
  47730.      Sport: %@AB@%King Mtetwa%@AE@%%@BO:          26a401@%%@NL@%
  47731. %@NL@%
  47732.      %@2@%And the world's shrunken to a heap%@NL@%
  47733.      Of hot flesh straining on a bed.%@NL@%
  47734. %@CR:SEX   Dodds1    @%%@NL@%
  47735.                                                    E. R. Dodds (1893-1979)%@NL@%
  47736.                                                  British classical scholar%@NL@%
  47737. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47738. %@NL@%
  47739. %@NL@%
  47740.      %@2@%Love is not the dying moan of a distant violin%@NL@%
  47741.       - it's the triumphant twang of a bedspring.%@NL@%
  47742. %@CR:SEX   Perelman  @%%@NL@%
  47743.                                                 S. J. Perelman (1904-1979)%@NL@%
  47744.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  47745. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47746. %@NL@%
  47747. %@NL@%
  47748.      %@2@%So must pure lovers' souls descend%@NL@%
  47749.      T'affections and to faculties%@NL@%
  47750.      Which sense may reach and apprehend;%@NL@%
  47751.      Else a great prince in prison dies.%@NL@%
  47752. %@CR:SEX   Donne     @%%@NL@%
  47753.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  47754.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  47755. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47756. %@NL@%
  47757. %@NL@%
  47758. %@2@%For all the pseudo-sophistication of twentieth-century sex%@EH@%
  47759. theory, it is still assumed that a man should make love as if his
  47760. principal intention was to people the wilderness.%@NL@%
  47761. %@CR:SEX   Greer     @%%@NL@%
  47762.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  47763.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  47764. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47765. %@NL@%
  47766. %@NL@%
  47767. %@2@%The reproduction of mankind is a great marvel and mystery.%@EH@%
  47768. Had God consulted me in the matter, I should have advised him to
  47769. continue the generation of the species by fashioning them of clay.%@NL@%
  47770. %@CR:SEX   Luther    @%%@NL@%
  47771.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  47772.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  47773. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47774. %@NL@%
  47775. %@NL@%
  47776. %@2@%I could be content that we might procreate like trees, without%@EH@%
  47777. conjunction, or that there were any way to perpetuate the world
  47778. without this trivial and vulgar way of coition.%@NL@%
  47779. %@CR:SEX   Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  47780.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  47781.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  47782. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47783. %@NL@%
  47784. %@NL@%
  47785. %@2@%This sex attraction, though it is so useful for keeping the%@EH@%
  47786. world peopled, has nothing to do with beauty: it blinds us to ugliness
  47787. instead of opening our eyes to beauty.%@NL@%
  47788. %@CR:SEX   Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  47789.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  47790.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  47791. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47792. %@NL@%
  47793. %@NL@%
  47794. %@2@%Making love? It's a communion with a woman. The bed is the%@EH@%
  47795. holy table. There I find passion - and purification.%@NL@%
  47796. %@CR:SEX   Sharif    @%%@NL@%
  47797.                                                      Omar Sharif (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  47798.                                                        Egyptian film actor%@NL@%
  47799. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47800. %@NL@%
  47801. %@NL@%
  47802. %@2@%Girls who put out are tramps. Girls who don't are ladies. This%@EH@%
  47803. is, however, a rather archaic use of the word. Should one of you
  47804. boys happen upon a girl who doesn't put out, do not jump to the
  47805. conclusion that you have found a lady. What you have probably found
  47806. is a lesbian.%@NL@%
  47807. %@CR:SEX   Lebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  47808.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  47809.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  47810. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47811. %@NL@%
  47812. %@NL@%
  47813.      %@2@%Embraces are cominglings from the%@NL@%
  47814.      Head to the Feet,%@NL@%
  47815.      And not a pompous High Priest entering by a Secret Place.%@NL@%
  47816. %@CR:SEX   Blake     @%%@NL@%
  47817.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  47818.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  47819. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47820. %@NL@%
  47821. %@NL@%
  47822.      %@2@%License my roving hands, and let them go%@NL@%
  47823.      Before, behind, between, above, below.%@NL@%
  47824. %@CR:SEX   Donne     @%%@NL@%
  47825.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  47826.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  47827. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47828. %@NL@%
  47829. %@NL@%
  47830. %@2@%Sex, unlike justice, should not be seen to be done.%@NL@%
  47831. %@CR:SEX   Laye      @%%@NL@%
  47832.                                                      Evelyn Laye (b. 1900)%@NL@%
  47833.                                                    British actress, singer%@NL@%
  47834. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47835. %@NL@%
  47836. %@NL@%
  47837.      %@2@%Night makes no difference 'twixt the Priest and Clerk:%@NL@%
  47838.      Joan as my Lady is as good i'th'dark.%@NL@%
  47839. %@CR:SEX   Herrick   @%%@NL@%
  47840.                                                 Robert Herrick (1591-1674)%@NL@%
  47841.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  47842. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47843. %@NL@%
  47844. %@NL@%
  47845.      %@2@%Enough if in the veins we know%@NL@%
  47846.      Body's delirium, body's peace%@NL@%
  47847.       - Ask not that ghost to ghost shall go,%@NL@%
  47848.      Essence in essence merge and cease.%@NL@%
  47849. %@CR:SEX   Dodds1    @%%@NL@%
  47850.                                                    E. R. Dodds (1893-1979)%@NL@%
  47851.                                                  British classical scholar%@NL@%
  47852. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47853. %@NL@%
  47854. %@NL@%
  47855. %@2@%In America sex is an obsession, in other parts of the world%@EH@%
  47856. it is a fact.%@NL@%
  47857. %@CR:SEX   Dietrich  @%%@NL@%
  47858.                                                 Marlene Dietrich (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  47859.                                               German-American film actress%@NL@%
  47860. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47861. %@NL@%
  47862. %@NL@%
  47863. %@2@%It has to be admitted that we English have sex on the brain,%@EH@%
  47864. which is a very unsatisfactory place to have it.%@NL@%
  47865. %@CR:SEX   Muggeridge@%%@NL@%
  47866.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  47867.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  47868. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47869. %@NL@%
  47870. %@NL@%
  47871. %@2@%I have long lost any capacity for surprise where sex is concerned.%@NL@%
  47872. %@CR:SEX   Howard1   @%%@NL@%
  47873.                                           Judge GeoffreyHoward (1889-1973)%@NL@%
  47874.                                                              British judge%@NL@%
  47875. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47876. %@NL@%
  47877. %@NL@%
  47878.      %@2@%There goes a saying, and 'twas shrewdly said,%@NL@%
  47879.      Old fish at table, but young flesh in bed.%@NL@%
  47880. %@CR:SEX   Pope      @%%@NL@%
  47881.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  47882.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  47883. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47884. %@NL@%
  47885. %@NL@%
  47886. %@2@%Men always fall for frigid women because they put on the best%@EH@%
  47887. show.%@NL@%
  47888. %@CR:SEX   Brice     @%%@NL@%
  47889.                                                    Fanny Brice (1891-1951)%@NL@%
  47890.                                                       American entertainer%@NL@%
  47891. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47892. %@NL@%
  47893. %@NL@%
  47894. %@2@%All this fuss about sleeping together. For physical pleasure%@EH@%
  47895. I'd sooner go to the dentist any day.%@NL@%
  47896. %@CR:SEX   Waugh     @%%@NL@%
  47897.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  47898.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  47899. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47900. %@NL@%
  47901. %@NL@%
  47902. %@2@%Someone asked Sophocles: "How do you stand in respect to the%@EH@%
  47903. pleasures of sex? Are you still capable of intercourse?" "Hush,
  47904. sir," he said, "It gives me the greatest joy to have escaped
  47905. the clutches of that savage and fierce master."%@NL@%
  47906. %@CR:SEX   Plato     @%%@NL@%
  47907.                                                         Plato (428-347 BC)%@NL@%
  47908.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  47909.                                                       trans. A. D. Lindsay%@NL@%
  47910. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47911. %@NL@%
  47912. %@NL@%
  47913. %@2@%When sexual indulgence has reduced a man to the shape of Lord%@EH@%
  47914. Hailsham, sexual continence involves no more than a sense of the
  47915. ridiculous.%@NL@%
  47916. %@CR:SEX   Paget     @%%@NL@%
  47917.                                                       Lord Paget (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  47918.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  47919.                                            during the Profumo debate, 1963%@NL@%
  47920. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47921. %@NL@%
  47922. %@NL@%
  47923. %@2@%The more sex becomes a non-issue in people's lives, the happier%@EH@%
  47924. they are.%@NL@%
  47925. %@CR:SEX   Maclaine  @%%@NL@%
  47926.                                                 Shirley Maclaine (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  47927.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  47928. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47929. %@NL@%
  47930. %@NL@%
  47931. %@2@%Sex is. There is nothing more to be done about it. Sex builds%@EH@%
  47932. no roads, writes no novels and sex certainly gives no meaning to
  47933. anything in life but itself.%@NL@%
  47934. %@CR:SEX   Vidal     @%%@NL@%
  47935.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  47936.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  47937. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47938. %@NL@%
  47939. %@NL@%
  47940. %@2@%In Europe men and women have intercourse because they love%@EH@%
  47941. each other. In the South Seas they love each other because they
  47942. have had intercourse. Who is right?%@NL@%
  47943. %@CR:SEX   Gauguin   @%%@NL@%
  47944.                                                   Paul Gauguin (1838-1903)%@NL@%
  47945.                                                              French artist%@NL@%
  47946. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47947. %@NL@%
  47948. %@NL@%
  47949. %@2@%Sex is an emotion in motion.%@NL@%
  47950. %@CR:SEX   West1     @%%@NL@%
  47951.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  47952.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  47953. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47954. %@NL@%
  47955. %@NL@%
  47956. %@2@%I think sex is dead anyway.%@NL@%
  47957. %@CR:SEX   Taylor3   @%%@NL@%
  47958.                                                 Elizabeth Taylor (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  47959.                                                Anglo-American film actress%@NL@%
  47960.                                                                    in 1958%@NL@%
  47961. %@AS@%                                                                       Sex%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47962. %@NL@%
  47963. %@NL@%
  47964. %@NL@%
  47965. %@1@%%@AS@%Sex Appeal%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  47966. %@CR:SEXAPPEAL       @%%@NL@%
  47967. %@2@%%@QR:Sex Appeal@%'Tisn't beauty, so to speak, nor good talk necessarily. It's%@EH@%
  47968. just IT. Some women'll stay in a man's memory if they once walked
  47969. down a street.%@NL@%
  47970. %@CR:SEXAPPKipling   @%%@NL@%
  47971.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  47972.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  47973. %@AS@%                                                                Sex Appeal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47974. %@NL@%
  47975. %@NL@%
  47976. %@2@%Being a sex symbol has to do with an attitude, not looks. Most%@EH@%
  47977. men think it's looks, most women know otherwise.%@NL@%
  47978. %@CR:SEXAPPTurner1   @%%@NL@%
  47979.                                                  Kathleen Turner (b. 1956)%@NL@%
  47980.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  47981. %@AS@%                                                                Sex Appeal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47982. %@NL@%
  47983. %@NL@%
  47984. %@2@%Sex appeal is 50 percent what you've got and 50 percent what%@EH@%
  47985. people think you've got.%@NL@%
  47986. %@CR:SEXAPPLoren     @%%@NL@%
  47987.                                                     Sophia Loren (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  47988.                                                       Italian film actress%@NL@%
  47989. %@AS@%                                                                Sex Appeal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47990. %@NL@%
  47991. %@NL@%
  47992. %@2@%Being a sex symbol was rather like being a convict.%@NL@%
  47993. %@CR:SEXAPPWelch     @%%@NL@%
  47994.                                                     Raquel Welch (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  47995.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  47996. %@AS@%                                                                Sex Appeal%@AE@%%@NL@%
  47997. %@NL@%
  47998. %@NL@%
  47999. %@NL@%
  48000. %@1@%%@AS@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48001. %@CR:SHAKESPEARE     @%%@NL@%
  48002. %@2@%%@QR:Shakespeare@%The remarkable thing about Shakespeare is that he is really%@EH@%
  48003. very good - in spite of all the people who say he is very good.%@NL@%
  48004. %@CR:SHAKESGraves    @%%@NL@%
  48005.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  48006.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  48007. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48008. %@NL@%
  48009. %@NL@%
  48010. %@2@%He was not of an age, but for all time!%@NL@%
  48011. %@CR:SHAKESJonson    @%%@NL@%
  48012.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  48013.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48014. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48015. %@NL@%
  48016. %@NL@%
  48017. %@2@%He was the man who, of all modern, and perhaps ancient poets,%@EH@%
  48018. had the largest and most comprehensive soul.%@NL@%
  48019. %@CR:SHAKESDryden    @%%@NL@%
  48020.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  48021.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  48022. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48023. %@NL@%
  48024. %@NL@%
  48025. %@2@%A quibble is to Shakespeare what luminous vapours are to the%@EH@%
  48026. traveller: he follows it at all adventures; it is sure to lead
  48027. him out of his way and sure to engulf him in the mire.%@NL@%
  48028. %@CR:SHAKESJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  48029.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  48030.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  48031. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48032. %@NL@%
  48033. %@NL@%
  48034. %@2@%If we wish to know the force of human genius we should read%@EH@%
  48035. Shakespeare. If we wish to see the insignificance of human learning
  48036. we may study his commentators.%@NL@%
  48037. %@CR:SHAKESHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  48038.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  48039.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  48040. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48041. %@NL@%
  48042. %@NL@%
  48043. %@2@%Shakespeare is the sexiest great writer in the language.%@NL@%
  48044. %@CR:SHAKESRowse     @%%@NL@%
  48045.                                                      A. L. Rowse (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  48046.                                                           British academic%@NL@%
  48047. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48048. %@NL@%
  48049. %@NL@%
  48050. %@2@%For I loved the man and do honour his memory, on this side%@EH@%
  48051. idolatry, as much as any.%@NL@%
  48052. %@CR:SHAKESJonson    @%%@NL@%
  48053.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  48054.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48055. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48056. %@NL@%
  48057. %@NL@%
  48058. %@2@%I am more easily bored with Shakespeare and have suffered more%@EH@%
  48059. ghastly evenings with Shakespeare than with any other dramatist
  48060. I know.%@NL@%
  48061. %@CR:SHAKESBrook     @%%@NL@%
  48062.                                                      Peter Brook (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  48063.                                                   British theater director%@NL@%
  48064. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48065. %@NL@%
  48066. %@NL@%
  48067. %@2@%It would positively be a relief to me to dig him up and throw%@EH@%
  48068. stones at him.%@NL@%
  48069. %@CR:SHAKESShaw      @%%@NL@%
  48070.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  48071.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  48072. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48073. %@NL@%
  48074. %@NL@%
  48075.      %@2@%good frend for jesus sake forbeare%@NL@%
  48076.      to digg the dust encloased heare%@NL@%
  48077.      blese be ye man yt spares thes stones%@NL@%
  48078.      and curst be he yt moves my bones%@NL@%
  48079. %@CR:SHAKESShaw      @%%@NL@%
  48080.                                 epitaph on Shakespeare's tomb at Stratford%@NL@%
  48081. %@AS@%                                                               Shakespeare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48082. %@NL@%
  48083. %@NL@%
  48084. %@NL@%
  48085. %@1@%%@AS@%Shame%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48086. %@CR:SHAME           @%%@NL@%
  48087. %@2@%See:%@QR:Shame@%%@NL@%
  48088.      Lovers: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          187995@%%@NL@%
  48089.      Paradise: %@AB@%Bible, Genesis%@AE@%%@BO:          1ca508@%%@NL@%
  48090.      Poverty: %@AB@%Fuller%@AE@%%@BO:          1f5495@%%@NL@%
  48091.      Respectability: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2281ef@%%@NL@%
  48092. %@NL@%
  48093. %@2@%We live in an atmosphere of shame. We are ashamed of everything%@EH@%
  48094. that is real about us; ashamed of ourselves, of our relatives,
  48095. of our income, of our accents, of our opinions, of our experience,
  48096. just as we are ashamed of our naked skins.%@NL@%
  48097. %@CR:SHAME Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  48098.                                                   Tanner, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48099.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  48100.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  48101. %@AS@%                                                                     Shame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48102. %@NL@%
  48103. %@NL@%
  48104. %@2@%Shame is the feeling you have when you agree with the woman%@EH@%
  48105. who loves you that you are the man she thinks you are.%@NL@%
  48106. %@CR:SHAME Sandburg  @%%@NL@%
  48107.                                                  Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  48108.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  48109. %@AS@%                                                                     Shame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48110. %@NL@%
  48111. %@NL@%
  48112. %@2@%Whoever blushes is already guilty; true innocence is not ashamed%@EH@%
  48113. of anything.%@NL@%
  48114. %@CR:SHAME Rousseau  @%%@NL@%
  48115.                                          Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)%@NL@%
  48116.                               Swiss-French philosopher, political theorist%@NL@%
  48117. %@AS@%                                                                     Shame%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48118. %@NL@%
  48119. %@NL@%
  48120. %@NL@%
  48121. %@1@%%@AS@%George Bernard Shaw%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48122. %@CR:GEORGEBERNARDSHA@%%@NL@%
  48123. %@2@%%@QR:George Bernard Shaw@%Bernard Shaw is an excellent man; he has not an enemy in the%@EH@%
  48124. world, and none of his friends like him.%@NL@%
  48125. %@CR:GEORGEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  48126.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  48127.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  48128. %@AS@%                                                       George Bernard Shaw%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48129. %@NL@%
  48130. %@NL@%
  48131. %@2@%The way Shaw believes in himself is very refreshing in these%@EH@%
  48132. atheistic days when so many people believe in no God at all.%@NL@%
  48133. %@CR:GEORGEZangwill  @%%@NL@%
  48134.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  48135.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  48136. %@AS@%                                                       George Bernard Shaw%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48137. %@NL@%
  48138. %@NL@%
  48139. %@NL@%
  48140. %@1@%%@AS@%Show Business%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48141. %@CR:SHOWBUSINESS    @%%@NL@%
  48142. %@2@%See:%@QR:Show Business@%%@NL@%
  48143.      Hollywood: %@AB@%Levant%@AE@%%@BO:          12f7fb@%%@NL@%
  48144. %@NL@%
  48145. %@2@%All my shows are great. Some of them are bad. But they are%@EH@%
  48146. all great.%@NL@%
  48147. %@CR:SHOWBUGrade     @%%@NL@%
  48148.                                                       Lord Grade (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  48149.                                           British film and TV entrepreneur%@NL@%
  48150. %@AS@%                                                             Show Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48151. %@NL@%
  48152. %@NL@%
  48153. %@2@%That's what show business is - sincere insincerity.%@NL@%
  48154. %@CR:SHOWBUHill1     @%%@NL@%
  48155.                                                       Benny Hill (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  48156.                                                           British comedian%@NL@%
  48157. %@AS@%                                                             Show Business%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48158. %@NL@%
  48159. %@NL@%
  48160. %@NL@%
  48161. %@1@%%@AS@%Significance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48162. %@CR:SIGNIFICANCE    @%%@NL@%
  48163. %@2@%See:%@QR:Significance@%%@NL@%
  48164.      Coincidence: %@AB@%Priestley%@AE@%%@BO:           73083@%%@NL@%
  48165. %@NL@%
  48166. %@2@%The tiniest hair casts a shadow.%@NL@%
  48167. %@CR:SIGNIFGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  48168.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  48169.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  48170. %@AS@%                                                              Significance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48171. %@NL@%
  48172. %@NL@%
  48173. %@NL@%
  48174. %@1@%%@AS@%Silence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48175. %@CR:SILENCE         @%%@NL@%
  48176. %@2@%See:%@QR:Silence@%%@NL@%
  48177.      Applause: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:           250f2@%%@NL@%
  48178.      Conversation: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           830b4@%%@NL@%
  48179.      The English: %@AB@%Heine%@AE@%%@BO:           cf3b7@%%@NL@%
  48180.      Lying: %@AB@%Stevenson%@AE@%%@BO:          18c984@%%@NL@%
  48181.      Modesty: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          1ac03a@%%@NL@%
  48182. %@NL@%
  48183. %@2@%And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence%@EH@%
  48184. in heaven about the space of half an hour.%@NL@%
  48185. %@CR:SILENCJohntheDiv@%%@NL@%
  48186.                                        John the Divine (b. 1st century AD)%@NL@%
  48187.                                                           Apostle of Jesus%@NL@%
  48188. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48189. %@NL@%
  48190. %@NL@%
  48191.      %@2@%And Silence like a poultice comes%@NL@%
  48192.      To heal the blows of sound.%@NL@%
  48193. %@CR:SILENCHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  48194.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  48195.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  48196. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48197. %@NL@%
  48198. %@NL@%
  48199. %@2@%I have been breaking silence these twenty-three years and have%@EH@%
  48200. hardly made a rent in it.%@NL@%
  48201. %@CR:SILENCThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  48202.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  48203.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  48204. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48205. %@NL@%
  48206. %@NL@%
  48207. %@2@%I have often repented speaking, but never of holding my tongue.%@NL@%
  48208. %@CR:SILENCXenocrates@%%@NL@%
  48209.                                                    Xenocrates (396-315 BC)%@NL@%
  48210.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  48211. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48212. %@NL@%
  48213. %@NL@%
  48214. %@2@%Silence is the virtue of fools.%@NL@%
  48215. %@CR:SILENCBacon     @%%@NL@%
  48216.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  48217.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  48218. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48219. %@NL@%
  48220. %@NL@%
  48221. %@2@%Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise.%@NL@%
  48222. %@CR:SILENCBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  48223.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  48224. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48225. %@NL@%
  48226. %@NL@%
  48227. %@2@%The most silent people are generally those who think most highly%@EH@%
  48228. of themselves.%@NL@%
  48229. %@CR:SILENCHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  48230.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  48231.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  48232. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48233. %@NL@%
  48234. %@NL@%
  48235. %@2@%There may be other reasons for a man's not speaking in publick%@EH@%
  48236. than want of resolution: he may have nothing to say.%@NL@%
  48237. %@CR:SILENCJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  48238.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  48239.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  48240. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48241. %@NL@%
  48242. %@NL@%
  48243. %@2@%His enemies might have said before that he talked rather too%@EH@%
  48244. much; but now he has occasional flashes of silence, that make his
  48245. conversation perfectly delightful.%@NL@%
  48246. %@CR:SILENCSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  48247.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  48248.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  48249.                                                                of Macaulay%@NL@%
  48250. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48251. %@NL@%
  48252. %@NL@%
  48253. %@2@%That man's silence is wonderful to listen to.%@NL@%
  48254. %@CR:SILENCHardy     @%%@NL@%
  48255.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  48256.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  48257. %@AS@%                                                                   Silence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48258. %@NL@%
  48259. %@NL@%
  48260. %@NL@%
  48261. %@1@%%@AS@%Sin%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48262. %@CR:SIN             @%%@NL@%
  48263. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sin@%%@NL@%
  48264.      Church of England: %@AB@%Wilson%@AE@%%@BO:           69693@%%@NL@%
  48265.      Crime: %@AB@%Milton%@AE@%%@BO:           8e514@%%@NL@%
  48266.      The English: %@AB@%de Madariaga%@AE@%%@BO:           cd8c5@%%@NL@%
  48267.      Mitigation: %@AB@%Marlowe%@AE@%%@BO:          1a8ce3@%%@NL@%
  48268.      Partnership: %@AB@%Crane%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce5c2@%%@NL@%
  48269.      Preaching: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          1fe0c7@%%@NL@%
  48270.      Religion: %@AB@%France%@AE@%%@BO:          224541@%; %@AB@%Marlowe%@AE@%%@BO:          221942@%%@NL@%
  48271.      Repentance: %@AB@%Billings%@AE@%%@BO:          2254f4@%; %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          225350@%%@NL@%
  48272.      Sainthood: %@AB@%Bierce%@AE@%%@BO:          2354f9@%; %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2356a8@%%@NL@%
  48273.      Scandal: %@AB@%Moliere%@AE@%%@BO:          2382df@%%@NL@%
  48274.      Sense of Humor: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          24ab81@%%@NL@%
  48275. %@NL@%
  48276. %@2@%One leak will sink a ship, and one sin will destroy a sinner.%@NL@%
  48277. %@CR:SIN   Bunyan    @%%@NL@%
  48278.                                                    John Bunyan (1628-1688)%@NL@%
  48279.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  48280. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48281. %@NL@%
  48282. %@NL@%
  48283. %@2@%That which we call sin in others, is experiment for us.%@NL@%
  48284. %@CR:SIN   Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  48285.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  48286.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  48287. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48288. %@NL@%
  48289. %@NL@%
  48290. %@2@%A large part of mankind is angry not with the sins, but with%@EH@%
  48291. the sinners.%@NL@%
  48292. %@CR:SIN   Seneca    @%%@NL@%
  48293.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  48294.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  48295. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48296. %@NL@%
  48297. %@NL@%
  48298. %@2@%Nothing makes one so vain as being told that one is a sinner.%@NL@%
  48299. %@CR:SIN   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  48300.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  48301.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  48302. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48303. %@NL@%
  48304. %@NL@%
  48305. %@2@%Commit a sin twice and it will not seem a crime.%@NL@%
  48306. %@CR:SIN   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  48307.                                                          rabbinical saying%@NL@%
  48308. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48309. %@NL@%
  48310. %@NL@%
  48311. %@2@%To sin is in itself excusable; to be taken is a crime.%@NL@%
  48312. %@CR:SIN   Fletcher1 @%%@NL@%
  48313.                                                  John Fletcher (1579-1625)%@NL@%
  48314.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  48315. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48316. %@NL@%
  48317. %@NL@%
  48318. %@2@%No matter how hard the times get, the wages of sin are always%@EH@%
  48319. liberal and on the dot.%@NL@%
  48320. %@CR:SIN   Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  48321.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  48322.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  48323. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48324. %@NL@%
  48325. %@NL@%
  48326. %@2@%There are only two sorts of men: the one the just, who believe%@EH@%
  48327. themselves sinners; the other sinners, who believe themselves just.%@NL@%
  48328. %@CR:SIN   Pascal    @%%@NL@%
  48329.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  48330.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  48331. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48332. %@NL@%
  48333. %@NL@%
  48334. %@2@%He that falls into sin is a man; that grieves at it, is a saint;%@EH@%
  48335. that boasteth of it, is a devil.%@NL@%
  48336. %@CR:SIN   Fuller2   @%%@NL@%
  48337.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)%@NL@%
  48338.                                                             English cleric%@NL@%
  48339. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48340. %@NL@%
  48341. %@NL@%
  48342. %@2@%It makes a great difference whether a person is unwilling to%@EH@%
  48343. sin, or does not know how.%@NL@%
  48344. %@CR:SIN   Seneca    @%%@NL@%
  48345.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  48346.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  48347. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48348. %@NL@%
  48349. %@NL@%
  48350. %@2@%To abstain from sin when a man cannot sin is to be forsaken%@EH@%
  48351. by sin, not to forsake it.%@NL@%
  48352. %@CR:SIN   SaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  48353.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  48354.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  48355. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48356. %@NL@%
  48357. %@NL@%
  48358. %@2@%Many are saved from sin by being so inept at it.%@NL@%
  48359. %@CR:SIN   McLaughlin@%%@NL@%
  48360.                                                          Mignon McLaughlin%@NL@%
  48361.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  48362. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48363. %@NL@%
  48364. %@NL@%
  48365.      %@2@%For God's sake, if you sin, take pleasure in it,%@NL@%
  48366.      And do it for the pleasure  . . . %@NL@%
  48367. %@CR:SIN   Gould     @%%@NL@%
  48368.                                                   Gerald Gould (1885-1936)%@NL@%
  48369.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  48370. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48371. %@NL@%
  48372. %@NL@%
  48373. %@2@%When we sin, we are all ashamed at the presence of our inferiors.%@NL@%
  48374. %@CR:SIN   Chrysostom@%%@NL@%
  48375.                                                  John Chrysostom (345-407)%@NL@%
  48376.                                                   Greek ecclesiast, hermit%@NL@%
  48377. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48378. %@NL@%
  48379. %@NL@%
  48380. %@2@%Few love to hear the sins they love to act.%@NL@%
  48381. %@CR:SIN   Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  48382.                                                         Pericles, %@AI@%Pericles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48383.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  48384.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48385. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48386. %@NL@%
  48387. %@NL@%
  48388. %@2@%Should we all confess our sins to one another we would all%@EH@%
  48389. laugh at one another for our lack of originality.%@NL@%
  48390. %@CR:SIN   Gibran    @%%@NL@%
  48391.                                                  Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)%@NL@%
  48392.                                                        Syrian mystic, poet%@NL@%
  48393. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48394. %@NL@%
  48395. %@NL@%
  48396. %@2@%A private sin is not so prejudicial in the world as a public%@EH@%
  48397. indecency.%@NL@%
  48398. %@CR:SIN   Cervantes @%%@NL@%
  48399.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  48400.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48401. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48402. %@NL@%
  48403. %@NL@%
  48404. %@2@%When the righteous man turneth away from his righteousness%@EH@%
  48405. that he hath committed and doeth that which is neither quite lawful
  48406. nor quite right, he will generally be found to have gained in
  48407. amiability what he has lost in holiness.%@NL@%
  48408. %@CR:SIN   Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  48409.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  48410.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  48411. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48412. %@NL@%
  48413. %@NL@%
  48414. %@2@%Christ died for our sins. Dare we make his martyrdom meaningless%@EH@%
  48415. by not committing them?%@NL@%
  48416. %@CR:SIN   Feiffer   @%%@NL@%
  48417.                                                    Jules Feiffer (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  48418.                                                        American cartoonist%@NL@%
  48419. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48420. %@NL@%
  48421. %@NL@%
  48422. %@2@%Sin writes histories, goodness is silent.%@NL@%
  48423. %@CR:SIN   Goethe    @%%@NL@%
  48424.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  48425.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  48426. %@AS@%                                                                       Sin%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48427. %@NL@%
  48428. %@NL@%
  48429. %@NL@%
  48430. %@1@%%@AS@%Sincerity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48431. %@CR:SINCERITY       @%%@NL@%
  48432. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sincerity@%%@NL@%
  48433.      Sociability: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          25d6e1@%%@NL@%
  48434. %@NL@%
  48435. %@2@%It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid.%@NL@%
  48436. %@CR:SINCERShaw      @%%@NL@%
  48437.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  48438.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  48439. %@AS@%                                                                 Sincerity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48440. %@NL@%
  48441. %@NL@%
  48442. %@2@%Most remarks that are worth making are commonplace remarks.%@EH@%
  48443. The thing that makes them worth saying is that we really mean them.%@NL@%
  48444. %@CR:SINCERLynd      @%%@NL@%
  48445.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  48446.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  48447. %@AS@%                                                                 Sincerity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48448. %@NL@%
  48449. %@NL@%
  48450. %@2@%I only desire sincere relations with the worthiest of my acquaintance,%@EH@%
  48451. that they may give me an opportunity once in a year to speak the
  48452. truth.%@NL@%
  48453. %@CR:SINCERThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  48454.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  48455.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  48456. %@AS@%                                                                 Sincerity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48457. %@NL@%
  48458. %@NL@%
  48459. %@2@%Do not wonder if the common people speak more truly than those%@EH@%
  48460. of higher rank; for they speak with more safety.%@NL@%
  48461. %@CR:SINCERBacon     @%%@NL@%
  48462.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  48463.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  48464. %@AS@%                                                                 Sincerity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48465. %@NL@%
  48466. %@NL@%
  48467. %@NL@%
  48468. %@1@%%@AS@%The Sixties%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48469. %@CR:THESIXTIES      @%%@NL@%
  48470. %@2@%%@QR:The Sixties@%All that Swinging Sixties nonsense, we all thought it was passe%@EH@%
  48471. at the time.%@NL@%
  48472. %@CR:THESIXBailey1   @%%@NL@%
  48473.                                                     David Bailey (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  48474.                                                       British photographer%@NL@%
  48475. %@AS@%                                                               The Sixties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48476. %@NL@%
  48477. %@NL@%
  48478. %@2@%I was appalled when the San Francisco ethic didn't mushroom%@EH@%
  48479. and envelop the whole world into this loving community of acid
  48480. freaks. I was very naive.%@NL@%
  48481. %@CR:THESIXSlick     @%%@NL@%
  48482.                                                      Grace Slick (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  48483.                                                       American rock singer%@NL@%
  48484. %@AS@%                                                               The Sixties%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48485. %@NL@%
  48486. %@NL@%
  48487. %@NL@%
  48488. %@1@%%@AS@%Skepticism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48489. %@CR:SKEPTICISM      @%%@NL@%
  48490. %@2@%See:%@QR:Skepticism@%%@NL@%
  48491.      %@AB@%Doubt%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b3fe6@%%@NL@%
  48492. %@NL@%
  48493. %@2@%Skepticism is the chastity of the intellect.%@NL@%
  48494. %@CR:SKEPTISantayana @%%@NL@%
  48495.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  48496.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  48497. %@AS@%                                                                Skepticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48498. %@NL@%
  48499. %@NL@%
  48500. %@2@%It is by insisting on an impossible standard of perfection%@EH@%
  48501. that the sceptic makes himself secure.%@NL@%
  48502. %@CR:SKEPTIAyer      @%%@NL@%
  48503.                                                     A. J. Ayer (1910-1989)%@NL@%
  48504.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  48505. %@AS@%                                                                Skepticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48506. %@NL@%
  48507. %@NL@%
  48508. %@2@%Truth, Sir, is a cow, which will yield sceptics no more milk;%@EH@%
  48509. so they have gone to milk the bull.%@NL@%
  48510. %@CR:SKEPTIJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  48511.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  48512.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  48513. %@AS@%                                                                Skepticism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48514. %@NL@%
  48515. %@NL@%
  48516. %@NL@%
  48517. %@1@%%@AS@%Slander%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48518. %@CR:SLANDER         @%%@NL@%
  48519. %@2@%See:%@QR:Slander@%%@NL@%
  48520.      %@AB@%Gossip%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1131b5@%%@NL@%
  48521.      Satire: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:          237257@%%@NL@%
  48522. %@NL@%
  48523. %@2@%No character, however upright, is a match for constantly reiterated%@EH@%
  48524. attacks, however false.%@NL@%
  48525. %@CR:SLANDEHamilton  @%%@NL@%
  48526.                                             Alexander Hamilton (1755-1804)%@NL@%
  48527.                                                         American statesman%@NL@%
  48528. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48529. %@NL@%
  48530. %@NL@%
  48531. %@2@%I will make a bargain with the Democrats. If they will stop%@EH@%
  48532. telling lies about Republicans we will stop telling the truth about
  48533. them.%@NL@%
  48534. %@CR:SLANDEDepew     @%%@NL@%
  48535.                                                 Chauncey Depew (1834-1928)%@NL@%
  48536.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  48537. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48538. %@NL@%
  48539. %@NL@%
  48540. %@2@%The slanders poured down like Niagara. If you take into consideration%@EH@%
  48541. the setting - the war and the revolution - and the character
  48542. of the accused - revolutionary leaders of millions who were
  48543. conducting their party to the sovereign power - you can say
  48544. without exaggeration that July 1917 was the month of the most gigantic
  48545. slander in world history.%@NL@%
  48546. %@CR:SLANDETrotsky   @%%@NL@%
  48547.                                                   Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)%@NL@%
  48548.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  48549. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48550. %@NL@%
  48551. %@NL@%
  48552. %@2@%Lie lustily, some filth will stick.%@NL@%
  48553. %@CR:SLANDEHall4     @%%@NL@%
  48554.                                                    Thomas Hall (1610-1665)%@NL@%
  48555.                                                   English preacher, author%@NL@%
  48556. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48557. %@NL@%
  48558. %@NL@%
  48559. %@2@%Our disputants put me in mind of the scuttlefish that, when%@EH@%
  48560. he is unable to extricate himself, blackens the water about him
  48561. till he becomes invisible.%@NL@%
  48562. %@CR:SLANDEAddison   @%%@NL@%
  48563.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  48564.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  48565. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48566. %@NL@%
  48567. %@NL@%
  48568. %@2@%Calumny differs from most other injuries in this dreadful circumstance:%@EH@%
  48569. he who commits it can never repair it.%@NL@%
  48570. %@CR:SLANDEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  48571.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  48572.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  48573. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48574. %@NL@%
  48575. %@NL@%
  48576. %@2@%Slander-mongers and those who listen to slander, if I had my%@EH@%
  48577. way, would all be strung up, the talkers by the tongue, the listeners
  48578. by the ears.%@NL@%
  48579. %@CR:SLANDEPlautus   @%%@NL@%
  48580.                                                       Plautus (254-184 BC)%@NL@%
  48581.                                                           Roman playwright%@NL@%
  48582. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48583. %@NL@%
  48584. %@NL@%
  48585. %@2@%It is perfectly monstrous the way people go about nowadays%@EH@%
  48586. saying things against one, behind one's back, that are absolutely
  48587. and entirely true.%@NL@%
  48588. %@CR:SLANDEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  48589.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  48590.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  48591. %@AS@%                                                                   Slander%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48592. %@NL@%
  48593. %@NL@%
  48594. %@NL@%
  48595. %@1@%%@AS@%Slang%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48596. %@CR:SLANG           @%%@NL@%
  48597. %@2@%%@QR:Slang@%Never was such a cracked tin whistle played on the splendid%@EH@%
  48598. quarter-deck of the English spoken word.%@NL@%
  48599. %@CR:SLANG Connor    @%%@NL@%
  48600.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  48601.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  48602. %@AS@%                                                                     Slang%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48603. %@NL@%
  48604. %@NL@%
  48605. %@2@%All slang is metaphor, and all metaphor is poetry.%@NL@%
  48606. %@CR:SLANG Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  48607.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  48608.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  48609. %@AS@%                                                                     Slang%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48610. %@NL@%
  48611. %@NL@%
  48612. %@2@%Correct English is the slang of prigs who write history and%@EH@%
  48613. essays. And the strongest slang of all is the slang of poets.%@NL@%
  48614. %@CR:SLANG Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  48615.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  48616.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  48617. %@AS@%                                                                     Slang%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48618. %@NL@%
  48619. %@NL@%
  48620. %@2@%Slang is a language that rolls up its sleeves, spits on its%@EH@%
  48621. hands and goes to work.%@NL@%
  48622. %@CR:SLANG Sandburg  @%%@NL@%
  48623.                                                  Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  48624.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  48625. %@AS@%                                                                     Slang%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48626. %@NL@%
  48627. %@NL@%
  48628. %@2@%I know only two words of American slang, "swell" and "lousy."%@EH@%
  48629. I think "swell" is lousy, but "lousy" is swell.%@NL@%
  48630. %@CR:SLANG Priestley @%%@NL@%
  48631.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  48632.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  48633. %@AS@%                                                                     Slang%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48634. %@NL@%
  48635. %@NL@%
  48636. %@NL@%
  48637. %@1@%%@AS@%Slavery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48638. %@CR:SLAVERY         @%%@NL@%
  48639. %@2@%See:%@QR:Slavery@%%@NL@%
  48640.      Women: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          2be601@%%@NL@%
  48641. %@NL@%
  48642. %@2@%In all social systems there must be a class to do the mean%@EH@%
  48643. duties  . . .  It constitutes the very mudsills of society  . . . 
  48644. Fortunately for the South, she found a race adapted to that purpose
  48645.  . . .  We use them for that purpose and call them slaves.%@NL@%
  48646. %@CR:SLAVERHammond1  @%%@NL@%
  48647.                                                  J. H. Hammond (1807-1864)%@NL@%
  48648.                                                           American senator%@NL@%
  48649.                                                 speech to the Senate, 1858%@NL@%
  48650. %@AS@%                                                                   Slavery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48651. %@NL@%
  48652. %@NL@%
  48653. %@2@%I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that%@EH@%
  48654. his justice cannot sleep forever.%@NL@%
  48655. %@CR:SLAVERJefferson @%%@NL@%
  48656.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  48657.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  48658. %@AS@%                                                                   Slavery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48659. %@NL@%
  48660. %@NL@%
  48661. %@2@%Slavery is founded on the selfishness of man's nature - opposition%@EH@%
  48662. to it on his love of justice. These principles are in eternal antagonism;
  48663. and when brought into collision so fiercely as slavery extension
  48664. brings them, shocks and throes and convulsions must ceaselessly
  48665. follow.%@NL@%
  48666. %@CR:SLAVERLincoln   @%%@NL@%
  48667.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  48668.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  48669. %@AS@%                                                                   Slavery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48670. %@NL@%
  48671. %@NL@%
  48672. %@2@%Mister Ward, don't yur blud bile at the thawd that three million%@EH@%
  48673. and a half of your culled brethren air a clanking their chains
  48674. in the South? - Sez I, not a bile! Let 'em clank!%@NL@%
  48675. %@CR:SLAVERWard1     @%%@NL@%
  48676.                                                   Artemus Ward (1834-1867)%@NL@%
  48677.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  48678. %@AS@%                                                                   Slavery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48679. %@NL@%
  48680. %@NL@%
  48681. %@2@%The distinguishing sign of slavery is to have a price, and%@EH@%
  48682. to be bought for it.%@NL@%
  48683. %@CR:SLAVERRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  48684.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  48685.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  48686. %@AS@%                                                                   Slavery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48687. %@NL@%
  48688. %@NL@%
  48689. %@NL@%
  48690. %@1@%%@AS@%Sleep%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48691. %@CR:SLEEP           @%%@NL@%
  48692. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sleep@%%@NL@%
  48693.      %@AB@%Dreaming%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b4c95@%%@NL@%
  48694.      Life: %@AB@%Chamfort%@AE@%%@BO:          178b32@%%@NL@%
  48695.      Prayer: %@AB@%Baudelaire%@AE@%%@BO:          1fb49c@%%@NL@%
  48696.      Religion: %@AB@%Rabelais%@AE@%%@BO:          220ca4@%%@NL@%
  48697. %@NL@%
  48698.      %@2@%Sleep, dear Sleep, sweet harlot of the senses,%@NL@%
  48699.      Delilah of the spirit.%@NL@%
  48700. %@CR:SLEEP Morley1   @%%@NL@%
  48701.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  48702.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  48703. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48704. %@NL@%
  48705. %@NL@%
  48706. %@2@%All men whilst they are awake are in one common world: but%@EH@%
  48707. each of them, when he is asleep, is in a world of his own.%@NL@%
  48708. %@CR:SLEEP Plutarch  @%%@NL@%
  48709.                                                          Plutarch (46-120)%@NL@%
  48710.                                                 Greek essayist, biographer%@NL@%
  48711. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48712. %@NL@%
  48713. %@NL@%
  48714. %@2@%We term sleep a death  . . .  by which we may be literally said%@EH@%
  48715. to die daily; %@AI@%in fine,%@AE@% so like death, I dare not trust it without
  48716. my prayers.%@NL@%
  48717. %@CR:SLEEP Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  48718.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  48719.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  48720. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48721. %@NL@%
  48722. %@NL@%
  48723. %@2@%Sleep is when all the unsorted stuff comes flying out as from%@EH@%
  48724. a dustbin upset in a high wind.%@NL@%
  48725. %@CR:SLEEP Golding   @%%@NL@%
  48726.                                                  William Golding (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  48727.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  48728. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48729. %@NL@%
  48730. %@NL@%
  48731.      %@2@%Oh Sleep! it is a gentle thing,%@NL@%
  48732.      Beloved from pole to pole,%@NL@%
  48733.      To Mary Queen the praise be given!%@NL@%
  48734.      She sent the gentle sleep from Heaven,%@NL@%
  48735.      That slid into my soul.%@NL@%
  48736. %@CR:SLEEP Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  48737.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  48738.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48739. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48740. %@NL@%
  48741. %@NL@%
  48742. %@2@%Blessings on him that invented sleep! It covers a man, thoughts%@EH@%
  48743. and all, like a cloak; it is meat for the hungry, drink for the
  48744. thirsty, heat for the cold, and cold for the hot. It is the currency
  48745. with which everything may be purchased, and the balance that sets
  48746. even king and shepherd, simpleton and sage.%@NL@%
  48747. %@CR:SLEEP Cervantes @%%@NL@%
  48748.                                            Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616)%@NL@%
  48749.                                          Spanish novelist, dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48750. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48751. %@NL@%
  48752. %@NL@%
  48753. %@2@%We are not hypocrites in our sleep.%@NL@%
  48754. %@CR:SLEEP Hazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  48755.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  48756.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  48757. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48758. %@NL@%
  48759. %@NL@%
  48760. %@2@%Those no-sooner-have-I-touched-the-pillow people are past my%@EH@%
  48761. comprehension. There is something bovine about them.%@NL@%
  48762. %@CR:SLEEP Priestley @%%@NL@%
  48763.                                                J. B. Priestley (1894-1984)%@NL@%
  48764.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  48765. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48766. %@NL@%
  48767. %@NL@%
  48768.      %@2@%Come Sleep! Oh Sleep, the certain knot of peace,%@NL@%
  48769.      The baiting-place of wit, the balm of woe,%@NL@%
  48770.      The poor man's wealth, the prisoner's release,%@NL@%
  48771.      Th'indifferent judge between the high and low.%@NL@%
  48772. %@CR:SLEEP Sidney    @%%@NL@%
  48773.                                              Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)%@NL@%
  48774.                                              English poet, critic, soldier%@NL@%
  48775. %@AS@%                                                                     Sleep%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48776. %@NL@%
  48777. %@NL@%
  48778. %@NL@%
  48779. %@1@%%@AS@%Sloanes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48780. %@CR:SLOANES         @%%@NL@%
  48781. %@2@%%@QR:Sloanes@%The wealthy curled darlings of our nation.%@NL@%
  48782. %@CR:SLOANEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  48783.                                                         Brabantio, %@AI@%Othello%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48784.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  48785.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48786. %@AS@%                                                                   Sloanes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48787. %@NL@%
  48788. %@NL@%
  48789. %@2@%A fine puss-gentleman that's all perfume.%@NL@%
  48790. %@CR:SLOANECowper    @%%@NL@%
  48791.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  48792.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48793. %@AS@%                                                                   Sloanes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48794. %@NL@%
  48795. %@NL@%
  48796. %@2@%A clever, ugly man every now and then is successful with the%@EH@%
  48797. ladies, but a handsome fool is irresistible.%@NL@%
  48798. %@CR:SLOANEThackeray @%%@NL@%
  48799.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  48800.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  48801. %@AS@%                                                                   Sloanes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48802. %@NL@%
  48803. %@NL@%
  48804. %@NL@%
  48805. %@1@%%@AS@%Smells%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48806. %@CR:SMELLS          @%%@NL@%
  48807. %@2@%See:%@QR:Smells@%%@NL@%
  48808.      Defecation: %@AB@%Artaud%@AE@%%@BO:           a1e7c@%%@NL@%
  48809. %@NL@%
  48810.      %@2@%I counted two and seventy stenches,%@NL@%
  48811.      All well defined, and several stinks!%@NL@%
  48812. %@CR:SMELLSColeridge @%%@NL@%
  48813.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  48814.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48815.                                                                 of Cologne%@NL@%
  48816. %@AS@%                                                                    Smells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48817. %@NL@%
  48818. %@NL@%
  48819. %@2@%The rankest compound of villainous smell that ever offended%@EH@%
  48820. nostril.%@NL@%
  48821. %@CR:SMELLSShakespear@%%@NL@%
  48822.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  48823.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  48824. %@AS@%                                                                    Smells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48825. %@NL@%
  48826. %@NL@%
  48827. %@2@%Of nothing are you allowed to get the real odor or savor. Everything%@EH@%
  48828. is sterilized and wrapped in cellophane. The only odor which is
  48829. recognized and admitted as an odor is halitosis and of this all
  48830. Americans live in mortal dread.%@NL@%
  48831. %@CR:SMELLSMiller2   @%%@NL@%
  48832.                                                   Henry Miller (1891-1980)%@NL@%
  48833.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  48834. %@AS@%                                                                    Smells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48835. %@NL@%
  48836. %@NL@%
  48837. %@2@%The woman one loves always smells good.%@NL@%
  48838. %@CR:SMELLSdeGourmont@%%@NL@%
  48839.                                               Remy de Gourmont (1858-1915)%@NL@%
  48840.                                                    French critic, novelist%@NL@%
  48841. %@AS@%                                                                    Smells%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48842. %@NL@%
  48843. %@NL@%
  48844. %@NL@%
  48845. %@1@%%@AS@%Smoking%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48846. %@CR:SMOKING         @%%@NL@%
  48847. %@2@%%@QR:Smoking@%A custom loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful%@EH@%
  48848. to the brain, dangerous to the lungs, and in the black, stinking
  48849. fume thereof nearest resembling the horrible Stygian smoke of
  48850. the pit that is bottomless.%@NL@%
  48851. %@CR:SMOKINJamesI    @%%@NL@%
  48852.                                        King James I of England (1566-1625)%@NL@%
  48853. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48854. %@NL@%
  48855. %@NL@%
  48856. %@2@%There's nothing quite like tobacco; it's the passion of decent%@EH@%
  48857. folk, and whoever lives without tobacco doesn't deserve to live.%@NL@%
  48858. %@CR:SMOKINMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  48859.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  48860.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  48861. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48862. %@NL@%
  48863. %@NL@%
  48864. %@2@%The pipe, with solemn interposing puff,%@EH@%
  48865. Makes half a sentence at a time enough;
  48866. The dozing sages drop the drowsy strain,
  48867. Then pause, and puff - and speak, and
  48868. pause again.%@NL@%
  48869. %@CR:SMOKINCowper    @%%@NL@%
  48870.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  48871.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48872. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48873. %@NL@%
  48874. %@NL@%
  48875. %@2@%The believing we do something when we do nothing is the first%@EH@%
  48876. illusion of tobacco.%@NL@%
  48877. %@CR:SMOKINEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  48878.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  48879.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  48880. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48881. %@NL@%
  48882. %@NL@%
  48883. %@2@%Smokers, male and female, inject and excuse idleness in their%@EH@%
  48884. lives every time they light a cigarette.%@NL@%
  48885. %@CR:SMOKINColette   @%%@NL@%
  48886.                                                        Colette (1873-1954)%@NL@%
  48887.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  48888. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48889. %@NL@%
  48890. %@NL@%
  48891. %@2@%What joy in that light cloud!%@NL@%
  48892. %@CR:SMOKINWolfFerrar@%%@NL@%
  48893.                                           Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari (1876-1948)%@NL@%
  48894.                                                      Italo-German composer%@NL@%
  48895. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48896. %@NL@%
  48897. %@NL@%
  48898. %@2@%But when I don't smoke I scarcely feel as if I'm living. I%@EH@%
  48899. don't feel as if I'm living unless I'm killing myself.%@NL@%
  48900. %@CR:SMOKINHoban     @%%@NL@%
  48901.                                                    Russell Hoban (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  48902.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  48903. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48904. %@NL@%
  48905. %@NL@%
  48906. %@2@%I have every sympathy with the American who was so horrified%@EH@%
  48907. by what he had read of the effects of smoking that he gave up reading.%@NL@%
  48908. %@CR:SMOKINStrauss   @%%@NL@%
  48909.                               Henry G. Strauss, Lord Conesford (1892-1974)%@NL@%
  48910.                                                 British lawyer, politician%@NL@%
  48911. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48912. %@NL@%
  48913. %@NL@%
  48914. %@2@%I kissed my first woman and smoked my first cigarette on the%@EH@%
  48915. same day; I have never had time for tobacco since.%@NL@%
  48916. %@CR:SMOKINToscanini @%%@NL@%
  48917.                                               Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957)%@NL@%
  48918.                                                          Italian conductor%@NL@%
  48919. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48920. %@NL@%
  48921. %@NL@%
  48922. %@2@%Tobacco is the tomb of love.%@NL@%
  48923. %@CR:SMOKINDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  48924.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  48925.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  48926. %@AS@%                                                                   Smoking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48927. %@NL@%
  48928. %@NL@%
  48929. %@NL@%
  48930. %@1@%%@AS@%Smugness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48931. %@CR:SMUGNESS        @%%@NL@%
  48932. %@2@%%@QR:Smugness@%I do not object to Gladstone's always having the ace of trumps%@EH@%
  48933. up his sleeve, but only to his pretence that God had put it there.%@NL@%
  48934. %@CR:SMUGNELabouchere@%%@NL@%
  48935.                                               Henry Labouchere (1831-1912)%@NL@%
  48936.                                             English journalist, politician%@NL@%
  48937. %@AS@%                                                                  Smugness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48938. %@NL@%
  48939. %@NL@%
  48940. %@2@%Every man has a right to be conceited until he is successful.%@NL@%
  48941. %@CR:SMUGNEDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  48942.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  48943.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  48944. %@AS@%                                                                  Smugness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48945. %@NL@%
  48946. %@NL@%
  48947.      %@2@%And then in the fullness of joy and hope,%@NL@%
  48948.      Seemed washing his hands with invisible soap,%@NL@%
  48949.      In imperceptible water.%@NL@%
  48950. %@CR:SMUGNEHood      @%%@NL@%
  48951.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  48952.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48953. %@AS@%                                                                  Smugness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48954. %@NL@%
  48955. %@NL@%
  48956. %@2@%I seem to see looming between us that wincing, winsome face%@EH@%
  48957. discharging, as though from some suppurating wound of the spirit,
  48958. an unstaunchable ooze of sneers.%@NL@%
  48959. %@CR:SMUGNELambert   @%%@NL@%
  48960.                                                    J. W. Lambert (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  48961.                                    British author, journalist, broadcaster%@NL@%
  48962.                                                      of Malcolm Muggeridge%@NL@%
  48963. %@AS@%                                                                  Smugness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48964. %@NL@%
  48965. %@NL@%
  48966.      %@2@%Of all the horrid, hideous notes of woe,%@NL@%
  48967.      Sadder than owl-songs or the midnight blast,%@NL@%
  48968.      Is that portentous phrase, "I told you so."%@NL@%
  48969. %@CR:SMUGNEByron2    @%%@NL@%
  48970.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  48971.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  48972. %@AS@%                                                                  Smugness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48973. %@NL@%
  48974. %@NL@%
  48975. %@NL@%
  48976. %@1@%%@AS@%Snobbery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  48977. %@CR:SNOBBERY        @%%@NL@%
  48978. %@2@%See:%@QR:Snobbery@%%@NL@%
  48979.      Class: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           703b5@%%@NL@%
  48980. %@NL@%
  48981. %@2@%Snobbery - the "pox Britannica."%@NL@%
  48982. %@CR:SNOBBESampson   @%%@NL@%
  48983.                                                  Anthony Sampson (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  48984.                                                 British journalist, author%@NL@%
  48985. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48986. %@NL@%
  48987. %@NL@%
  48988. %@2@%It is impossible, in our condition of society, not to be sometimes%@EH@%
  48989. a Snob.%@NL@%
  48990. %@CR:SNOBBEThackeray @%%@NL@%
  48991.                                    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)%@NL@%
  48992.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  48993. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  48994. %@NL@%
  48995. %@NL@%
  48996. %@2@%Respectable means rich, and decent means poor. I should die%@EH@%
  48997. if I heard my family called decent.%@NL@%
  48998. %@CR:SNOBBEPeacock   @%%@NL@%
  48999.                                            Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866)%@NL@%
  49000.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  49001. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49002. %@NL@%
  49003. %@NL@%
  49004.      %@2@%Heaven grant him now some noble nook,%@NL@%
  49005.      For, rest his soul! he'd rather be%@NL@%
  49006.      Genteelly damn'd beside a Duke,%@NL@%
  49007.      Then sav'd in vulgar company.%@NL@%
  49008. %@CR:SNOBBEMoore5    @%%@NL@%
  49009.                                                   Thomas Moore (1779-1852)%@NL@%
  49010.                                                                 Irish poet%@NL@%
  49011. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49012. %@NL@%
  49013. %@NL@%
  49014. %@2@%Snobs talk as if they had begotten their own ancestors.%@NL@%
  49015. %@CR:SNOBBEAgar      @%%@NL@%
  49016.                                                   Herbert Agar (1897-1980)%@NL@%
  49017.                                                American author, journalist%@NL@%
  49018. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49019. %@NL@%
  49020. %@NL@%
  49021. %@2@%Philistine - a term of contempt applied by prigs to the%@EH@%
  49022. rest of their species.%@NL@%
  49023. %@CR:SNOBBEStephen2  @%%@NL@%
  49024.                                             Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904)%@NL@%
  49025.                                                British author, philosopher%@NL@%
  49026. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49027. %@NL@%
  49028. %@NL@%
  49029. %@2@%Laughter would be bereaved if snobbery died.%@NL@%
  49030. %@CR:SNOBBEUstinov   @%%@NL@%
  49031.                                                    Peter Ustinov (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  49032.                                                 British author, actor, wit%@NL@%
  49033. %@AS@%                                                                  Snobbery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49034. %@NL@%
  49035. %@NL@%
  49036. %@NL@%
  49037. %@1@%%@AS@%Snubs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49038. %@CR:SNUBS           @%%@NL@%
  49039. %@2@%See:%@QR:Snubs@%%@NL@%
  49040.      Sensitivity: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          24aee2@%%@NL@%
  49041. %@NL@%
  49042. %@2@%He was as irrepressibly good-humoured under ghastly snubs as%@EH@%
  49043. a parliamentary candidate on the hustings.%@NL@%
  49044. %@CR:SNUBS Hardy     @%%@NL@%
  49045.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  49046.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  49047. %@AS@%                                                                     Snubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49048. %@NL@%
  49049. %@NL@%
  49050. %@2@%Mrs Montagu has dropt me. Now, Sir, there are people whom one%@EH@%
  49051. should like very well to drop, but would not wish to be dropt by.%@NL@%
  49052. %@CR:SNUBS Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  49053.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  49054.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  49055. %@AS@%                                                                     Snubs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49056. %@NL@%
  49057. %@NL@%
  49058. %@NL@%
  49059. %@1@%%@AS@%Sociability%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49060. %@CR:SOCIABILITY     @%%@NL@%
  49061. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sociability@%%@NL@%
  49062.      %@AB@%Company%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           771e2@%%@NL@%
  49063.      Dinner Parties: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:           a95a8@%; %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           a9989@%; %@AB@%Patmore%@AE@%%@BO:           aa900@%; %@AB@%Virgil%@AE@%%@BO:           ab80a@%%@NL@%
  49064.      %@AB@%Friendliness%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           fce5b@%%@NL@%
  49065. %@NL@%
  49066. %@2@%On clean-shirt day he went abroad, and paid visits.%@NL@%
  49067. %@CR:SOCIABBoswell   @%%@NL@%
  49068.                                                  James Boswell (1740-1795)%@NL@%
  49069.                                                        Scottish biographer%@NL@%
  49070.                                                          of Doctor Johnson%@NL@%
  49071. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49072. %@NL@%
  49073. %@NL@%
  49074. %@2@%Of all animals of prey, man is the only sociable one. Every%@EH@%
  49075. one of us preys upon his neighbour, and yet we herd together.%@NL@%
  49076. %@CR:SOCIABGay       @%%@NL@%
  49077.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  49078.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  49079. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49080. %@NL@%
  49081. %@NL@%
  49082. %@2@%What men call social virtue, good fellowship, is commonly but%@EH@%
  49083. the virtue of pigs in a litter, which lie close together to keep
  49084. each other warm.%@NL@%
  49085. %@CR:SOCIABThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  49086.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  49087.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  49088. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49089. %@NL@%
  49090. %@NL@%
  49091. %@2@%Scoundrels are always sociable.%@NL@%
  49092. %@CR:SOCIABSchopenhau@%%@NL@%
  49093.                                            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)%@NL@%
  49094.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  49095. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49096. %@NL@%
  49097. %@NL@%
  49098. %@2@%If you wish to appear agreeable in society you must consent%@EH@%
  49099. to be taught many things which you already know.%@NL@%
  49100. %@CR:SOCIABLavater   @%%@NL@%
  49101.                                          Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801)%@NL@%
  49102.                                                         Swiss divine, poet%@NL@%
  49103. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49104. %@NL@%
  49105. %@NL@%
  49106. %@2@%Be really reserved with everybody, and seemingly reserved with%@EH@%
  49107. nobody; for it is disagreeable to %@AI@%seem%@AE@% reserved, and dangerous
  49108. %@AI@%not%@AE@% to be.%@NL@%
  49109. %@CR:SOCIABChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  49110.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  49111.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  49112. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49113. %@NL@%
  49114. %@NL@%
  49115. %@2@%He that will live in this world must be endowed with the three%@EH@%
  49116. rare qualities of dissimulation, equivocation, and mental reservation.%@NL@%
  49117. %@CR:SOCIABBehn      @%%@NL@%
  49118.                                                     Aphra Behn (1640-1689)%@NL@%
  49119.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  49120. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49121. %@NL@%
  49122. %@NL@%
  49123. %@2@%The most exhausting thing in life is being insincere. That%@EH@%
  49124. is why so much social life is exhausting.%@NL@%
  49125. %@CR:SOCIABLindbergh @%%@NL@%
  49126.                                            Anne Morrow Lindbergh (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  49127.                                                    American poet, essayist%@NL@%
  49128. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49129. %@NL@%
  49130. %@NL@%
  49131. %@2@%Nothing so much prevents our being natural as the desire to%@EH@%
  49132. seem so.%@NL@%
  49133. %@CR:SOCIABLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  49134.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  49135.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  49136. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49137. %@NL@%
  49138. %@NL@%
  49139. %@2@%Once the realization is accepted that even between the %@AI@%closest%@AE@%%@EH@%
  49140. human beings infinite distances continue to exist, a wonderful
  49141. living side by side can grow up, if they succeed in loving the
  49142. distance between them which makes it possible for each to see the
  49143. other whole against the sky.%@NL@%
  49144. %@CR:SOCIABRilke     @%%@NL@%
  49145.                                             Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)%@NL@%
  49146.                                                                German poet%@NL@%
  49147.                          trans. Jane Barnard Green and M. D. Herter Norton%@NL@%
  49148. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49149. %@NL@%
  49150. %@NL@%
  49151. %@2@%Making a film with Garbo does not constitute an introduction.%@NL@%
  49152. %@CR:SOCIABMontgomery@%%@NL@%
  49153.                                              Robert Montgomery (1904-1981)%@NL@%
  49154.                                                   American actor, director%@NL@%
  49155. %@AS@%                                                               Sociability%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49156. %@NL@%
  49157. %@NL@%
  49158. %@NL@%
  49159. %@1@%%@AS@%Socialism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49160. %@CR:SOCIALISM       @%%@NL@%
  49161. %@2@%See:%@QR:Socialism@%%@NL@%
  49162.      Capitalism: %@AB@%Churchill%@AE@%%@BO:           511c6@%%@NL@%
  49163.      %@AB@%Communism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           75702@%%@NL@%
  49164.      Economics: %@AB@%Galbraith%@AE@%%@BO:           be854@%%@NL@%
  49165.      %@AB@%Marxism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          19b75a@%%@NL@%
  49166.      Trade Unions: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          28f07c@%%@NL@%
  49167. %@NL@%
  49168. %@2@%For the right moment you must wait, as Fabius did most patiently,%@EH@%
  49169. when warring against Hannibal, though many censured his delays;
  49170. but when the time comes you must strike hard, as Fabius did, or
  49171. your waiting will be in vain.%@NL@%
  49172. %@CR:SOCIALPodmore   @%%@NL@%
  49173.                                                  Frank Podmore (1855-1910)%@NL@%
  49174.                            English psychist, founder of the Fabian Society%@NL@%
  49175.                                          from Fabian Society's first tract%@NL@%
  49176. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49177. %@NL@%
  49178. %@NL@%
  49179. %@2@%Socialism can only arrive by bicycle.%@NL@%
  49180. %@CR:SOCIALGallo     @%%@NL@%
  49181.                                         Jose Antonio Viera Gallo (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  49182.                                 Chilean politician in Allende's government%@NL@%
  49183. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49184. %@NL@%
  49185. %@NL@%
  49186. %@2@%We cannot outline socialism. What socialism will look like%@EH@%
  49187. when it takes on its final form we do not know and cannot say.%@NL@%
  49188. %@CR:SOCIALLenin     @%%@NL@%
  49189.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  49190.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  49191. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49192. %@NL@%
  49193. %@NL@%
  49194. %@2@%In socialism there should always remain a trace of the anarchist%@EH@%
  49195. and the libertarian, and not too much of the prig and the prude.%@NL@%
  49196. %@CR:SOCIALCrosland  @%%@NL@%
  49197.                                               Anthony Crosland (1918-1977)%@NL@%
  49198.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  49199. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49200. %@NL@%
  49201. %@NL@%
  49202. %@2@%Whether considered as a doctrine, or as an historical fact,%@EH@%
  49203. or as a movement, socialism, if it really remains socialism, cannot
  49204. be brought into harmony with the dogmas of the Catholic church
  49205.  . . .  Religious socialism, Christian socialism, are expressions
  49206. implying a contradiction in terms.%@NL@%
  49207. %@CR:SOCIALPopePiusXI@%%@NL@%
  49208.                                                   Pope Pius XI (1857-1939)%@NL@%
  49209. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49210. %@NL@%
  49211. %@NL@%
  49212. %@2@% As with the Christian religion, the worst advertisement for%@EH@%
  49213. Socialism is its adherents.%@NL@%
  49214. %@CR:SOCIALOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  49215.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  49216.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49217. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49218. %@NL@%
  49219. %@NL@%
  49220. %@2@%Essentially Socialism is no more and no less than a criticism%@EH@%
  49221. of the idea of property in the light of the public good.%@NL@%
  49222. %@CR:SOCIALWells     @%%@NL@%
  49223.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  49224.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  49225. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49226. %@NL@%
  49227. %@NL@%
  49228. %@2@%Socialism proposes no adequate substitute for the motive of%@EH@%
  49229. enlightened selfishness that today is at the basis of all human
  49230. labor and effort, enterprise and new activity.%@NL@%
  49231. %@CR:SOCIALTaft2     @%%@NL@%
  49232.                                            William Howard Taft (1857-1930)%@NL@%
  49233.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  49234. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49235. %@NL@%
  49236. %@NL@%
  49237. %@2@%By concentrating on what is good in people, by appealing to%@EH@%
  49238. their idealism and their sense of justice, and by asking them to
  49239. put their faith in the future, socialists put themselves at a severe
  49240. disadvantage.%@NL@%
  49241. %@CR:SOCIALMcEwan    @%%@NL@%
  49242.                                                       Ian McEwan (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  49243.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49244. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49245. %@NL@%
  49246. %@NL@%
  49247. %@2@%Socialists make the mistake of confusing individual worth with%@EH@%
  49248. success. They believe you cannot allow people to succeed in case
  49249. those who fail feel worthless.%@NL@%
  49250. %@CR:SOCIALBaker1    @%%@NL@%
  49251.                                                    Kenneth Baker (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  49252.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  49253. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49254. %@NL@%
  49255. %@NL@%
  49256. %@2@%Socialism is simply the degenerate capitalism of bankrupt capitalists.%@EH@%
  49257. Its one genuine object is to get more money for its professors.%@NL@%
  49258. %@CR:SOCIALMencken   @%%@NL@%
  49259.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  49260.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  49261. %@AS@%                                                                 Socialism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49262. %@NL@%
  49263. %@NL@%
  49264. %@NL@%
  49265. %@1@%%@AS@%Society%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49266. %@CR:SOCIETY         @%%@NL@%
  49267. %@2@%%@QR:Society@%Society can only exist on the basis that there is some amount%@EH@%
  49268. of polished lying and that no one says exactly what he thinks.%@NL@%
  49269. %@CR:SOCIETLinYutang @%%@NL@%
  49270.                                                     Lin Yutang (1895-1976)%@NL@%
  49271.                                                             Chinese writer%@NL@%
  49272. %@AS@%                                                                   Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49273. %@NL@%
  49274. %@NL@%
  49275. %@2@%Society is a masked ball, where every one hides his real character,%@EH@%
  49276. and reveals it in hiding.%@NL@%
  49277. %@CR:SOCIETEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  49278.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  49279.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  49280. %@AS@%                                                                   Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49281. %@NL@%
  49282. %@NL@%
  49283. %@2@%What are we going to get out of it, what's it all in aid of - is%@EH@%
  49284. it really just for the sake of a gloved hand waving at you from
  49285. a golden coach?%@NL@%
  49286. %@CR:SOCIETOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  49287.                                                      Jean, %@AI@%The Entertainer%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49288.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  49289.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  49290. %@AS@%                                                                   Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49291. %@NL@%
  49292. %@NL@%
  49293. %@2@%Society everywhere is in conspiracy against the manhood of%@EH@%
  49294. every one of its members  . . .  The virtue in most requests is conformity.
  49295. Self-reliance is its aversion. It loves not realities and creators,
  49296. but names and customs.%@NL@%
  49297. %@CR:SOCIETEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  49298.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  49299.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  49300. %@AS@%                                                                   Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49301. %@NL@%
  49302. %@NL@%
  49303. %@2@%Never speak disrespectfully of Society, Algernon. Only people%@EH@%
  49304. who can't get into it do that.%@NL@%
  49305. %@CR:SOCIETWilde     @%%@NL@%
  49306.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  49307.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  49308. %@AS@%                                                                   Society%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49309. %@NL@%
  49310. %@NL@%
  49311. %@NL@%
  49312. %@1@%%@AS@%Solemnity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49313. %@CR:SOLEMNITY       @%%@NL@%
  49314. %@2@%See:%@QR:Solemnity@%%@NL@%
  49315.      Ceremony: %@AB@%Lichtenberg%@AE@%%@BO:           576b1@%%@NL@%
  49316.      Historians: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          12cb71@%%@NL@%
  49317. %@NL@%
  49318. %@2@%Never make people laugh. If you would succeed in life, you%@EH@%
  49319. must be solemn, solemn as an ass. All the great monuments are built
  49320. over solemn asses.%@NL@%
  49321. %@CR:SOLEMNCorwin    @%%@NL@%
  49322.                                                  Thomas Corwin (1794-1865)%@NL@%
  49323.                                                        American politician%@NL@%
  49324. %@AS@%                                                                 Solemnity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49325. %@NL@%
  49326. %@NL@%
  49327. %@2@%No one is exempt from talking nonsense: the misfortune is to%@EH@%
  49328. do it solemnly.%@NL@%
  49329. %@CR:SOLEMNMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  49330.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  49331.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  49332. %@AS@%                                                                 Solemnity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49333. %@NL@%
  49334. %@NL@%
  49335. %@2@%Nothing in the world annoys a man more than not being taken%@EH@%
  49336. seriously.%@NL@%
  49337. %@CR:SOLEMNValdes    @%%@NL@%
  49338.                                                 Palacio Valdes (1853-1938)%@NL@%
  49339.                                                           Spanish novelist%@NL@%
  49340. %@AS@%                                                                 Solemnity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49341. %@NL@%
  49342. %@NL@%
  49343. %@2@%Solemn people are generally humbugs.%@NL@%
  49344. %@CR:SOLEMNRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  49345.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  49346.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  49347. %@AS@%                                                                 Solemnity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49348. %@NL@%
  49349. %@NL@%
  49350. %@2@%In the last analysis ability is commonly found to consist mainly%@EH@%
  49351. in a high degree of solemnity.%@NL@%
  49352. %@CR:SOLEMNBierce    @%%@NL@%
  49353.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  49354.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  49355. %@AS@%                                                                 Solemnity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49356. %@NL@%
  49357. %@NL@%
  49358. %@NL@%
  49359. %@1@%%@AS@%Solitude%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49360. %@CR:SOLITUDE        @%%@NL@%
  49361. %@2@%See:%@QR:Solitude@%%@NL@%
  49362.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Vaughan%@AE@%%@BO:           11cd9@%%@NL@%
  49363.      Atheism: %@AB@%Osborne%@AE@%%@BO:           35fe9@%%@NL@%
  49364.      Hell: %@AB@%Eliot%@AE@%%@BO:          1261fa@%%@NL@%
  49365.      %@AB@%Hermits%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          127d95@%%@NL@%
  49366. %@NL@%
  49367. %@2@%I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude.%@NL@%
  49368. %@CR:SOLITUThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  49369.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  49370.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  49371. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49372. %@NL@%
  49373. %@NL@%
  49374. %@2@%Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or%@EH@%
  49375. a god.%@NL@%
  49376. %@CR:SOLITUBacon     @%%@NL@%
  49377.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  49378.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  49379. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49380. %@NL@%
  49381. %@NL@%
  49382. %@2@%There are some solitary wretches, who seem to have left the%@EH@%
  49383. rest of mankind only as Eve left Adam, to meet the devil in private.%@NL@%
  49384. %@CR:SOLITUPope      @%%@NL@%
  49385.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  49386.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  49387. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49388. %@NL@%
  49389. %@NL@%
  49390. %@2@%A solitude is the audience-chamber of God.%@NL@%
  49391. %@CR:SOLITULandor    @%%@NL@%
  49392.                                           Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864)%@NL@%
  49393.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  49394. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49395. %@NL@%
  49396. %@NL@%
  49397. %@2@%The greatest thing in the world is to know how to be on your%@EH@%
  49398. own.%@NL@%
  49399. %@CR:SOLITUMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  49400.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  49401.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  49402. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49403. %@NL@%
  49404. %@NL@%
  49405. %@2@%In solitude, where we are LEAST alone.%@NL@%
  49406. %@CR:SOLITUByron2    @%%@NL@%
  49407.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  49408.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  49409. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49410. %@NL@%
  49411. %@NL@%
  49412. %@2@%Solitude gives birth to the original in us, to beauty unfamiliar%@EH@%
  49413. and perilous - to poetry. But also, it gives birth to the opposite:
  49414. to the perverse, the illicit, the absurd.%@NL@%
  49415. %@CR:SOLITUMann      @%%@NL@%
  49416.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  49417.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  49418. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49419. %@NL@%
  49420. %@NL@%
  49421. %@2@%Solitude is un-American%@NL@%
  49422. %@CR:SOLITUJong      @%%@NL@%
  49423.                                                       Erica Jong (b. 1942)%@NL@%
  49424.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  49425. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49426. %@NL@%
  49427. %@NL@%
  49428. %@2@%One can acquire everything in solitude except character.%@NL@%
  49429. %@CR:SOLITUStendhal  @%%@NL@%
  49430.                                                       Stendhal (1783-1842)%@NL@%
  49431.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  49432. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49433. %@NL@%
  49434. %@NL@%
  49435. %@2@%Solitude is to the mind what fasting is to the body, fatal%@EH@%
  49436. if it is too prolonged, and yet necessary.%@NL@%
  49437. %@CR:SOLITUMarquisVau@%%@NL@%
  49438.                                   Luc, Marquis de Vauvenargues (1715-1747)%@NL@%
  49439.                                                            French moralist%@NL@%
  49440. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49441. %@NL@%
  49442. %@NL@%
  49443. %@2@%Solitude is dangerous to reason, without being favourable to%@EH@%
  49444. virtue  . . .  Remember that the solitary mortal is certainly luxurious,
  49445. probably superstitious, and possibly mad.%@NL@%
  49446. %@CR:SOLITUJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  49447.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  49448.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  49449. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49450. %@NL@%
  49451. %@NL@%
  49452. %@2@%Solitude is the mother of anxieties.%@NL@%
  49453. %@CR:SOLITUPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  49454.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  49455.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  49456. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49457. %@NL@%
  49458. %@NL@%
  49459. %@2@%Perhaps even one's feelings get tired, when one is alone with%@EH@%
  49460. oneself.%@NL@%
  49461. %@CR:SOLITUBetti     @%%@NL@%
  49462.                                                      Ugo Betti (1892-1953)%@NL@%
  49463.                                                         Italian playwright%@NL@%
  49464. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49465. %@NL@%
  49466. %@NL@%
  49467.      %@2@%Ships that pass in the night, and speak each other in passing,%@NL@%
  49468.      Only a signal shown, and a distant voice in the darkness;%@NL@%
  49469.      So on the ocean of life, we pass and speak one another.%@NL@%
  49470.      Only a look and a voice, then darkness again and a silence.%@NL@%
  49471. %@CR:SOLITULongfellow@%%@NL@%
  49472.                                     Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)%@NL@%
  49473.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  49474. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49475. %@NL@%
  49476. %@NL@%
  49477. %@2@%Life without a friend is death without a witness.%@NL@%
  49478. %@CR:SOLITULongfellow@%%@NL@%
  49479.                                                            Spanish proverb%@NL@%
  49480. %@AS@%                                                                  Solitude%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49481. %@NL@%
  49482. %@NL@%
  49483. %@NL@%
  49484. %@1@%%@AS@%Song%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49485. %@CR:SONG            @%%@NL@%
  49486. %@2@%See:%@QR:Song@%%@NL@%
  49487.      Music: %@AB@%Hill%@AE@%%@BO:          1b4d51@%%@NL@%
  49488. %@NL@%
  49489. %@2@%It is the best of all trades to make songs, and the second%@EH@%
  49490. best to sing them.%@NL@%
  49491. %@CR:SONG  Belloc    @%%@NL@%
  49492.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  49493.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49494. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49495. %@NL@%
  49496. %@NL@%
  49497. %@2@%Song: the licensed medium for bawling in public things too%@EH@%
  49498. silly or sacred to be uttered in ordinary speech.%@NL@%
  49499. %@CR:SONG  Herford   @%%@NL@%
  49500.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  49501.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  49502. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49503. %@NL@%
  49504. %@NL@%
  49505. %@2@%These days, what isn't worth saying is sung.%@NL@%
  49506. %@CR:SONG  Beaumarcha@%%@NL@%
  49507.                                         Pierre de Beaumarchais (1732-1799)%@NL@%
  49508.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  49509. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49510. %@NL@%
  49511. %@NL@%
  49512. %@2@%Odd life! must one swear to the truth of a song?%@NL@%
  49513. %@CR:SONG  Prior     @%%@NL@%
  49514.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  49515.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  49516. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49517. %@NL@%
  49518. %@NL@%
  49519.      %@2@%That's the wise thrush; he sings each song twice over,%@NL@%
  49520.      Lest you should think he never could recapture%@NL@%
  49521.      The first fine careless rapture!%@NL@%
  49522. %@CR:SONG  Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  49523.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  49524.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  49525. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49526. %@NL@%
  49527. %@NL@%
  49528. %@2@%I can't stand to sing the same song the same way two nights%@EH@%
  49529. in succession. If you can, then it ain't music, it's close order
  49530. drill, or exercise or yodeling or something, not music.%@NL@%
  49531. %@CR:SONG  Holiday   @%%@NL@%
  49532.                                                 Billie Holiday (1915-1959)%@NL@%
  49533.                                                       American jazz singer%@NL@%
  49534. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49535. %@NL@%
  49536. %@NL@%
  49537. %@2@%When Satan makes impure verses, Allah sends a divine tune to%@EH@%
  49538. cleanse them.%@NL@%
  49539. %@CR:SONG  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  49540.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  49541.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  49542. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49543. %@NL@%
  49544. %@NL@%
  49545. %@2@%I would rather be remembered by a song than by a victory.%@NL@%
  49546. %@CR:SONG  Smith2    @%%@NL@%
  49547.                                                Alexander Smith (1830-1867)%@NL@%
  49548.                                                              Scottish poet%@NL@%
  49549. %@AS@%                                                                      Song%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49550. %@NL@%
  49551. %@NL@%
  49552. %@NL@%
  49553. %@1@%%@AS@%The Soul%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49554. %@CR:THESOUL         @%%@NL@%
  49555. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Soul@%%@NL@%
  49556.      Anxiety: %@AB@%Haldane%@AE@%%@BO:           22714@%%@NL@%
  49557.      Certainty: %@AB@%Meredith%@AE@%%@BO:           57f81@%%@NL@%
  49558.      Conformity: %@AB@%Woolf%@AE@%%@BO:           7bcaa@%%@NL@%
  49559.      The Cosmos: %@AB@%Charles%@AE@%%@BO:           86351@%%@NL@%
  49560.      Immortality: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:          148748@%%@NL@%
  49561.      Night: %@AB@%Fitzgerald%@AE@%%@BO:          1be158@%%@NL@%
  49562.      Unhappiness: %@AB@%Carlyle%@AE@%%@BO:          29bb66@%%@NL@%
  49563. %@NL@%
  49564. %@2@%The soul is a troublesome possession, and when man developed%@EH@%
  49565. it he lost the Garden of Eden.%@NL@%
  49566. %@CR:THESOUMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  49567.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  49568.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49569. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49570. %@NL@%
  49571. %@NL@%
  49572. %@2@%Most people sell their souls, and live with a good conscience%@EH@%
  49573. on the proceeds.%@NL@%
  49574. %@CR:THESOUSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  49575.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  49576.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  49577. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49578. %@NL@%
  49579. %@NL@%
  49580. %@2@%A beautiful soul has no other merit than its existence.%@NL@%
  49581. %@CR:THESOUSchiller  @%%@NL@%
  49582.                                         Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805)%@NL@%
  49583.                                                     German dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  49584. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49585. %@NL@%
  49586. %@NL@%
  49587. %@2@%The soul is the body and the body is the soul. They tell us%@EH@%
  49588. they are different because they want to persuade us that we can
  49589. keep our souls if we let them make slaves of our bodies.%@NL@%
  49590. %@CR:THESOUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  49591.                                                    Ellie, %@AI@%Heartbreak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49592.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  49593.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  49594. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49595. %@NL@%
  49596. %@NL@%
  49597.      %@2@%The soul's a sort of sentimental wife,%@NL@%
  49598.      That prays and whimpers of the higher life.%@NL@%
  49599. %@CR:THESOULeGallienn@%%@NL@%
  49600.                                           Richard Le Gallienne (1866-1947)%@NL@%
  49601.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  49602. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49603. %@NL@%
  49604. %@NL@%
  49605. %@2@%Instead of being at the mercy of wild beasts, earthquakes,%@EH@%
  49606. landslides, and inundations, modern man is battered by the elemental
  49607. forces of his own psyche. This is the World Power that vastly
  49608. exceeds all other powers on earth. The Age of Enlightenment, which
  49609. stripped nature and human institutions of gods, overlooked the
  49610. God of Terror who dwells in the human soul.%@NL@%
  49611. %@CR:THESOUJung      @%%@NL@%
  49612.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  49613.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  49614. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49615. %@NL@%
  49616. %@NL@%
  49617. %@2@%Every soul is a melody which needs renewing.%@NL@%
  49618. %@CR:THESOUMallarme  @%%@NL@%
  49619.                                              Stephane Mallarme (1842-1898)%@NL@%
  49620.                                                      French Symbolist poet%@NL@%
  49621. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49622. %@NL@%
  49623. %@NL@%
  49624. %@2@%Why do you hasten to remove anything which hurts your eye,%@EH@%
  49625. while if something affects your soul you postpone the cure until
  49626. next year?%@NL@%
  49627. %@CR:THESOUHorace    @%%@NL@%
  49628.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  49629.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  49630. %@AS@%                                                                  The Soul%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49631. %@NL@%
  49632. %@NL@%
  49633. %@NL@%
  49634. %@1@%%@AS@%South Africa%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49635. %@CR:SOUTHAFRICA     @%%@NL@%
  49636. %@2@%%@QR:South Africa@%I am fifty-two years of age. I am a bishop in the Anglican%@EH@%
  49637. Church, and a few people might be constrained to say that I was
  49638. reasonably responsible. In the land of my birth I cannot vote.
  49639. And why? Because he or she possesses that wonderful biological
  49640. attribute - a white skin.%@NL@%
  49641. %@CR:SOUTHATutu      @%%@NL@%
  49642.                                              Bishop Desmond Tutu (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  49643.                                             South African religious leader%@NL@%
  49644. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49645. %@NL@%
  49646. %@NL@%
  49647. %@2@%Is not our role to stand for the one thing which means our%@EH@%
  49648. own salvation here but with which it will also be possible to save
  49649. the world, and with which Europe will be able to save itself, namely
  49650. the preservation of the white man and his state?%@NL@%
  49651. %@CR:SOUTHAVerwoerd  @%%@NL@%
  49652.                                               Hendrik Verwoerd (1901-1966)%@NL@%
  49653.                                   South African politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  49654. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49655. %@NL@%
  49656. %@NL@%
  49657. %@2@%Christ in this country would quite likely have been arrested%@EH@%
  49658. under the Suppression of Communism Act.%@NL@%
  49659. %@CR:SOUTHABlank     @%%@NL@%
  49660.                                                 Joost de Blank (1908-1968)%@NL@%
  49661.                                        Archbishop of Cape Town (1957-1963)%@NL@%
  49662. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49663. %@NL@%
  49664. %@NL@%
  49665. %@2@%As far as criticism is concerned, we don't resent that unless%@EH@%
  49666. it is absolutely biased, as it is in most cases.%@NL@%
  49667. %@CR:SOUTHAVorster   @%%@NL@%
  49668.                                                   John Vorster (1915-1983)%@NL@%
  49669.                                   South African politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  49670. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49671. %@NL@%
  49672. %@NL@%
  49673. %@2@%The drama can only be brought to its climax in one of two ways - through%@EH@%
  49674. the selective brutality of terrorism or the impartial horrors of
  49675. war.%@NL@%
  49676. %@CR:SOUTHAKaunda    @%%@NL@%
  49677.                                                   Kenneth Kaunda (b. 1924)%@NL@%
  49678.                                               Zambian statesman, president%@NL@%
  49679.                                     of the situation in South Africa, 1980%@NL@%
  49680. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49681. %@NL@%
  49682. %@NL@%
  49683. %@2@%Together, hand in hand, with our matches and our necklaces,%@EH@%
  49684. we shall liberate this country.%@NL@%
  49685. %@CR:SOUTHAMandela   @%%@NL@%
  49686.                                                   Winnie Mandela (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  49687.                                             South African political leader%@NL@%
  49688. %@AS@%                                                              South Africa%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49689. %@NL@%
  49690. %@NL@%
  49691. %@NL@%
  49692. %@1@%%@AS@%Space%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49693. %@CR:SPACE           @%%@NL@%
  49694. %@2@%See:%@QR:Space@%%@NL@%
  49695.      The Cosmos: %@AB@%von Schiller%@AE@%%@BO:           85e5f@%; %@AB@%Lamb%@AE@%%@BO:           85b75@%%@NL@%
  49696. %@NL@%
  49697. %@2@%Space is the stature of God.%@NL@%
  49698. %@CR:SPACE Joubert   @%%@NL@%
  49699.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  49700.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  49701. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49702. %@NL@%
  49703. %@NL@%
  49704. %@2@%The eternal silence of those inifinite spaces terrifies me.%@NL@%
  49705. %@CR:SPACE Pascal    @%%@NL@%
  49706.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  49707.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  49708. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49709. %@NL@%
  49710. %@NL@%
  49711. %@2@%Space isn't remote at all. It's only an hour's drive away if%@EH@%
  49712. your car could go straight upwards.%@NL@%
  49713. %@CR:SPACE Hoyle2    @%%@NL@%
  49714.                                                   Sir Fred Hoyle (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  49715.                                                         British astronomer%@NL@%
  49716. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49717. %@NL@%
  49718. %@NL@%
  49719. %@2@%Walking in space, man has never looked more puny or more significant.%@NL@%
  49720. %@CR:SPACE Chase     @%%@NL@%
  49721.                                                  Alexander Chase (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  49722.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  49723. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49724. %@NL@%
  49725. %@NL@%
  49726. %@2@%Today we can no more predict what use mankind may make of the%@EH@%
  49727. Moon than could Columbus have imagined the future of the continent
  49728. he had discovered.%@NL@%
  49729. %@CR:SPACE Clarke1   @%%@NL@%
  49730.                                                 Arthur C. Clarke (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  49731.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49732. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49733. %@NL@%
  49734. %@NL@%
  49735. %@2@%Space flights are merely an escape, a fleeing away from oneself,%@EH@%
  49736. because it is easier to go to Mars or to the moon than it is to
  49737. penetrate one's own being.%@NL@%
  49738. %@CR:SPACE Jung      @%%@NL@%
  49739.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  49740.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  49741. %@AS@%                                                                     Space%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49742. %@NL@%
  49743. %@NL@%
  49744. %@NL@%
  49745. %@1@%%@AS@%Speech%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49746. %@CR:SPEECH          @%%@NL@%
  49747. %@2@%See:%@QR:Speech@%%@NL@%
  49748.      Conversation: %@AB@%Holmes%@AE@%%@BO:           83730@%%@NL@%
  49749.      %@AB@%Words%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2c16e8@%%@NL@%
  49750. %@NL@%
  49751. %@2@%Language most shews a man: Speak, that I may see thee.%@NL@%
  49752. %@CR:SPEECHJonson    @%%@NL@%
  49753.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  49754.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  49755. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49756. %@NL@%
  49757. %@NL@%
  49758. %@2@%Speech was given to man to disguise his thoughts.%@NL@%
  49759. %@CR:SPEECHTalleyrand@%%@NL@%
  49760.                                      Charles, Count Talleyrand (1754-1838)%@NL@%
  49761.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  49762. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49763. %@NL@%
  49764. %@NL@%
  49765. %@2@%Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned with salt.%@NL@%
  49766. %@CR:SPEECHSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  49767.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  49768.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  49769. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49770. %@NL@%
  49771. %@NL@%
  49772. %@2@%Many a man's tongue broke his nose.%@NL@%
  49773. %@CR:SPEECHMacManus  @%%@NL@%
  49774.                                                Seumas MacManus (1869-1960)%@NL@%
  49775.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  49776. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49777. %@NL@%
  49778. %@NL@%
  49779. %@2@%The stroke of the whip maketh marks in the flesh: but the stroke%@EH@%
  49780. of the tongue breaketh the bones. Many have fallen by the edge
  49781. of the sword; but not so many as have fallen by the tongue.%@NL@%
  49782. %@CR:SPEECHApocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  49783.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  49784. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49785. %@NL@%
  49786. %@NL@%
  49787.      %@2@%Speak clearly, if you speak at all;%@NL@%
  49788.      Carve every word before you let it fall.%@NL@%
  49789. %@CR:SPEECHHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  49790.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  49791.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  49792. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49793. %@NL@%
  49794. %@NL@%
  49795. %@2@%If your face is not clean, wash it: don't cut your head off.%@EH@%
  49796. If your diction is slipshod and impure, correct and purify it:
  49797. don't throw it away and make shift for the rest of your life with
  49798. a hideous affectation accent, false emphases, unmeaning pauses,
  49799. aggravating slowness, ill-conditioned gravity, and perverse resolution
  49800. to "get it from the chest" and make it sound as if you got it
  49801. from the cellar. Of course, if you are a professional humbug - a
  49802. bishop or a judge, for instance - then the case is different;
  49803. for the salary makes it seem worth your while to dehumanize yourself
  49804. and pretend to belong to a different species.%@NL@%
  49805. %@CR:SPEECHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  49806.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  49807.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  49808. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49809. %@NL@%
  49810. %@NL@%
  49811. %@2@%I don't want to talk grammar. I want to talk like a lady.%@NL@%
  49812. %@CR:SPEECHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  49813.                                                            Liza, %@AI@%Pygmalion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49814.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  49815.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  49816. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49817. %@NL@%
  49818. %@NL@%
  49819. %@2@%All speech, written or spoken, is a dead language, until it%@EH@%
  49820. finds a willing and prepared hearer.%@NL@%
  49821. %@CR:SPEECHStevenson2@%%@NL@%
  49822.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  49823.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  49824. %@AS@%                                                                    Speech%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49825. %@NL@%
  49826. %@NL@%
  49827. %@NL@%
  49828. %@1@%%@AS@%Speeches%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  49829. %@CR:SPEECHES        @%%@NL@%
  49830. %@2@%See:%@QR:Speeches@%%@NL@%
  49831.      Action: %@AB@%Gaboriau%@AE@%%@BO:            41b9@%%@NL@%
  49832.      Guests: %@AB@%Nietzsche%@AE@%%@BO:          11de61@%%@NL@%
  49833.      Passion: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          1ce7b4@%%@NL@%
  49834.      %@AB@%Preaching%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1fc7d1@%%@NL@%
  49835.      %@AB@%Understanding%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2995c3@%%@NL@%
  49836. %@NL@%
  49837. %@2@%Let thy speech be short, comprehending much in few words.%@NL@%
  49838. %@CR:SPEECHApocrypha4@%%@NL@%
  49839.                                                Aprocrypha, Ecclesiasticus
  49840. %@NL@%
  49841. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49842. %@NL@%
  49843. %@NL@%
  49844. %@2@%What orators lack in depth they make up to you in length.%@NL@%
  49845. %@CR:SPEECHMontesquie@%%@NL@%
  49846.                                         Charles de Montesquieu (1689-1755)%@NL@%
  49847.                                         French philosopher, writer, lawyer%@NL@%
  49848. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49849. %@NL@%
  49850. %@NL@%
  49851. %@2@%Most people have ears, but few have judgement; tickle those%@EH@%
  49852. ears, and depend upon it, you will catch their judgements, such
  49853. as they are.%@NL@%
  49854. %@CR:SPEECHChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  49855.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  49856.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  49857. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49858. %@NL@%
  49859. %@NL@%
  49860. %@2@%A good indignation makes an excellent speech.%@NL@%
  49861. %@CR:SPEECHEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  49862.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  49863.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  49864. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49865. %@NL@%
  49866. %@NL@%
  49867. %@2@%Strong men delight in forceful speech. Soldiers relish a speaker%@EH@%
  49868. delivering himself a little unreservedly.%@NL@%
  49869. %@CR:SPEECHKeble     @%%@NL@%
  49870.                                                     John Keble (1792-1866)%@NL@%
  49871.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  49872. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49873. %@NL@%
  49874. %@NL@%
  49875. %@2@%Begin low, speak slow; take fire, rise higher; when most impressed%@EH@%
  49876. be self-possessed; at the end wax warm, and sit down in a storm.%@NL@%
  49877. %@CR:SPEECHKeble     @%%@NL@%
  49878.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  49879. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49880. %@NL@%
  49881. %@NL@%
  49882.      %@2@%Adepts in the speaking trade%@NL@%
  49883.      Keep a cough by them ready made.%@NL@%
  49884. %@CR:SPEECHChurchill1@%%@NL@%
  49885.                                              Charles Churchill (1731-1764)%@NL@%
  49886.                                                    English clergyman, poet%@NL@%
  49887. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49888. %@NL@%
  49889. %@NL@%
  49890. %@2@%He can best be described as one of those orators who, before%@EH@%
  49891. they get up, do not know what they are going to say; when they
  49892. are speaking, do not know what they are saying; and, when they
  49893. have sat down, do not know what they have said.%@NL@%
  49894. %@CR:SPEECHChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  49895.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  49896.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  49897. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49898. %@NL@%
  49899. %@NL@%
  49900. %@2@%He's a wonderful talker who has the art of telling you nothing%@EH@%
  49901. in a great harangue.%@NL@%
  49902. %@CR:SPEECHMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  49903.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  49904.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  49905. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49906. %@NL@%
  49907. %@NL@%
  49908. %@2@%The object of oratory alone is not truth, but persuasion.%@NL@%
  49909. %@CR:SPEECHMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  49910.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  49911.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  49912. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49913. %@NL@%
  49914. %@NL@%
  49915. %@2@%When a subject is highly controversial  . . .  one cannot hope%@EH@%
  49916. to tell the truth. One can only show how one came to hold whatever
  49917. opinion one does hold. One can only give one's audience the chance
  49918. of drawing their own conclusions as they observe the limitations,
  49919. the prejudices, the idiosyncrasies of the speaker.%@NL@%
  49920. %@CR:SPEECHWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  49921.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  49922.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  49923. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49924. %@NL@%
  49925. %@NL@%
  49926. %@2@%She plunged into a sea of platitudes and with the powerful%@EH@%
  49927. breast stroke of a Channel swimmer made her confident way towards
  49928. the white cliffs of the obvious.%@NL@%
  49929. %@CR:SPEECHMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  49930.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  49931.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  49932. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49933. %@NL@%
  49934. %@NL@%
  49935. %@2@%He rose without a friend, and sat down without an enemy.%@NL@%
  49936. %@CR:SPEECHGrattan   @%%@NL@%
  49937.                                                  Henry Grattan (1746-1820)%@NL@%
  49938.                                                           Irish politician%@NL@%
  49939.                                        of a member of the Irish Parliament%@NL@%
  49940. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49941. %@NL@%
  49942. %@NL@%
  49943. %@2@%All you need to do to get a speech out of Mr Choate is to open%@EH@%
  49944. his mouth, drop in a dinner, and up comes a speech.%@NL@%
  49945. %@CR:SPEECHDepew     @%%@NL@%
  49946.                                                 Chauncey Depew (1834-1928)%@NL@%
  49947.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  49948.                                             of Ambassador Joseph H. Choate%@NL@%
  49949. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49950. %@NL@%
  49951. %@NL@%
  49952. %@2@%How many grave speeches which have surprised, shocked, and%@EH@%
  49953. directed the nation, have been made by Great Men too soon after
  49954. a noble dinner, words winged by the Press without an accompanying
  49955. and explanatory wine list.%@NL@%
  49956. %@CR:SPEECHTomlinson @%%@NL@%
  49957.                                                H. M. Tomlinson (1873-1958)%@NL@%
  49958.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  49959. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49960. %@NL@%
  49961. %@NL@%
  49962. %@2@%It usually takes more than three weeks to prepare a good impromptu%@EH@%
  49963. speech.%@NL@%
  49964. %@CR:SPEECHTwain     @%%@NL@%
  49965.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  49966.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  49967. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49968. %@NL@%
  49969. %@NL@%
  49970. %@2@%Why doesn't the fellow who says, "I'm no speechmaker," let%@EH@%
  49971. it go at that instead of giving a demonstration.%@NL@%
  49972. %@CR:SPEECHHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  49973.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  49974.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  49975. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49976. %@NL@%
  49977. %@NL@%
  49978. %@2@%I do not object to people looking at their watches when I am%@EH@%
  49979. speaking. But I strongly object when they start shaking them to
  49980. make certain they are still going.%@NL@%
  49981. %@CR:SPEECHBirkett   @%%@NL@%
  49982.                                                   Lord Birkett (1883-1962)%@NL@%
  49983.                                         British lawyer, Liberal politician%@NL@%
  49984. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49985. %@NL@%
  49986. %@NL@%
  49987. %@2@%You know very well that after a certain age a man has only%@EH@%
  49988. one speech.%@NL@%
  49989. %@CR:SPEECHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  49990.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  49991.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  49992. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  49993. %@NL@%
  49994. %@NL@%
  49995.      %@2@%He hears%@NL@%
  49996.      On all sides, from innumerable tongues,%@NL@%
  49997.      A dismal universal hiss, the sound%@NL@%
  49998.      Of public scorn.%@NL@%
  49999. %@CR:SPEECHMilton    @%%@NL@%
  50000.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  50001.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  50002. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50003. %@NL@%
  50004. %@NL@%
  50005. %@2@%The great orator always shows a dash of contempt for the opinions%@EH@%
  50006. of his audience.%@NL@%
  50007. %@CR:SPEECHHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  50008.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  50009.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  50010. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50011. %@NL@%
  50012. %@NL@%
  50013. %@2@%I never failed to convince an audience that the best thing%@EH@%
  50014. they could do was to go way.%@NL@%
  50015. %@CR:SPEECHPeacock   @%%@NL@%
  50016.                                            Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866)%@NL@%
  50017.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  50018. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50019. %@NL@%
  50020. %@NL@%
  50021. %@2@%A speech is like a love affair: any fool can start one but%@EH@%
  50022. to end it requires considerable skill.%@NL@%
  50023. %@CR:SPEECHMancroft  @%%@NL@%
  50024.                                                  Lord Mancroft (1914-1987)%@NL@%
  50025.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  50026. %@AS@%                                                                  Speeches%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50027. %@NL@%
  50028. %@NL@%
  50029. %@NL@%
  50030. %@1@%%@AS@%Spirituality%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50031. %@CR:SPIRITUALITY    @%%@NL@%
  50032. %@2@%%@QR:Spirituality@%Zen does not confuse spirituality with thinking about God while%@EH@%
  50033. one is peeling potatoes. Zen spirituality is just to peel the potatoes.%@NL@%
  50034. %@CR:SPIRITWatts2    @%%@NL@%
  50035.                                                     Alan Watts (1915-1973)%@NL@%
  50036.                                               American philosopher, author%@NL@%
  50037. %@AS@%                                                              Spirituality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50038. %@NL@%
  50039. %@NL@%
  50040. %@2@%Yoga in Mayfair or Fifth Avenue, or in any other place which%@EH@%
  50041. is on the telephone, is a spiritual fake.%@NL@%
  50042. %@CR:SPIRITJung      @%%@NL@%
  50043.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  50044.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  50045. %@AS@%                                                              Spirituality%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50046. %@NL@%
  50047. %@NL@%
  50048. %@NL@%
  50049. %@1@%%@AS@%Spontaneity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50050. %@CR:SPONTANEITY     @%%@NL@%
  50051. %@2@%See:%@QR:Spontaneity@%%@NL@%
  50052.      Speeches: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          267de3@%%@NL@%
  50053. %@NL@%
  50054. %@2@%The most decisive actions of our life - I mean those that%@EH@%
  50055. are most likely to decide the whole course of our future - are,
  50056. more often than not, unconsidered.%@NL@%
  50057. %@CR:SPONTAGide      @%%@NL@%
  50058.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  50059.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  50060. %@AS@%                                                               Spontaneity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50061. %@NL@%
  50062. %@NL@%
  50063. %@NL@%
  50064. %@1@%%@AS@%Sport%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50065. %@CR:SPORT           @%%@NL@%
  50066. %@2@%See:%@QR:Sport@%%@NL@%
  50067.      %@AB@%Cricket%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           8caf2@%%@NL@%
  50068.      Exercise: %@AB@%Coward%@AE@%%@BO:           d7168@%%@NL@%
  50069.      Foul play: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           f8e63@%; %@AB@%Stewart%@AE@%%@BO:           f8caf@%%@NL@%
  50070.      %@AB@%Golf%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          111532@%%@NL@%
  50071.      Individuality: %@AB@%Advertisement%@AE@%%@BO:          14b0d1@%%@NL@%
  50072.      University: %@AB@%Bowra%@AE@%%@BO:          29d919@%%@NL@%
  50073.      War: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:          2aa6ee@%%@NL@%
  50074.      Winning: %@AB@%Mansell%@AE@%%@BO:          2b41d7@%%@NL@%
  50075. %@NL@%
  50076.      %@2@%%@AI@%Duas tantem res anxius optat,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50077.      Panem et Circenses.%@NL@%
  50078. %@NL@%
  50079. %@2@%Two things only the people anxiously desire, bread and the
  50080. Circus games.%@NL@%
  50081. %@CR:SPORT Juvenal   @%%@NL@%
  50082.                                                        Juvenal (c. 40-130)%@NL@%
  50083.                                                         Roman satiric poet%@NL@%
  50084. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50085. %@NL@%
  50086. %@NL@%
  50087. %@2@%A ballplayer's got to be kept hungry to become a big-leaguer.%@EH@%
  50088. That's why no boy from a rich family ever made the big leagues.%@NL@%
  50089. %@CR:SPORT DiMaggio  @%%@NL@%
  50090.                                                     Joe DiMaggio (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  50091.                                                   American baseball player%@NL@%
  50092. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50093. %@NL@%
  50094. %@NL@%
  50095. %@2@%Show me a good loser in professional sports and I'll show you%@EH@%
  50096. an idiot. Show me a good sportsman and I'll show you a player I'm
  50097. looking to trade.%@NL@%
  50098. %@CR:SPORT Durocher  @%%@NL@%
  50099.                                                     Leo Durocher (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  50100.                                                  American baseball manager%@NL@%
  50101. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50102. %@NL@%
  50103. %@NL@%
  50104. %@2@%I don't like that Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. It's a shame%@EH@%
  50105. a great guy like Humphrey had to be named after it.%@NL@%
  50106. %@CR:SPORT Martin1   @%%@NL@%
  50107.                                                   Billy Martin (1928-1989)%@NL@%
  50108.                                                  American baseball manager%@NL@%
  50109. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50110. %@NL@%
  50111. %@NL@%
  50112. %@2@%I don't think I can be expected to take seriously any game%@EH@%
  50113. which takes less than three days to reach its conclusion.%@NL@%
  50114. %@CR:SPORT Stoppard  @%%@NL@%
  50115.                                                     Tom Stoppard (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  50116.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  50117.                                                                on baseball%@NL@%
  50118. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50119. %@NL@%
  50120. %@NL@%
  50121. %@2@%It's like standing under a cold shower tearing up five pound%@EH@%
  50122. notes.%@NL@%
  50123. %@CR:SPORT Heath     @%%@NL@%
  50124.                                                     Edward Heath (b. 1916)%@NL@%
  50125.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  50126.                                                            of ocean-racing%@NL@%
  50127. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50128. %@NL@%
  50129. %@NL@%
  50130. %@2@%All fighters are prostitutes and all promoters are pimps.%@NL@%
  50131. %@CR:SPORT Holmes3   @%%@NL@%
  50132.                                                     Larry Holmes (b. 1949)%@NL@%
  50133.                                                   American boxing champion%@NL@%
  50134. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50135. %@NL@%
  50136. %@NL@%
  50137. %@2@%New Yorkers love it when you spill your guts out there. Spill%@EH@%
  50138. your guts at Wimbledon and they make you stop and clean it up.%@NL@%
  50139. %@CR:SPORT Connors   @%%@NL@%
  50140.                                                    Jimmy Connors (b. 1952)%@NL@%
  50141.                                                     American tennis player%@NL@%
  50142. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50143. %@NL@%
  50144. %@NL@%
  50145. %@2@%If you're up against a girl with big boobs, bring her to the%@EH@%
  50146. net and make her hit backhand volleys.%@NL@%
  50147. %@CR:SPORT King2     @%%@NL@%
  50148.                                                  Billy Jean King (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  50149.                                                     American tennis player%@NL@%
  50150. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50151. %@NL@%
  50152. %@NL@%
  50153. %@2@%A lot of beautiful girls may be made available to you before%@EH@%
  50154. the game. Such traps are aimed at destabilizing you. You are going
  50155. to war, and must be on the lookout for all kinds of weapons.%@NL@%
  50156. %@CR:SPORT Mtetwa    @%%@NL@%
  50157.                                                                King Mtetwa%@NL@%
  50158.                                      Swaziland Home Affairs Minister, 1985%@NL@%
  50159.                          to Highlanders FC players before match in Lesotho%@NL@%
  50160. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50161. %@NL@%
  50162. %@NL@%
  50163. %@2@%Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound%@EH@%
  50164. up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules
  50165. and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it
  50166. is war minus the shooting.%@NL@%
  50167. %@CR:SPORT Orwell    @%%@NL@%
  50168.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  50169.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  50170. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50171. %@NL@%
  50172. %@NL@%
  50173. %@2@%Games are for people who can neither read nor think.%@NL@%
  50174. %@CR:SPORT Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  50175.                                                     The Lady, %@AI@%On the Rocks%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50176.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  50177.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  50178. %@AS@%                                                                     Sport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50179. %@NL@%
  50180. %@NL@%
  50181. %@NL@%
  50182. %@1@%%@AS@%Stardom%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50183. %@CR:STARDOM         @%%@NL@%
  50184. %@2@%See:%@QR:Stardom@%%@NL@%
  50185.      %@AB@%Fame%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           e0ef3@%%@NL@%
  50186. %@NL@%
  50187. %@2@%Thy name is an ointment poured forth, therefore do the virgins%@EH@%
  50188. love thee.%@NL@%
  50189. %@CR:STARDOBibleSongo@%%@NL@%
  50190.                                                     Bible, Song of Solomon%@NL@%
  50191. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50192. %@NL@%
  50193. %@NL@%
  50194. %@2@%They are trying to make me into a fixed star. I am an irregular%@EH@%
  50195. planet.%@NL@%
  50196. %@CR:STARDOLuther    @%%@NL@%
  50197.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  50198.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  50199. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50200. %@NL@%
  50201. %@NL@%
  50202. %@2@%Being a star has made it possible for me to get insulted in%@EH@%
  50203. places where the average Negro could never hope to get insulted.%@NL@%
  50204. %@CR:STARDODavis4    @%%@NL@%
  50205.                                                  Sammy Davis Jr. (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  50206.                                                       American entertainer%@NL@%
  50207. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50208. %@NL@%
  50209. %@NL@%
  50210. %@2@%You're not a star until they can spell your name in Karachi.%@NL@%
  50211. %@CR:STARDOBogart    @%%@NL@%
  50212.                                                Humphrey Bogart (1899-1957)%@NL@%
  50213.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  50214. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50215. %@NL@%
  50216. %@NL@%
  50217. %@2@%I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six. Mother took%@EH@%
  50218. me to see him in a department store and he asked for my autograph.%@NL@%
  50219. %@CR:STARDOBlack     @%%@NL@%
  50220.                             Shirley Temple Black, Shirley Temple (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  50221.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  50222. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50223. %@NL@%
  50224. %@NL@%
  50225. %@2@%God makes stars. I just produce them.%@NL@%
  50226. %@CR:STARDOGoldwyn   @%%@NL@%
  50227.                                                 Samuel Goldwyn (1882-1974)%@NL@%
  50228.                                                     American film producer%@NL@%
  50229. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50230. %@NL@%
  50231. %@NL@%
  50232. %@2@%In America I had two secretaries - one for autographs and%@EH@%
  50233. the other for locks of hair. Within six months one had died of
  50234. writer's cramp, and the other was completely bald.%@NL@%
  50235. %@CR:STARDOWilde     @%%@NL@%
  50236.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  50237.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  50238. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50239. %@NL@%
  50240. %@NL@%
  50241. %@2@%One thing about being successful is that I stopped being afraid%@EH@%
  50242. of dying. Once you're a star you're dead already. You're embalmed.%@NL@%
  50243. %@CR:STARDOHoffman1  @%%@NL@%
  50244.                                                   Dustin Hoffman (b. 1937)%@NL@%
  50245.                                                             American actor%@NL@%
  50246. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50247. %@NL@%
  50248. %@NL@%
  50249. %@2@%It's nice to be a part of history but people should get it%@EH@%
  50250. right. I may not be perfect, but I'm bloody close.%@NL@%
  50251. %@CR:STARDORotten    @%%@NL@%
  50252.                                        John Lydon, Johnny Rotten (b. 1957)%@NL@%
  50253.                                                     British punk rock star%@NL@%
  50254. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50255. %@NL@%
  50256. %@NL@%
  50257. %@2@%There is not a more unhappy being than a superannuated idol.%@NL@%
  50258. %@CR:STARDOAddison   @%%@NL@%
  50259.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  50260.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  50261. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50262. %@NL@%
  50263. %@NL@%
  50264. %@2@%If I'm such a legend, then why am I so lonely? If I'm such%@EH@%
  50265. a legend, then why do I sit at home for hours staring at the damned
  50266. telephone, hoping it's out of order, even calling the operator
  50267. asking her if she's %@AI@%sure%@AE@% it's not out of order?%@NL@%
  50268. %@CR:STARDOGarland   @%%@NL@%
  50269.                                                   Judy Garland (1922-1969)%@NL@%
  50270.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  50271. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50272. %@NL@%
  50273. %@NL@%
  50274. %@2@%On stage I make love to 25,000 people; then I go home alone.%@NL@%
  50275. %@CR:STARDOJoplin    @%%@NL@%
  50276.                                                   Janis Joplin (1943-1970)%@NL@%
  50277.                                                            American singer%@NL@%
  50278. %@AS@%                                                                   Stardom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50279. %@NL@%
  50280. %@NL@%
  50281. %@NL@%
  50282. %@1@%%@AS@%Staring%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50283. %@CR:STARING         @%%@NL@%
  50284. %@2@%See:%@QR:Staring@%%@NL@%
  50285.      Idleness: %@AB@%Davies%@AE@%%@BO:          1440a2@%%@NL@%
  50286. %@NL@%
  50287.      %@2@%Oh! Death will find me long before%@NL@%
  50288.      I tire%@NL@%
  50289.      Of watching you.%@NL@%
  50290. %@CR:STARINBrooke    @%%@NL@%
  50291.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  50292.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  50293. %@AS@%                                                                   Staring%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50294. %@NL@%
  50295. %@NL@%
  50296. %@2@%I have known a vast quantity of nonsense talked about bad men%@EH@%
  50297. not looking you in the face. Don't trust that conventional idea.
  50298. Dishonesty will stare honesty out of countenance any day in the
  50299. week if there is anything to be got by it.%@NL@%
  50300. %@CR:STARINDickens   @%%@NL@%
  50301.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  50302.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  50303. %@AS@%                                                                   Staring%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50304. %@NL@%
  50305. %@NL@%
  50306. %@NL@%
  50307. %@1@%%@AS@%The State%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50308. %@CR:THESTATE        @%%@NL@%
  50309. %@2@%See:%@QR:The State@%%@NL@%
  50310.      Force: %@AB@%Kaunda%@AE@%%@BO:           f681d@%%@NL@%
  50311. %@NL@%
  50312. %@2@%The state includes the dead, the living, and the coming generations.%@NL@%
  50313. %@CR:THESTABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  50314.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  50315.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  50316. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50317. %@NL@%
  50318. %@NL@%
  50319. %@2@%The State is a collection of officials, different for different%@EH@%
  50320. purposes, drawing comfortable incomes so long as the %@AI@%status quo%@AE@%
  50321. is preserved. The only alteration they are likely to desire in
  50322. the %@AI@%status quo%@AE@% is an increase of bureaucracy and of the power
  50323. of bureaucrats.%@NL@%
  50324. %@CR:THESTARussell1  @%%@NL@%
  50325.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  50326.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  50327. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50328. %@NL@%
  50329. %@NL@%
  50330. %@2@%A state without the means of some change is without the means%@EH@%
  50331. of its own conservation.%@NL@%
  50332. %@CR:THESTABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  50333.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  50334.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  50335. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50336. %@NL@%
  50337. %@NL@%
  50338. %@2@%The state  . . .  is the most flagrant negation, the most cynical%@EH@%
  50339. and complete negation of humanity.%@NL@%
  50340. %@CR:THESTABakunin   @%%@NL@%
  50341.                                                Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876)%@NL@%
  50342.                                                 Russian political theorist%@NL@%
  50343. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50344. %@NL@%
  50345. %@NL@%
  50346. %@2@%The word %@AI@%state%@AE@% is identical with the word %@AI@%war%@AE@%.%@NL@%
  50347. %@CR:THESTAKropotkin @%%@NL@%
  50348.                                                P. A. Kropotkin (1842-1912)%@NL@%
  50349.                                                          Russian anarchist%@NL@%
  50350. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50351. %@NL@%
  50352. %@NL@%
  50353. %@2@%The obligation of subjects to the sovereign is understood to%@EH@%
  50354. last as long, and no longer, than the power lasteth by which he
  50355. is able to protect them.%@NL@%
  50356. %@CR:THESTAHobbes    @%%@NL@%
  50357.                                                  Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)%@NL@%
  50358.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  50359. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50360. %@NL@%
  50361. %@NL@%
  50362. %@2@%If the state is strong, it crushes us. If it is weak, we perish.%@NL@%
  50363. %@CR:THESTAValery    @%%@NL@%
  50364.                                                    Paul Valery (1871-1945)%@NL@%
  50365.                                                      French poet, essayist%@NL@%
  50366. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50367. %@NL@%
  50368. %@NL@%
  50369. %@2@%While the state exists there is no freedom; when there is freedom%@EH@%
  50370. there will be no state.%@NL@%
  50371. %@CR:THESTALenin     @%%@NL@%
  50372.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  50373.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  50374. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50375. %@NL@%
  50376. %@NL@%
  50377. %@2@%The state is not abolished, it withers away.%@NL@%
  50378. %@CR:THESTAEngels    @%%@NL@%
  50379.                                               Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)%@NL@%
  50380.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  50381. %@AS@%                                                                 The State%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50382. %@NL@%
  50383. %@NL@%
  50384. %@NL@%
  50385. %@1@%%@AS@%Statistics%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50386. %@CR:STATISTICS      @%%@NL@%
  50387. %@2@%See:%@QR:Statistics@%%@NL@%
  50388.      Facts: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           dcece@%%@NL@%
  50389.      Genocide: %@AB@%Stalin%@AE@%%@BO:          109a2e@%%@NL@%
  50390. %@NL@%
  50391. %@2@%There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.%@NL@%
  50392. %@CR:STATISDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  50393.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  50394.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  50395. %@AS@%                                                                Statistics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50396. %@NL@%
  50397. %@NL@%
  50398. %@2@%Statistics are like alienists - they will testify for either%@EH@%
  50399. side.%@NL@%
  50400. %@CR:STATISLaGuardia @%%@NL@%
  50401.                                            Fiorello La Guardia (1882-1947)%@NL@%
  50402.                                     American politician, mayor of New York%@NL@%
  50403. %@AS@%                                                                Statistics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50404. %@NL@%
  50405. %@NL@%
  50406. %@2@%He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts - for%@EH@%
  50407. support rather than illumination.%@NL@%
  50408. %@CR:STATISLang      @%%@NL@%
  50409.                                                    Andrew Lang (1844-1912)%@NL@%
  50410.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  50411. %@AS@%                                                                Statistics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50412. %@NL@%
  50413. %@NL@%
  50414. %@2@%I could prove God statistically.%@NL@%
  50415. %@CR:STATISGallup    @%%@NL@%
  50416.                                                  George Gallup (1901-1984)%@NL@%
  50417.                                            American statistician, pollster%@NL@%
  50418. %@AS@%                                                                Statistics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50419. %@NL@%
  50420. %@NL@%
  50421. %@2@%I always find that statistics are hard to swallow and impossible%@EH@%
  50422. to digest. The only one I can ever remember is that if all the
  50423. people who go to sleep in church were laid end to end they would
  50424. be a lot more comfortable.%@NL@%
  50425. %@CR:STATISTaft1     @%%@NL@%
  50426.                                                         Mrs. Robert A.Taft%@NL@%
  50427.                                                wife of American politician%@NL@%
  50428. %@AS@%                                                                Statistics%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50429. %@NL@%
  50430. %@NL@%
  50431. %@NL@%
  50432. %@1@%%@AS@%Status%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50433. %@CR:STATUS          @%%@NL@%
  50434. %@2@%See:%@QR:Status@%%@NL@%
  50435.      America: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           1a462@%%@NL@%
  50436.      Leisure: %@AB@%Veblen%@AE@%%@BO:          173181@%%@NL@%
  50437. %@NL@%
  50438. %@2@%If we all wore crowns the kings would go bare-headed.%@NL@%
  50439. %@CR:STATUSBenson    @%%@NL@%
  50440.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  50441.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  50442. %@AS@%                                                                    Status%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50443. %@NL@%
  50444. %@NL@%
  50445. %@2@%It is only middle-class people who, quite mistakenly, imagine%@EH@%
  50446. that a lively pursuit of the latest in reading or painting will
  50447. advance their status in the world.%@NL@%
  50448. %@CR:STATUSMcCarthy2 @%%@NL@%
  50449.                                                  Mary McCarthy (1912-1989)%@NL@%
  50450.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  50451. %@AS@%                                                                    Status%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50452. %@NL@%
  50453. %@NL@%
  50454. %@2@%I don't know of anything better than a woman if you want to%@EH@%
  50455. spend money where it'll show.%@NL@%
  50456. %@CR:STATUSHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  50457.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  50458.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  50459. %@AS@%                                                                    Status%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50460. %@NL@%
  50461. %@NL@%
  50462. %@2@%It is the superfluous things for which men sweat.%@NL@%
  50463. %@CR:STATUSSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  50464.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  50465.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  50466. %@AS@%                                                                    Status%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50467. %@NL@%
  50468. %@NL@%
  50469. %@NL@%
  50470. %@1@%%@AS@%The Status Quo%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50471. %@CR:THESTATUSQUO    @%%@NL@%
  50472. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Status Quo@%%@NL@%
  50473.      Inequality: %@AB@%Alexander%@AE@%%@BO:          14bbc1@%; %@AB@%Orwell%@AE@%%@BO:          14bdb8@%%@NL@%
  50474.      The State: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          26c52b@%%@NL@%
  50475. %@NL@%
  50476. %@2@%The powers that be are ordained of God.%@NL@%
  50477. %@CR:THESTASaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  50478.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  50479.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  50480. %@AS@%                                                            The Status Quo%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50481. %@NL@%
  50482. %@NL@%
  50483. %@NL@%
  50484. %@1@%%@AS@%Strangers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50485. %@CR:STRANGERS       @%%@NL@%
  50486. %@2@%%@QR:Strangers@%I do desire we may be better strangers.%@NL@%
  50487. %@CR:STRANGShakespear@%%@NL@%
  50488.                                                    Orlando, %@AI@%As You Like It%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50489.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  50490.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  50491. %@AS@%                                                                 Strangers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50492. %@NL@%
  50493. %@NL@%
  50494. %@2@%I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.%@NL@%
  50495. %@CR:STRANGWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  50496.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  50497.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  50498. %@AS@%                                                                 Strangers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50499. %@NL@%
  50500. %@NL@%
  50501. %@2@%Men always talk about the most important things to perfect%@EH@%
  50502. strangers. In the perfect stranger we perceive man himself;
  50503. the image of God is not disguised by resemblances to an uncle or
  50504. doubts of the wisdom of a moustache.%@NL@%
  50505. %@CR:STRANGChesterton@%%@NL@%
  50506.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  50507.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  50508. %@AS@%                                                                 Strangers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50509. %@NL@%
  50510. %@NL@%
  50511. %@NL@%
  50512. %@1@%%@AS@%Strength%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50513. %@CR:STRENGTH        @%%@NL@%
  50514. %@2@%See:%@QR:Strength@%%@NL@%
  50515.      Power: %@AB@%Wordsworth%@AE@%%@BO:          1f8aea@%%@NL@%
  50516. %@NL@%
  50517.      %@2@%My strength is as the strength of ten,%@NL@%
  50518.      Because my heart is pure.%@NL@%
  50519. %@CR:STRENGTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  50520.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  50521.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  50522. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50523. %@NL@%
  50524. %@NL@%
  50525.      %@2@%What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted!%@NL@%
  50526.      Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just,%@NL@%
  50527.      And he but naked, though locked up in steel,%@NL@%
  50528.      Whose conscience with injustice is corrupted.%@NL@%
  50529. %@CR:STRENGShakespear@%%@NL@%
  50530.                                           King Henry, %@AI@%King Henry VI part 2%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50531.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  50532.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  50533. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50534. %@NL@%
  50535. %@NL@%
  50536. %@2@%Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just, but four times%@EH@%
  50537. he who gets his blow in fust.%@NL@%
  50538. %@CR:STRENGBillings  @%%@NL@%
  50539.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  50540.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  50541. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50542. %@NL@%
  50543. %@NL@%
  50544. %@2@%There is only one right in the world and that right is one's%@EH@%
  50545. own strength.%@NL@%
  50546. %@CR:STRENGHitler    @%%@NL@%
  50547.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  50548.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  50549. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50550. %@NL@%
  50551. %@NL@%
  50552. %@2@%Calmness and irony are the only weapons worthy of the strong.%@NL@%
  50553. %@CR:STRENGGaboriau  @%%@NL@%
  50554.                                                 Emile Gaboriau (1835-1873)%@NL@%
  50555.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  50556. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50557. %@NL@%
  50558. %@NL@%
  50559. %@2@%The weak have one weapon: the errors of those who think they%@EH@%
  50560. are strong.%@NL@%
  50561. %@CR:STRENGBidault   @%%@NL@%
  50562.                                                Georges Bidault (1899-1983)%@NL@%
  50563.                                        French resistance leader, statesman%@NL@%
  50564. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50565. %@NL@%
  50566. %@NL@%
  50567. %@2@%There may come a time when the lion and the lamb will lie down%@EH@%
  50568. together, but I am still betting on the lion.%@NL@%
  50569. %@CR:STRENGBillings  @%%@NL@%
  50570.                                                  Josh Billings (1818-1885)%@NL@%
  50571.                                                          American humorist%@NL@%
  50572. %@AS@%                                                                  Strength%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50573. %@NL@%
  50574. %@NL@%
  50575. %@NL@%
  50576. %@1@%%@AS@%Students%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50577. %@CR:STUDENTS        @%%@NL@%
  50578. %@2@%See:%@QR:Students@%%@NL@%
  50579.      %@AB@%Examinations%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           d4bd7@%%@NL@%
  50580.      Oxford: %@AB@%Milton%@AE@%%@BO:          1c9a70@%%@NL@%
  50581.      %@AB@%School%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2397dc@%%@NL@%
  50582.      %@AB@%University%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29ce12@%%@NL@%
  50583. %@NL@%
  50584. %@2@%Disciples do owe their masters only a temporary belief, and%@EH@%
  50585. a suspension of their own judgement till they be fully instructed;
  50586. and not an absolute resignation nor perpetual captivity.%@NL@%
  50587. %@CR:STUDENBacon     @%%@NL@%
  50588.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  50589.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  50590. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50591. %@NL@%
  50592. %@NL@%
  50593. %@2@%The average PhD thesis is nothing but a transference of bones%@EH@%
  50594. from one graveyard to another.%@NL@%
  50595. %@CR:STUDENDobie     @%%@NL@%
  50596.                                                 J. Frank Dobie (1888-1964)%@NL@%
  50597.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  50598. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50599. %@NL@%
  50600. %@NL@%
  50601. %@2@%Generally young men are regarded as radicals. This is a popular%@EH@%
  50602. misconception. The most conservative persons I ever met are college
  50603. undergraduates.%@NL@%
  50604. %@CR:STUDENWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  50605.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  50606.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  50607. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50608. %@NL@%
  50609. %@NL@%
  50610. %@2@%When I was a student at the Sorbonne in Paris I used to go%@EH@%
  50611. out and riot occasionally. I can't remember now what side it was
  50612. on.%@NL@%
  50613. %@CR:STUDENDulles    @%%@NL@%
  50614.                                             John Foster Dulles (1888-1959)%@NL@%
  50615.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  50616. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50617. %@NL@%
  50618. %@NL@%
  50619. %@2@%Study to be quiet, and to do your own business.%@NL@%
  50620. %@CR:STUDENSaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  50621.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  50622.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  50623. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50624. %@NL@%
  50625. %@NL@%
  50626. %@2@%Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make%@EH@%
  50627. thee mad.%@NL@%
  50628. %@CR:STUDENFestus    @%%@NL@%
  50629.                                                                     Festus%@NL@%
  50630.                                                Bible, Acts of the Apostles%@NL@%
  50631. %@AS@%                                                                  Students%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50632. %@NL@%
  50633. %@NL@%
  50634. %@NL@%
  50635. %@1@%%@AS@%Style%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50636. %@CR:STYLE           @%%@NL@%
  50637. %@2@%See:%@QR:Style@%%@NL@%
  50638.      %@AB@%Fashion%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           e8178@%%@NL@%
  50639.      Writing: %@AB@%Pascal%@AE@%%@BO:          2ceb56@%%@NL@%
  50640. %@NL@%
  50641.      %@2@%I do not much dislike the matter, but%@NL@%
  50642.      The manner of his speech.%@NL@%
  50643. %@CR:STYLE Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  50644.                                               Caesar, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50645.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  50646.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  50647. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50648. %@NL@%
  50649. %@NL@%
  50650. %@2@%She represents merely tone and technique without intelligence.%@NL@%
  50651. %@CR:STYLE Newman4   @%%@NL@%
  50652.                                              Sir Ernest Newman (1868-1959)%@NL@%
  50653.                                                       British musicologist%@NL@%
  50654. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50655. %@NL@%
  50656. %@NL@%
  50657. %@2@%Properly understood style is not a seductive decoration added%@EH@%
  50658. to a functional structure; it is of the essence of a work of art.%@NL@%
  50659. %@CR:STYLE Waugh     @%%@NL@%
  50660.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  50661.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  50662. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50663. %@NL@%
  50664. %@NL@%
  50665. %@2@%To me style is just the outside of content, and content the%@EH@%
  50666. inside of style, like the outside and inside of the human body - both
  50667. go together, they can't be separated.%@NL@%
  50668. %@CR:STYLE Godard    @%%@NL@%
  50669.                                                  Jean-Luc Godard (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  50670.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  50671. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50672. %@NL@%
  50673. %@NL@%
  50674. %@2@%Style consists in certain fashions, or certain eccentricities,%@EH@%
  50675. or certain manners, of certain people, in certain situations, and
  50676. possessed of a certain share of fashion or importance.%@NL@%
  50677. %@CR:STYLE Irving    @%%@NL@%
  50678.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  50679.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  50680. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50681. %@NL@%
  50682. %@NL@%
  50683. %@2@%In doing good, we are generally cold and languid and sluggish,%@EH@%
  50684. but the works of malice and injustice are quite in another style.
  50685. They are finished with a bold, masterly hand.%@NL@%
  50686. %@CR:STYLE Burke2    @%%@NL@%
  50687.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  50688.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  50689. %@AS@%                                                                     Style%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50690. %@NL@%
  50691. %@NL@%
  50692. %@NL@%
  50693. %@1@%%@AS@%Subjectivity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50694. %@CR:SUBJECTIVITY    @%%@NL@%
  50695. %@2@%%@QR:Subjectivity@%The same battle in the clouds will be known to the deaf only%@EH@%
  50696. as lightning and to the blind only as thunder.%@NL@%
  50697. %@CR:SUBJECSantayana @%%@NL@%
  50698.                                               George Santayana (1863-1952)%@NL@%
  50699.                                                 American philosopher, poet%@NL@%
  50700. %@AS@%                                                              Subjectivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50701. %@NL@%
  50702. %@NL@%
  50703. %@2@%He that is giddy thinks the world turns round.%@NL@%
  50704. %@CR:SUBJECShakespear@%%@NL@%
  50705.                                             Widow, %@AI@%The Taming of the Shrew%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50706.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  50707.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  50708. %@AS@%                                                              Subjectivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50709. %@NL@%
  50710. %@NL@%
  50711. %@2@%We see things not as they are, but as we are.%@NL@%
  50712. %@CR:SUBJECTomlinson @%%@NL@%
  50713.                                                H. M. Tomlinson (1873-1958)%@NL@%
  50714.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  50715. %@AS@%                                                              Subjectivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50716. %@NL@%
  50717. %@NL@%
  50718. %@2@%The fly sat upon the axel-tree of the chariot-wheel and said,%@EH@%
  50719. What a dust do I raise!%@NL@%
  50720. %@CR:SUBJECBacon     @%%@NL@%
  50721.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  50722.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  50723. %@AS@%                                                              Subjectivity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50724. %@NL@%
  50725. %@NL@%
  50726. %@NL@%
  50727. %@1@%%@AS@%The Suburbs%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50728. %@CR:SUBURBS         @%%@NL@%
  50729. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Suburbs@%%@NL@%
  50730.      Commuters: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           7708b@%%@NL@%
  50731. %@NL@%
  50732.      %@2@%Heaven is not built of country seats%@NL@%
  50733.      But little queer suburban streets.%@NL@%
  50734. %@CR:SUBURBMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  50735.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  50736.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  50737. %@AS@%                                                               The Suburbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50738. %@NL@%
  50739. %@NL@%
  50740. %@2@%Slums may well be breeding-grounds of crime, but middle-class%@EH@%
  50741. suburbs are incubators of apathy and delirium.%@NL@%
  50742. %@CR:SUBURBConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  50743.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  50744.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  50745. %@AS@%                                                               The Suburbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50746. %@NL@%
  50747. %@NL@%
  50748. %@2@%Conformity may not always reign in the prosperous bourgeois%@EH@%
  50749. suburb, but it ultimately always governs.%@NL@%
  50750. %@CR:SUBURBKronenberg@%%@NL@%
  50751.                                             Louis Kronenberger (1904-1980)%@NL@%
  50752.                                            American critic, editor, author%@NL@%
  50753. %@AS@%                                                               The Suburbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50754. %@NL@%
  50755. %@NL@%
  50756. %@2@%They were as fed horses in the morning: every one neighed after%@EH@%
  50757. his neighbour's wife.%@NL@%
  50758. %@CR:SUBURBBibleJerem@%%@NL@%
  50759.                                                            Bible, Jeremiah%@NL@%
  50760. %@AS@%                                                               The Suburbs%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50761. %@NL@%
  50762. %@NL@%
  50763. %@NL@%
  50764. %@1@%%@AS@%Success%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50765. %@CR:SUCCESS         @%%@NL@%
  50766. %@2@%See:%@QR:Success@%%@NL@%
  50767.      Food: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           f35c8@%%@NL@%
  50768.      Fools: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           f6035@%%@NL@%
  50769.      Intelligence: %@AB@%Butler%@AE@%%@BO:          15463b@%%@NL@%
  50770.      Luck: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:          188eea@%%@NL@%
  50771.      Smugness: %@AB@%Disraeli%@AE@%%@BO:          25b0f2@%%@NL@%
  50772.      Socialism: %@AB@%Baker%@AE@%%@BO:          25ef21@%%@NL@%
  50773.      Solemnity: %@AB@%Corwin%@AE@%%@BO:          25fd35@%%@NL@%
  50774.      Wisdom: %@AB@%Eldridge%@AE@%%@BO:          2b644c@%%@NL@%
  50775. %@NL@%
  50776. %@2@%The moral flabbiness born of the exclusive worship of the bitch-goddess%@EH@%
  50777. %@AI@%success.%@AE@% That - with the squalid cash interpretation put on
  50778. the word success - is our national disease.%@NL@%
  50779. %@CR:SUCCESJames4    @%%@NL@%
  50780.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  50781.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  50782.                                                      letter to H. G. Wells%@NL@%
  50783. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50784. %@NL@%
  50785. %@NL@%
  50786. %@2@%One's religion is whatever he is most interested in, and yours%@EH@%
  50787. is Success.%@NL@%
  50788. %@CR:SUCCESBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  50789.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  50790.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  50791. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50792. %@NL@%
  50793. %@NL@%
  50794. %@2@%Everything yields to success, even grammar.%@NL@%
  50795. %@CR:SUCCESHugo      @%%@NL@%
  50796.                                                    Victor Hugo (1802-1885)%@NL@%
  50797.                                           French poet, dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  50798. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50799. %@NL@%
  50800. %@NL@%
  50801. %@2@%The secret of success in life is known only to those who have%@EH@%
  50802. not succeeded.%@NL@%
  50803. %@CR:SUCCESCollins1  @%%@NL@%
  50804.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  50805.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  50806. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50807. %@NL@%
  50808. %@NL@%
  50809. %@2@%Whenever a friend succeeds a little something in me dies.%@NL@%
  50810. %@CR:SUCCESVidal     @%%@NL@%
  50811.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  50812.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  50813. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50814. %@NL@%
  50815. %@NL@%
  50816. %@2@%We can come to look upon the deaths of our enemies with as%@EH@%
  50817. much regret as we feel for those of our friends, namely, when we
  50818. miss their existence as witnesses to our success.%@NL@%
  50819. %@CR:SUCCESSchopenhau@%%@NL@%
  50820.                                            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)%@NL@%
  50821.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  50822. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50823. %@NL@%
  50824. %@NL@%
  50825. %@2@%The road to success is filled with women pushing their husbands%@EH@%
  50826. along.%@NL@%
  50827. %@CR:SUCCESDewar     @%%@NL@%
  50828.                                                     Lord Dewar (1864-1930)%@NL@%
  50829.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  50830. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50831. %@NL@%
  50832. %@NL@%
  50833. %@2@%A successful man is one who makes more money than his wife%@EH@%
  50834. can spend. A successful woman is one who can find such a man.%@NL@%
  50835. %@CR:SUCCESTurner2   @%%@NL@%
  50836.                                                      Lana Turner (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  50837.                                               American film and TV actress%@NL@%
  50838. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50839. %@NL@%
  50840. %@NL@%
  50841. %@2@%All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence, and%@EH@%
  50842. then success is sure.%@NL@%
  50843. %@CR:SUCCESTwain     @%%@NL@%
  50844.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  50845.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  50846. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50847. %@NL@%
  50848. %@NL@%
  50849.      %@2@%'Tis not in mortals to command success,%@NL@%
  50850.      But we'll do more, Sempronius; we'll deserve it.%@NL@%
  50851. %@CR:SUCCESAddison   @%%@NL@%
  50852.                                                 Joseph Addison (1672-1719)%@NL@%
  50853.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  50854. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50855. %@NL@%
  50856. %@NL@%
  50857. %@2@%For a hundred that can bear adversity there is hardly one that%@EH@%
  50858. can bear prosperity.%@NL@%
  50859. %@CR:SUCCESCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  50860.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  50861.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  50862. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50863. %@NL@%
  50864. %@NL@%
  50865. %@2@%The common idea that success spoils people by making them vain,%@EH@%
  50866. egotistic, and selfcomplacent is erroneous; on the contrary,
  50867. it makes them, for the most part, humble, tolerant, and kind.
  50868. Failure makes people cruel and bitter.%@NL@%
  50869. %@CR:SUCCESMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  50870.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  50871.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  50872. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50873. %@NL@%
  50874. %@NL@%
  50875. %@2@%The penalty of success is to be bored by the attentions of%@EH@%
  50876. people who formerly snubbed you.%@NL@%
  50877. %@CR:SUCCESLittle    @%%@NL@%
  50878.                                                   Mary W. Little (b. 1880)%@NL@%
  50879.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  50880. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50881. %@NL@%
  50882. %@NL@%
  50883. %@2@%Nothing recedes like success.%@NL@%
  50884. %@CR:SUCCESWinchell  @%%@NL@%
  50885.                                                Walter Winchell (1897-1972)%@NL@%
  50886.                                                         American columnist%@NL@%
  50887. %@AS@%                                                                   Success%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50888. %@NL@%
  50889. %@NL@%
  50890. %@NL@%
  50891. %@1@%%@AS@%Suckers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50892. %@CR:SUCKERS         @%%@NL@%
  50893. %@2@%%@QR:Suckers@%The most positive men are the most credulous.%@NL@%
  50894. %@CR:SUCKERPope      @%%@NL@%
  50895.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  50896.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  50897. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50898. %@NL@%
  50899. %@NL@%
  50900. %@2@%We are inclined to believe those whom we do not know, because%@EH@%
  50901. they have never deceived us.%@NL@%
  50902. %@CR:SUCKERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  50903.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  50904.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  50905. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50906. %@NL@%
  50907. %@NL@%
  50908. %@2@%A man is his own easiest dupe, for what he wishes to be true%@EH@%
  50909. he generally believes to be true.%@NL@%
  50910. %@CR:SUCKERDemosthene@%%@NL@%
  50911.                                                Demosthenes (c. 384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  50912.                                                           Greek politician%@NL@%
  50913. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50914. %@NL@%
  50915. %@NL@%
  50916. %@2@%A certain portion of the human race has certainly a taste for%@EH@%
  50917. being diddled.%@NL@%
  50918. %@CR:SUCKERHood      @%%@NL@%
  50919.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  50920.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  50921. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50922. %@NL@%
  50923. %@NL@%
  50924. %@2@%There's a sucker born every minute.%@NL@%
  50925. %@CR:SUCKERBarnum    @%%@NL@%
  50926.                                              Phineas T. Barnum (1810-1891)%@NL@%
  50927.                                                           American showman%@NL@%
  50928. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50929. %@NL@%
  50930. %@NL@%
  50931. %@2@%And remember, dearie, never give a sucker an even break.%@NL@%
  50932. %@CR:SUCKERFields    @%%@NL@%
  50933.                                                   W. C. Fields (1879-1946)%@NL@%
  50934.                                                        American film actor%@NL@%
  50935. %@AS@%                                                                   Suckers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50936. %@NL@%
  50937. %@NL@%
  50938. %@NL@%
  50939. %@1@%%@AS@%Suffering%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  50940. %@CR:SUFFERING       @%%@NL@%
  50941. %@2@%See:%@QR:Suffering@%%@NL@%
  50942.      Grief: %@AB@%Byatt%@AE@%%@BO:          11bc67@%%@NL@%
  50943.      Rebellion: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          21d9ce@%%@NL@%
  50944. %@NL@%
  50945. %@2@%God had one son on earth without sin, but never one without%@EH@%
  50946. suffering.%@NL@%
  50947. %@CR:SUFFERSaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  50948.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  50949.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  50950. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50951. %@NL@%
  50952. %@NL@%
  50953. %@2@%You are outside life, you are above life, you are afflicted%@EH@%
  50954. with ills the ordinary person does not know, you transcend the
  50955. normal level and that is what people hold against you, you poison
  50956. their quietude, you corrode their stability. You feel repeated
  50957. and fugitive pain, insoluble pain, pain outside thought, pain which
  50958. is neither in the body, nor the mind, but which partakes of both.
  50959. And I, who share your ills, I am asking: who should dare to restrict
  50960. the means that bring us relief?%@NL@%
  50961. %@CR:SUFFERArtaud    @%%@NL@%
  50962.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  50963.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  50964.                         plea for free use of opium for sufferers including%@NL@%
  50965.                               'lucid madmen, tabetics, cancer patients and%@NL@%
  50966.                                   those afflicted with chronic meningitis'%@NL@%
  50967. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50968. %@NL@%
  50969. %@NL@%
  50970. %@2@%It is not true that suffering ennobles the character; happiness%@EH@%
  50971. does that sometimes, but suffering for the most part, makes men
  50972. petty and vindictive.%@NL@%
  50973. %@CR:SUFFERMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  50974.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  50975.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  50976. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50977. %@NL@%
  50978. %@NL@%
  50979. %@2@%Few can believe that suffering, especially by others, is in%@EH@%
  50980. vain. Anything that is disagreeable must surely have beneficial
  50981. economic effects.%@NL@%
  50982. %@CR:SUFFERGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  50983.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  50984.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  50985. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50986. %@NL@%
  50987. %@NL@%
  50988. %@2@%There is one psychological peculiarity in the human being that%@EH@%
  50989. always strikes one: to shun even the slightest signs of trouble
  50990. on the outer edge of your existence at times of well-being  . . . 
  50991. to try not to know about the sufferings of others and your own
  50992. or one's own future sufferings, to yield in many situations, even
  50993. important spiritual and central ones - as long as it prolongs
  50994. one's well-being.%@NL@%
  50995. %@CR:SUFFERSolzhenits@%%@NL@%
  50996.                                           Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  50997.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  50998. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  50999. %@NL@%
  51000. %@NL@%
  51001. %@2@%One does not love a place less for having suffered in it.%@NL@%
  51002. %@CR:SUFFERAusten    @%%@NL@%
  51003.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  51004.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  51005. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51006. %@NL@%
  51007. %@NL@%
  51008. %@2@%How much atonement is enough? The bombing must be allowed as%@EH@%
  51009. at least part-payment: those of our young people who are concerned
  51010. about the moral problem posed by the Allied air offensive should
  51011. at least consider the moral problem that would have been posed
  51012. if the German civilian population had not suffered at all.%@NL@%
  51013. %@CR:SUFFERJames1    @%%@NL@%
  51014.                                                      Clive James (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  51015.                                                  Australian writer, critic%@NL@%
  51016. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51017. %@NL@%
  51018. %@NL@%
  51019. %@2@%The only antidote to mental suffering is physical pain.%@NL@%
  51020. %@CR:SUFFERMarx2     @%%@NL@%
  51021.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  51022.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  51023. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51024. %@NL@%
  51025. %@NL@%
  51026. %@2@%I love the majesty of human suffering.%@NL@%
  51027. %@CR:SUFFERVigny     @%%@NL@%
  51028.                                                Alfred de Vigny (1797-1863)%@NL@%
  51029.                                           French poet, novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  51030. %@AS@%                                                                 Suffering%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51031. %@NL@%
  51032. %@NL@%
  51033. %@NL@%
  51034. %@1@%%@AS@%Suicide%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51035. %@CR:SUICIDE         @%%@NL@%
  51036. %@2@%See:%@QR:Suicide@%%@NL@%
  51037.      Confessions: %@AB@%Webster%@AE@%%@BO:           7ad3a@%%@NL@%
  51038.      Psychiatrists: %@AB@%Artaud%@AE@%%@BO:          20d850@%%@NL@%
  51039.      Sundays: %@AB@%Wertmuller%@AE@%%@BO:          2770d5@%%@NL@%
  51040. %@NL@%
  51041. %@2@%%@AI@%Je m'en vais enfin de ce monde, ou il faut que le coeur%@EH@%
  51042. %@AI@%se brise ou se bronze.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51043. And so I leave this world, where the heart must either break or
  51044. turn to lead.%@NL@%
  51045. %@CR:SUICIDChamfort  @%%@NL@%
  51046.                                     Nicolas-Sebastien Chamfort (1741-1794)%@NL@%
  51047.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  51048.                                                               suicide note%@NL@%
  51049. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51050. %@NL@%
  51051. %@NL@%
  51052. %@2@%The prevalence of suicide is a test of height in civilization;%@EH@%
  51053. it means that the population is winding up its nervous and intellectual
  51054. system to the utmost point of tension and that sometimes it snaps.%@NL@%
  51055. %@CR:SUICIDEllis     @%%@NL@%
  51056.                                                 Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)%@NL@%
  51057.                                               British psychologist, author%@NL@%
  51058. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51059. %@NL@%
  51060. %@NL@%
  51061. %@2@%I take it that no man is educated who has never dallied with%@EH@%
  51062. the thought of suicide.%@NL@%
  51063. %@CR:SUICIDJames4    @%%@NL@%
  51064.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  51065.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  51066. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51067. %@NL@%
  51068. %@NL@%
  51069. %@2@%It is always consoling to think of suicide: in that way one%@EH@%
  51070. gets through many a bad night.%@NL@%
  51071. %@CR:SUICIDNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  51072.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  51073.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  51074. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51075. %@NL@%
  51076. %@NL@%
  51077. %@2@%If you are of the opinion that the contemplation of suicide%@EH@%
  51078. is sufficient evidence of a poetic nature, do not forget that actions
  51079. speak louder than words.%@NL@%
  51080. %@CR:SUICIDLebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  51081.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  51082.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  51083. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51084. %@NL@%
  51085. %@NL@%
  51086. %@2@%There are many who dare not kill themselves for fear of what%@EH@%
  51087. the neighbours will say.%@NL@%
  51088. %@CR:SUICIDConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  51089.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  51090.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  51091. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51092. %@NL@%
  51093. %@NL@%
  51094.      %@2@%Razors pain you;%@NL@%
  51095.      Rivers are damp;%@NL@%
  51096.      Acids stain you%@NL@%
  51097.      And drugs cause cramp;%@NL@%
  51098.      Guns aren't lawful;%@NL@%
  51099.      Nooses give;%@NL@%
  51100.      Gas smells awful;%@NL@%
  51101.      You might as well live.%@NL@%
  51102. %@CR:SUICIDParker1   @%%@NL@%
  51103.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  51104.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  51105. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51106. %@NL@%
  51107. %@NL@%
  51108.      %@2@%A lover forsaken a new love may get,%@NL@%
  51109.      But a neck when once broken can never be set.%@NL@%
  51110. %@CR:SUICIDWalsh     @%%@NL@%
  51111.                                                  William Walsh (1663-1708)%@NL@%
  51112.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  51113. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51114. %@NL@%
  51115. %@NL@%
  51116. %@2@%However great a man's fear of life  . . .  suicide remains the%@EH@%
  51117. courageous act, the clear-headed act of a mathematician. The suicide
  51118. has judged by the laws of chance - so many odds against one,
  51119. that to live will be more miserable than to die. His sense of mathematics
  51120. is greater than his sense of survival.%@NL@%
  51121. %@CR:SUICIDGreene1   @%%@NL@%
  51122.                                                    Graham Greene (b. 1904)%@NL@%
  51123.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  51124. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51125. %@NL@%
  51126. %@NL@%
  51127. %@2@%It is the role of cowardice, not of courage, to crouch in a%@EH@%
  51128. hole, under a massive tomb, to avoid the blows of fortune.%@NL@%
  51129. %@CR:SUICIDMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  51130.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  51131.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  51132. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51133. %@NL@%
  51134. %@NL@%
  51135. %@2@%Just as I shall select my ship when I am about to go on a voyage,%@EH@%
  51136. or my house when I propose to take a residence, so I shall choose
  51137. my death when I am about to depart from life.%@NL@%
  51138. %@CR:SUICIDSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  51139.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  51140.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  51141. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51142. %@NL@%
  51143. %@NL@%
  51144. %@2@%Dear World, I am leaving you because I am bored. I am leaving%@EH@%
  51145. you with your worries. Good luck.%@NL@%
  51146. %@CR:SUICIDSanders   @%%@NL@%
  51147.                                                 George Sanders (1906-1972)%@NL@%
  51148.                                                              British actor%@NL@%
  51149.                                                               suicide note%@NL@%
  51150. %@AS@%                                                                   Suicide%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51151. %@NL@%
  51152. %@NL@%
  51153. %@NL@%
  51154. %@1@%%@AS@%Sundays%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51155. %@CR:SUNDAYS         @%%@NL@%
  51156. %@2@%%@QR:Sundays@%Now once a weeke, upon our Sabbath day,%@NL@%
  51157.      It is enough to doo our small devotion,%@NL@%
  51158.      And then to follow any merrie motion.%@NL@%
  51159. %@CR:SUNDAYSpenser   @%%@NL@%
  51160.                                                 Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)%@NL@%
  51161.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  51162. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51163. %@NL@%
  51164. %@NL@%
  51165. %@2@%Sometimes there's nothing but Sundays for weeks on end. Why%@EH@%
  51166. can't they move Sunday to the middle of the week so you could put
  51167. it in the OUT tray on your desk.%@NL@%
  51168. %@CR:SUNDAYHoban     @%%@NL@%
  51169.                                                    Russell Hoban (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  51170.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  51171. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51172. %@NL@%
  51173. %@NL@%
  51174. %@2@%Sabbath. A weekly festival having its origin in the fact that%@EH@%
  51175. God made the world in six days and was arrested on the seventh.%@NL@%
  51176. %@CR:SUNDAYBierce    @%%@NL@%
  51177.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  51178.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  51179. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51180. %@NL@%
  51181. %@NL@%
  51182. %@2@%Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with%@EH@%
  51183. themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.%@NL@%
  51184. %@CR:SUNDAYErtz      @%%@NL@%
  51185.                                                     Susan Ertz (1894-1985)%@NL@%
  51186.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  51187. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51188. %@NL@%
  51189. %@NL@%
  51190. %@2@%Some rainy winter Sundays when there's a little boredom, you%@EH@%
  51191. should always carry a gun. Not to shoot yourself, but to know exactly
  51192. that you're always making a choice.%@NL@%
  51193. %@CR:SUNDAYWertmuller@%%@NL@%
  51194.                                                  Lina Wertmuller (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  51195.                                                      Italian film director%@NL@%
  51196. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51197. %@NL@%
  51198. %@NL@%
  51199. %@2@%It was a Sunday afternoon, wet and cheerless: and a duller%@EH@%
  51200. spectacle this earth of ours has not to show than a rainy Sunday
  51201. in London.%@NL@%
  51202. %@CR:SUNDAYdeQuincey @%%@NL@%
  51203.                                              Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859)%@NL@%
  51204.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  51205. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51206. %@NL@%
  51207. %@NL@%
  51208. %@2@%I spent a year in that town, one Sunday.%@NL@%
  51209. %@CR:SUNDAYDeeping   @%%@NL@%
  51210.                                                Warwick Deeping (1877-1950)%@NL@%
  51211.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  51212. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51213. %@NL@%
  51214. %@NL@%
  51215. %@2@%Why do I do this every Sunday? Even the book reviews seem to%@EH@%
  51216. be the same as last week's. Different books - same reviews.%@NL@%
  51217. %@CR:SUNDAYOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  51218.                                                  Jimmy, %@AI@%Look Back in Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51219.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  51220.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  51221. %@AS@%                                                                   Sundays%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51222. %@NL@%
  51223. %@NL@%
  51224. %@NL@%
  51225. %@1@%%@AS@%Superstition%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51226. %@CR:SUPERSTITION    @%%@NL@%
  51227. %@2@%%@QR:Superstition@%Superstition is the religion of feeble minds.%@NL@%
  51228. %@CR:SUPERSBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  51229.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  51230.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  51231. %@AS@%                                                              Superstition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51232. %@NL@%
  51233. %@NL@%
  51234. %@2@%Superstition is godless religion.%@NL@%
  51235. %@CR:SUPERSHall2     @%%@NL@%
  51236.                                                    Joseph Hall (1574-1656)%@NL@%
  51237.                                                          Bishop of Norwich%@NL@%
  51238. %@AS@%                                                              Superstition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51239. %@NL@%
  51240. %@NL@%
  51241. %@2@%Supernaturalism is the mysticism of the materialist.%@NL@%
  51242. %@CR:SUPERSInge      @%%@NL@%
  51243.                                                     W. R. Inge (1860-1954)%@NL@%
  51244.                                                 Dean of St. Paul's, London%@NL@%
  51245. %@AS@%                                                              Superstition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51246. %@NL@%
  51247. %@NL@%
  51248. %@2@%Superstition is the poetry of life.%@NL@%
  51249. %@CR:SUPERSGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  51250.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  51251.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  51252. %@AS@%                                                              Superstition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51253. %@NL@%
  51254. %@NL@%
  51255. %@NL@%
  51256. %@1@%%@AS@%Survival%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51257. %@CR:SURVIVAL        @%%@NL@%
  51258. %@2@%%@QR:Survival@%To survive it is often necessary to fight, and to fight you%@EH@%
  51259. have to dirty yourself.%@NL@%
  51260. %@CR:SURVIVOrwell    @%%@NL@%
  51261.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  51262.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  51263. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51264. %@NL@%
  51265. %@NL@%
  51266. %@2@%To win your battle in this society, you've got to have your%@EH@%
  51267. cave. Then food. Then some kind of mate. After that, everything's
  51268. a luxury.%@NL@%
  51269. %@CR:SURVIVSteiger   @%%@NL@%
  51270.                                                      Rod Steiger (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  51271.                                                             American actor%@NL@%
  51272. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51273. %@NL@%
  51274. %@NL@%
  51275. %@2@%If you live among wolves you have to act like a wolf.%@NL@%
  51276. %@CR:SURVIVKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  51277.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  51278.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  51279. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51280. %@NL@%
  51281. %@NL@%
  51282. %@2@%Once one determines that he or she has a mission in life, that's%@EH@%
  51283. it's not going to be accomplished without a great deal of pain,
  51284. and that the rewards in the end may not outweigh the pain - if
  51285. you recognize historically that always happens, then when it comes,
  51286. you survive it.%@NL@%
  51287. %@CR:SURVIVNixon     @%%@NL@%
  51288.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  51289.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  51290. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51291. %@NL@%
  51292. %@NL@%
  51293. %@2@%One can survive anything these days except death.%@NL@%
  51294. %@CR:SURVIVWilde     @%%@NL@%
  51295.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  51296.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  51297. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51298. %@NL@%
  51299. %@NL@%
  51300. %@2@%Before undergoing a surgical operation arrange your temporal%@EH@%
  51301. affairs. You may live.%@NL@%
  51302. %@CR:SURVIVBierce    @%%@NL@%
  51303.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  51304.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  51305. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51306. %@NL@%
  51307. %@NL@%
  51308. %@2@%Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without%@EH@%
  51309. result.%@NL@%
  51310. %@CR:SURVIVChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  51311.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  51312.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  51313. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51314. %@NL@%
  51315. %@NL@%
  51316. %@2@%I have never been so gloriously filled with life as I was at%@EH@%
  51317. Auschwitz. It was  . . .  a triumph to do death down for just a few
  51318. hours, for perhaps one more minute.%@NL@%
  51319. %@CR:SURVIVChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  51320.                         Nathan, aged eighteen quoted by Charity Blackstock%@NL@%
  51321. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51322. %@NL@%
  51323. %@NL@%
  51324. %@2@%%@AI@%J'ai vecu.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  51325. I survived.%@NL@%
  51326. %@CR:SURVIVComteSieye@%%@NL@%
  51327.                                           Joseph, Comte Sieyes (1748-1836)%@NL@%
  51328.                                                       French revolutionary%@NL@%
  51329.                          asked what he had done during the Reign of Terror%@NL@%
  51330. %@AS@%                                                                  Survival%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51331. %@NL@%
  51332. %@NL@%
  51333. %@NL@%
  51334. %@1@%%@AS@%Suspicion%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51335. %@CR:SUSPICION       @%%@NL@%
  51336. %@2@%%@QR:Suspicion@%There is nothing makes a man suspect much, more than to know%@EH@%
  51337. little.%@NL@%
  51338. %@CR:SUSPICBacon     @%%@NL@%
  51339.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  51340.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  51341. %@AS@%                                                                 Suspicion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51342. %@NL@%
  51343. %@NL@%
  51344. %@2@%We are paid for our suspicions by finding what we suspected.%@NL@%
  51345. %@CR:SUSPICThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  51346.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  51347.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  51348. %@AS@%                                                                 Suspicion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51349. %@NL@%
  51350. %@NL@%
  51351. %@2@%We have to distrust each other. It is our only defense against%@EH@%
  51352. betrayal.%@NL@%
  51353. %@CR:SUSPICWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  51354.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  51355.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  51356. %@AS@%                                                                 Suspicion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51357. %@NL@%
  51358. %@NL@%
  51359. %@2@%What loneliness is more lonely than distrust?%@NL@%
  51360. %@CR:SUSPICEliot1    @%%@NL@%
  51361.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  51362.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  51363. %@AS@%                                                                 Suspicion%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51364. %@NL@%
  51365. %@NL@%
  51366. %@NL@%
  51367. %@1@%%@AS@%Swearing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51368. %@CR:SWEARING        @%%@NL@%
  51369. %@2@%See:%@QR:Swearing@%%@NL@%
  51370.      Discretion: %@AB@%Hardy%@AE@%%@BO:           aec99@%%@NL@%
  51371.      Self-control: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          2449ee@%%@NL@%
  51372. %@NL@%
  51373. %@2@%A whoreson jacknapes must take me up for swearing; as if I%@EH@%
  51374. borrowed mine oaths of him and might not spend them at my pleasure
  51375.  . . .  When a gentleman is disposed to swear, it is not for any
  51376. standers-by to curtail his oaths, ha?%@NL@%
  51377. %@CR:SWEARIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  51378.                                                          Cloten, %@AI@%Cymbeline%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51379.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  51380.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  51381. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51382. %@NL@%
  51383. %@NL@%
  51384. %@2@%The man who first abused his fellows with swear-words instead%@EH@%
  51385. of bashing their brains out with a club should be counted among
  51386. those who laid the foundations of civilization.%@NL@%
  51387. %@CR:SWEARICohen     @%%@NL@%
  51388.                                                       John Cohen (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  51389.                                                       British psychologist%@NL@%
  51390. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51391. %@NL@%
  51392. %@NL@%
  51393. %@2@%Profanity furnishes a relief denied even to prayer.%@NL@%
  51394. %@CR:SWEARITwain     @%%@NL@%
  51395.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  51396.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  51397. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51398. %@NL@%
  51399. %@NL@%
  51400. %@2@%Grant me some wild expressions, Heavens, or I shall burst.%@NL@%
  51401. %@CR:SWEARIFarquhar  @%%@NL@%
  51402.                                                George Farquhar (1678-1707)%@NL@%
  51403.                                                            Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  51404. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51405. %@NL@%
  51406. %@NL@%
  51407. %@2@%Take not God's name in vain; select a time when it will have%@EH@%
  51408. effect.%@NL@%
  51409. %@CR:SWEARIBierce    @%%@NL@%
  51410.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  51411.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  51412. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51413. %@NL@%
  51414. %@NL@%
  51415. %@2@%Swear me, Kate, like a lady as thou art, a good mouth-filling%@EH@%
  51416. oath.%@NL@%
  51417. %@CR:SWEARIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  51418.                                              Hotspur, %@AI@%King Henry IV part I%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51419.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  51420.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  51421. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51422. %@NL@%
  51423. %@NL@%
  51424. %@2@%It comes to pass oft that a terrible oath, with a swaggering%@EH@%
  51425. accent sharply twanged off, gives manhood more approbation than
  51426. ever proof itself would have earned him.%@NL@%
  51427. %@CR:SWEARIShakespear@%%@NL@%
  51428.                                              Sir Toby Belch, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51429.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  51430.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  51431. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51432. %@NL@%
  51433. %@NL@%
  51434. %@2@%All were swearing steadily and quietly and all were using the%@EH@%
  51435. same time-dishonoured Army oaths with such lavishness that made
  51436. it necessary to split words open in the middle in order to cram
  51437. all the obscenities in.%@NL@%
  51438. %@CR:SWEARIConnor    @%%@NL@%
  51439.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  51440.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  51441. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51442. %@NL@%
  51443. %@NL@%
  51444. %@2@%A footman may swear but he cannot swear like a lord. He can%@EH@%
  51445. swear as often, but can he swear with equal delicacy, propriety
  51446. and judgement?%@NL@%
  51447. %@CR:SWEARISwift     @%%@NL@%
  51448.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  51449.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  51450. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51451. %@NL@%
  51452. %@NL@%
  51453. %@2@%'Twas but my tongue, 'twas not my soul that swore.%@NL@%
  51454. %@CR:SWEARIEuripides @%%@NL@%
  51455.                                                     Euripides (480-406 BC)%@NL@%
  51456.                                                          Greek tragic poet%@NL@%
  51457. %@AS@%                                                                  Swearing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51458. %@NL@%
  51459. %@NL@%
  51460. %@NL@%
  51461. %@1@%%@AS@%Swindles%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51462. %@CR:SWINDLES        @%%@NL@%
  51463. %@2@%See:%@QR:Swindles@%%@NL@%
  51464.      Foul play: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           f8e63@%%@NL@%
  51465. %@NL@%
  51466. %@2@%It was beautiful and simple as all truly great swindles are.%@NL@%
  51467. %@CR:SWINDLHenry1    @%%@NL@%
  51468.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  51469.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  51470. %@AS@%                                                                  Swindles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51471. %@NL@%
  51472. %@NL@%
  51473. %@2@%I do not, more than another man, mind being cheated at cards;%@EH@%
  51474. but I find it a little nauseating if my opponent then publicly
  51475. ascribes his success to the partnership of the Most High.%@NL@%
  51476. %@CR:SWINDLSmith4    @%%@NL@%
  51477.                                   F. E. Smith, Lord Birkenhead (1872-1930)%@NL@%
  51478.                                    British Conservative politician, lawyer%@NL@%
  51479. %@AS@%                                                                  Swindles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51480. %@NL@%
  51481. %@NL@%
  51482. %@2@%Cheat me in the price, but not in the goods.%@NL@%
  51483. %@CR:SWINDLFuller3   @%%@NL@%
  51484.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  51485.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  51486. %@AS@%                                                                  Swindles%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51487. %@NL@%
  51488. %@NL@%
  51489. %@NL@%
  51490. %@1@%%@AS@%Switzerland%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51491. %@CR:SWITZERLAND     @%%@NL@%
  51492. %@2@%%@QR:Switzerland@%I look upon Switzerland as an inferior sort of Scotland.%@NL@%
  51493. %@CR:SWITZESmith8    @%%@NL@%
  51494.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  51495.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  51496. %@AS@%                                                               Switzerland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51497. %@NL@%
  51498. %@NL@%
  51499. %@2@%The Swiss  . . .  are not a people so much as a neat clean quite%@EH@%
  51500. solvent business.%@NL@%
  51501. %@CR:SWITZEFaulkner  @%%@NL@%
  51502.                                               William Faulkner (1897-1962)%@NL@%
  51503.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  51504. %@AS@%                                                               Switzerland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51505. %@NL@%
  51506. %@NL@%
  51507. %@2@%In Switzerland they had brother love, five hundred years of%@EH@%
  51508. democracy and peace, and what did they produce? The cuckoo clock!%@NL@%
  51509. %@CR:SWITZEWelles    @%%@NL@%
  51510.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  51511.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  51512.                                                from the film %@AI@%The Third Man%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51513. %@AS@%                                                               Switzerland%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51514. %@NL@%
  51515. %@NL@%
  51516. %@NL@%
  51517. %@1@%%@AS@%Taboo%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51518. %@CR:TABOO           @%%@NL@%
  51519. %@2@%See:%@QR:Taboo@%%@NL@%
  51520.      %@AB@%Disgrace%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           aedf1@%%@NL@%
  51521. %@NL@%
  51522. %@2@%To make our idea of morality centre on forbidden acts is to%@EH@%
  51523. defile the imagination and to introduce into our judgements of
  51524. our fellow-men a secret element of gusto.%@NL@%
  51525. %@CR:TABOO Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  51526.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  51527.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  51528. %@AS@%                                                                     Taboo%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51529. %@NL@%
  51530. %@NL@%
  51531. %@2@%Perhaps the long ages during which pork had been prohibited%@EH@%
  51532. had made it seem to the Jews as delicious as fornication.%@NL@%
  51533. %@CR:TABOO Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  51534.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  51535.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  51536. %@AS@%                                                                     Taboo%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51537. %@NL@%
  51538. %@NL@%
  51539. %@2@%It's an odd thing, but now one %@AI@%knows%@AE@% it's profoundly moral%@EH@%
  51540. and packed with deep spiritual significance a lot of the old charm
  51541. seems to have gone.%@NL@%
  51542. %@CR:TABOO Lancaster @%%@NL@%
  51543.                                               Osbert Lancaster (1908-1986)%@NL@%
  51544.                                                         British cartoonist%@NL@%
  51545.                             Maudie Littlehampton on%@AI@%Lady Chatterley's Lover%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51546. %@AS@%                                                                     Taboo%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51547. %@NL@%
  51548. %@NL@%
  51549. %@NL@%
  51550. %@1@%%@AS@%Tact%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51551. %@CR:TACT            @%%@NL@%
  51552. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tact@%%@NL@%
  51553.      Conversation: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           82294@%%@NL@%
  51554. %@NL@%
  51555. %@2@%Tact consists in knowing how far we may go too far.%@NL@%
  51556. %@CR:TACT  Cocteau   @%%@NL@%
  51557.                                                   Jean Cocteau (1891-1963)%@NL@%
  51558.                                               French writer, film director%@NL@%
  51559. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51560. %@NL@%
  51561. %@NL@%
  51562. %@2@%Never claim as a right what you can ask as a favour.%@NL@%
  51563. %@CR:TACT  Collins1  @%%@NL@%
  51564.                                             J. Churton Collins (1848-1908)%@NL@%
  51565.                                            English author, critic, scholar%@NL@%
  51566. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51567. %@NL@%
  51568. %@NL@%
  51569. %@2@%Forbear to mention what thou canst not praise.%@NL@%
  51570. %@CR:TACT  Prior     @%%@NL@%
  51571.                                                  Matthew Prior (1664-1721)%@NL@%
  51572.                                                     English poet, diplomat%@NL@%
  51573. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51574. %@NL@%
  51575. %@NL@%
  51576. %@2@%It's bad manners to begin courting a widow before she gets%@EH@%
  51577. home from the funeral.%@NL@%
  51578. %@CR:TACT  MacManus  @%%@NL@%
  51579.                                                Seumas MacManus (1869-1960)%@NL@%
  51580.                                                               Irish author%@NL@%
  51581. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51582. %@NL@%
  51583. %@NL@%
  51584. %@2@%'Tis not seasonable to call a man a traitor that has an army%@EH@%
  51585. at his heels.%@NL@%
  51586. %@CR:TACT  Selden    @%%@NL@%
  51587.                                                    John Selden (1584-1654)%@NL@%
  51588.                                                  English jurist, statesman%@NL@%
  51589. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51590. %@NL@%
  51591. %@NL@%
  51592. %@2@%Speak softly and carry a big stick.%@NL@%
  51593. %@CR:TACT  Roosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  51594.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  51595.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  51596. %@AS@%                                                                      Tact%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51597. %@NL@%
  51598. %@NL@%
  51599. %@NL@%
  51600. %@1@%%@AS@%Talent%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51601. %@CR:TALENT          @%%@NL@%
  51602. %@2@%See:%@QR:Talent@%%@NL@%
  51603.      Genius: %@AB@%Amiel%@AE@%%@BO:          108195@%; %@AB@%Conan Doyle%@AE@%%@BO:          108326@%%@NL@%
  51604.      Writers: %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          2c9079@%%@NL@%
  51605. %@NL@%
  51606. %@2@%Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising.%@NL@%
  51607. %@CR:TALENTConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  51608.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  51609.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  51610. %@AS@%                                                                    Talent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51611. %@NL@%
  51612. %@NL@%
  51613. %@2@%A middling talent makes a more serene life.%@NL@%
  51614. %@CR:TALENTMurdoch   @%%@NL@%
  51615.                                                     Iris Murdoch (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  51616.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  51617. %@AS@%                                                                    Talent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51618. %@NL@%
  51619. %@NL@%
  51620. %@2@%There's no shortage of talent. There's only a shortage of talent%@EH@%
  51621. that can recognize talent.%@NL@%
  51622. %@CR:TALENTWald      @%%@NL@%
  51623.                                                     Jerry Wald (1911-1962)%@NL@%
  51624.                                                   American writer-producer%@NL@%
  51625. %@AS@%                                                                    Talent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51626. %@NL@%
  51627. %@NL@%
  51628. %@2@%If a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or%@EH@%
  51629. make a better mouse-trap, than his neighbor, though he build his
  51630. house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door.%@NL@%
  51631. %@CR:TALENTEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  51632.                                                             attributed to %@NL@%
  51633.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  51634.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  51635. %@AS@%                                                                    Talent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51636. %@NL@%
  51637. %@NL@%
  51638. %@2@%Everyone has talent at twenty-five. The difficulty is to have%@EH@%
  51639. it at fifty.%@NL@%
  51640. %@CR:TALENTDegas     @%%@NL@%
  51641.                                                    Edgar Degas (1834-1917)%@NL@%
  51642.                                                   French painter, sculptor%@NL@%
  51643. %@AS@%                                                                    Talent%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51644. %@NL@%
  51645. %@NL@%
  51646. %@NL@%
  51647. %@1@%%@AS@%Taste%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51648. %@CR:TASTE           @%%@NL@%
  51649. %@2@%See:%@QR:Taste@%%@NL@%
  51650.      Vulgarity: %@AB@%Connolly%@AE@%%@BO:          2a6762@%%@NL@%
  51651. %@NL@%
  51652. %@2@%Ah, good taste! What a dreadful thing! Taste is the enemy of%@EH@%
  51653. creativeness.%@NL@%
  51654. %@CR:TASTE Picasso   @%%@NL@%
  51655.                                                  Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)%@NL@%
  51656.                                                             Spanish artist%@NL@%
  51657. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51658. %@NL@%
  51659. %@NL@%
  51660. %@2@%People care more about being thought to have good taste than%@EH@%
  51661. about being thought either good, clever or amiable.%@NL@%
  51662. %@CR:TASTE Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  51663.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  51664.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  51665. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51666. %@NL@%
  51667. %@NL@%
  51668. %@2@%A man of great common sense and good taste, - meaning thereby%@EH@%
  51669. a man without originality or moral courage.%@NL@%
  51670. %@CR:TASTE Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  51671.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  51672.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  51673. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51674. %@NL@%
  51675. %@NL@%
  51676. %@2@%Between good sense and good taste there is the same difference%@EH@%
  51677. as between cause and effect.%@NL@%
  51678. %@CR:TASTE laBruyere @%%@NL@%
  51679.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  51680.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  51681. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51682. %@NL@%
  51683. %@NL@%
  51684. %@2@%People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort%@EH@%
  51685. of thing they like.%@NL@%
  51686. %@CR:TASTE Lincoln   @%%@NL@%
  51687.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  51688.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  51689.                                                                  of a book%@NL@%
  51690. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51691. %@NL@%
  51692. %@NL@%
  51693. %@2@%What is exhilirating in bad taste is the aristocratic pleasure%@EH@%
  51694. of giving offense.%@NL@%
  51695. %@CR:TASTE Baudelaire@%%@NL@%
  51696.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  51697.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  51698. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51699. %@NL@%
  51700. %@NL@%
  51701. %@2@%No taste is so acquired as that for someone else's quality%@EH@%
  51702. of mind.%@NL@%
  51703. %@CR:TASTE Connolly  @%%@NL@%
  51704.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  51705.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  51706. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51707. %@NL@%
  51708. %@NL@%
  51709. %@2@%I wish you all sorts of prosperity, with a little more taste.%@NL@%
  51710. %@CR:TASTE LeSage    @%%@NL@%
  51711.                                             Alain-Rene Le Sage (1668-1747)%@NL@%
  51712.                                                French playwright, novelist%@NL@%
  51713. %@AS@%                                                                     Taste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51714. %@NL@%
  51715. %@NL@%
  51716. %@NL@%
  51717. %@1@%%@AS@%Taxation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51718. %@CR:TAXATION        @%%@NL@%
  51719. %@2@%See:%@QR:Taxation@%%@NL@%
  51720.      Certainty: %@AB@%Franklin%@AE@%%@BO:           5861a@%%@NL@%
  51721.      Government: %@AB@%Borah%@AE@%%@BO:          116843@%%@NL@%
  51722.      Truth: %@AB@%Dickens%@AE@%%@BO:          296593@%%@NL@%
  51723. %@NL@%
  51724. %@2@%In general, the art of government consists in taking as much%@EH@%
  51725. money as possible from one party of the citizens to give to the
  51726. other.%@NL@%
  51727. %@CR:TAXATIVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  51728.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  51729.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  51730. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51731. %@NL@%
  51732. %@NL@%
  51733. %@2@%A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend%@EH@%
  51734. on the support of Paul.%@NL@%
  51735. %@CR:TAXATIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  51736.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  51737.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  51738. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51739. %@NL@%
  51740. %@NL@%
  51741. %@2@%The art of taxation consists in so plucking the goose as to%@EH@%
  51742. obtain the largest amount of feathers with the least amount of
  51743. hissing.%@NL@%
  51744. %@CR:TAXATIColbert   @%%@NL@%
  51745.                                          Jean Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683)%@NL@%
  51746.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  51747. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51748. %@NL@%
  51749. %@NL@%
  51750. %@2@%They sing now. They will pay later.%@NL@%
  51751. %@CR:TAXATIMazarin   @%%@NL@%
  51752.                                        Jules, Cardinal Mazarin (1602-1661)%@NL@%
  51753.                                                           French statesman%@NL@%
  51754.         on the news that the people of Paris greeted each of his new taxes%@NL@%
  51755.                                                      with a satirical song%@NL@%
  51756. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51757. %@NL@%
  51758. %@NL@%
  51759. %@2@%To tax and to please, no more than to love and to be wise,%@EH@%
  51760. is not given to men.%@NL@%
  51761. %@CR:TAXATIBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  51762.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  51763.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  51764. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51765. %@NL@%
  51766. %@NL@%
  51767. %@2@%All money nowadays seems to be produced with a natural homing%@EH@%
  51768. instinct for the Treasury.%@NL@%
  51769. %@CR:TAXATIPrincePhil@%%@NL@%
  51770.                                 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  51771. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51772. %@NL@%
  51773. %@NL@%
  51774. %@2@%We are looking for a wealth tax that will bring in sufficient%@EH@%
  51775. revenue to justify having a wealth tax.%@NL@%
  51776. %@CR:TAXATISpring    @%%@NL@%
  51777.                                                      Dick Spring (b. 1950)%@NL@%
  51778.                                               leader of Irish Labour Party%@NL@%
  51779. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51780. %@NL@%
  51781. %@NL@%
  51782. %@2@%Taxes cause crime. When the tax rate reaches 25 percent, there%@EH@%
  51783. is an increase in lawlessness. America's tax system is inspired
  51784. by Karl Marx.%@NL@%
  51785. %@CR:TAXATIReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  51786.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  51787.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  51788. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51789. %@NL@%
  51790. %@NL@%
  51791. %@2@%The avoidance of taxes is the only pursuit that still carries%@EH@%
  51792. any reward.%@NL@%
  51793. %@CR:TAXATIKeynes    @%%@NL@%
  51794.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  51795.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  51796. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51797. %@NL@%
  51798. %@NL@%
  51799. %@2@%To produce an income tax return that has any depth to it, any%@EH@%
  51800. feeling, one must have Lived - and Suffered.%@NL@%
  51801. %@CR:TAXATISullivan1 @%%@NL@%
  51802.                                                 Frank Sullivan (1892-1976)%@NL@%
  51803.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  51804. %@AS@%                                                                  Taxation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51805. %@NL@%
  51806. %@NL@%
  51807. %@NL@%
  51808. %@1@%%@AS@%Tea%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51809. %@CR:TEA             @%%@NL@%
  51810. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tea@%%@NL@%
  51811.      Coffee: %@AB@%Holmes%@AE@%%@BO:           729d4@%%@NL@%
  51812. %@NL@%
  51813. %@2@%What would the world do without tea? How did it exist?%@NL@%
  51814. %@CR:TEA   Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  51815.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  51816.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  51817. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51818. %@NL@%
  51819. %@NL@%
  51820. %@2@%Its proper use is to amuse the idle, relax the studious and%@EH@%
  51821. dilute the full meals of those who cannot use exercise and will
  51822. not use abstinence.%@NL@%
  51823. %@CR:TEA   Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  51824.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  51825.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  51826. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51827. %@NL@%
  51828. %@NL@%
  51829. %@2@%If I had known there was no Latin word for tea I would have%@EH@%
  51830. let the vulgar stuff alone.%@NL@%
  51831. %@CR:TEA   Belloc    @%%@NL@%
  51832.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  51833.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  51834. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51835. %@NL@%
  51836. %@NL@%
  51837. %@2@%Come oh come ye tea-thirsty restless ones - the kettle boils,%@EH@%
  51838. bubbles and sings, musically.%@NL@%
  51839. %@CR:TEA   Tagore    @%%@NL@%
  51840.                                            Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)%@NL@%
  51841.                                                 Indian author, philosopher%@NL@%
  51842. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51843. %@NL@%
  51844. %@NL@%
  51845. %@2@%Love and scandal are the best sweeteners of tea.%@NL@%
  51846. %@CR:TEA   Fielding  @%%@NL@%
  51847.                                                 Henry Fielding (1707-1754)%@NL@%
  51848.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  51849. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51850. %@NL@%
  51851. %@NL@%
  51852. %@2@%While there's tea there's hope.%@NL@%
  51853. %@CR:TEA   Pinero    @%%@NL@%
  51854.                                              Sir Arthur Pinero (1855-1934)%@NL@%
  51855.                                        British actor, playwright, essayist%@NL@%
  51856. %@AS@%                                                                       Tea%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51857. %@NL@%
  51858. %@NL@%
  51859. %@NL@%
  51860. %@1@%%@AS@%Teachers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  51861. %@CR:TEACHERS        @%%@NL@%
  51862. %@2@%See:%@QR:Teachers@%%@NL@%
  51863.      Nationalism: %@AB@%Wells%@AE@%%@BO:          1b68f4@%%@NL@%
  51864.      Punishment: %@AB@%Olivier%@AE@%%@BO:          212dba@%%@NL@%
  51865.      Punishment: %@AB@%Trollope%@AE@%%@BO:          212f97@%%@NL@%
  51866. %@NL@%
  51867. %@2@%A teacher affects eternity.%@NL@%
  51868. %@CR:TEACHEAdams2    @%%@NL@%
  51869.                                                 Henry B. Adams (1838-1918)%@NL@%
  51870.                                                         American historian%@NL@%
  51871. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51872. %@NL@%
  51873. %@NL@%
  51874. %@2@%It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative%@EH@%
  51875. expression and knowledge.%@NL@%
  51876. %@CR:TEACHEEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  51877.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  51878.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  51879. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51880. %@NL@%
  51881. %@NL@%
  51882. %@2@%Arrogance, pedantry, and dogmatism are the occupational diseases%@EH@%
  51883. of those who spend their lives directing the intellects of the
  51884. young.%@NL@%
  51885. %@CR:TEACHECanby     @%%@NL@%
  51886.                                                 Henry S. Canby (1878-1961)%@NL@%
  51887.                                                    American author, editor%@NL@%
  51888. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51889. %@NL@%
  51890. %@NL@%
  51891. %@2@%I owe a lot to my teachers and mean to pay them back some day.%@NL@%
  51892. %@CR:TEACHELeacock   @%%@NL@%
  51893.                                                Stephen Leacock (1869-1944)%@NL@%
  51894.                                               Canadian humorist, economist%@NL@%
  51895. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51896. %@NL@%
  51897. %@NL@%
  51898. %@2@%Why are we never quite at ease in the presence of a schoolmaster?%@EH@%
  51899. Because we are conscious that he is not quite at his ease in ours.
  51900. He is awkward, and out of place in the society of his equals.
  51901. He comes like Gulliver from among his little people, and he cannot
  51902. fit the stature of his understanding to yours.%@NL@%
  51903. %@CR:TEACHELamb1     @%%@NL@%
  51904.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  51905.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  51906. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51907. %@NL@%
  51908. %@NL@%
  51909. %@2@%Everybody who is incapable of learning has taken to teaching.%@NL@%
  51910. %@CR:TEACHEWilde     @%%@NL@%
  51911.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  51912.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  51913. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51914. %@NL@%
  51915. %@NL@%
  51916. %@2@%He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches.%@NL@%
  51917. %@CR:TEACHEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  51918.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  51919.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  51920. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51921. %@NL@%
  51922. %@NL@%
  51923. %@2@%I am inclined to think that one's education has been in vain%@EH@%
  51924. if one fails to learn that most schoolmasters are idiots.%@NL@%
  51925. %@CR:TEACHEPearson   @%%@NL@%
  51926.                                                Hesketh Pearson (1887-1964)%@NL@%
  51927.                                                         British biographer%@NL@%
  51928. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51929. %@NL@%
  51930. %@NL@%
  51931. %@2@%The vanity of teaching often tempts a man to forget he is a%@EH@%
  51932. blockhead.%@NL@%
  51933. %@CR:TEACHESavile    @%%@NL@%
  51934.                                Sir George Savile, Lord Halifax (1633-1695)%@NL@%
  51935.                                                  English statesman, author%@NL@%
  51936. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51937. %@NL@%
  51938. %@NL@%
  51939. %@2@%God forgive me for having thought it possible that a schoolmaster%@EH@%
  51940. could be out and out a rational being.%@NL@%
  51941. %@CR:TEACHEScott4    @%%@NL@%
  51942.                                               Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)%@NL@%
  51943.                                                    Scottish novelist, poet%@NL@%
  51944. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51945. %@NL@%
  51946. %@NL@%
  51947. %@2@%The average schoolmaster is and always must be essentially%@EH@%
  51948. an ass, for how can one imagine an intelligent man engaging in
  51949. so puerile an avocation?%@NL@%
  51950. %@CR:TEACHEMencken   @%%@NL@%
  51951.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  51952.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  51953. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51954. %@NL@%
  51955. %@NL@%
  51956. %@2@%He can receive no pleasure from a casual glimpse of Nature,%@EH@%
  51957. but must catch at it as an object of instruction  . . .  He cannot
  51958. relish a beggarman, or a gipsy, for thinking of the suitable improvement
  51959.  . . .  A boy is at his board, and in his path, and in all his movements.
  51960. He is boy-rid, sick of perpetual boy.%@NL@%
  51961. %@CR:TEACHELamb1     @%%@NL@%
  51962.                                                   Charles Lamb (1775-1834)%@NL@%
  51963.                                                   English essayist, critic%@NL@%
  51964. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51965. %@NL@%
  51966. %@NL@%
  51967. %@2@%A teacher is one who, in his youth, admired teachers.%@NL@%
  51968. %@CR:TEACHEMencken   @%%@NL@%
  51969.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  51970.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  51971. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51972. %@NL@%
  51973. %@NL@%
  51974. %@2@%Slaves and schoolboys often love their masters.%@NL@%
  51975. %@CR:TEACHEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  51976.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  51977.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  51978. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51979. %@NL@%
  51980. %@NL@%
  51981. %@2@%One looks back with appreciation to the brilliant teachers,%@EH@%
  51982. but with gratitude to those who touched our human feelings. The
  51983. curriculum is so much necessary raw material, but warmth is the
  51984. vital element for the growing plant and for the soul of the child.%@NL@%
  51985. %@CR:TEACHEJung      @%%@NL@%
  51986.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  51987.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  51988. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51989. %@NL@%
  51990. %@NL@%
  51991. %@2@%We loved the doctrine for the teacher's sake.%@NL@%
  51992. %@CR:TEACHEDefoe     @%%@NL@%
  51993.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  51994.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  51995. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  51996. %@NL@%
  51997. %@NL@%
  51998. %@2@%A schoolmaster should have an atmosphere of awe, and walk wonderingly,%@EH@%
  51999. as if he was amazed at being himself.%@NL@%
  52000. %@CR:TEACHEBagehot   @%%@NL@%
  52001.                                                 Walter Bagehot (1826-1877)%@NL@%
  52002.                                                  English economist, critic%@NL@%
  52003. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52004. %@NL@%
  52005. %@NL@%
  52006. %@2@%A teacher should be sparing of his smile.%@NL@%
  52007. %@CR:TEACHECowper    @%%@NL@%
  52008.                                                 William Cowper (1731-1800)%@NL@%
  52009.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  52010. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52011. %@NL@%
  52012. %@NL@%
  52013. %@2@%We schoolmasters must temper discretion with deceit.%@NL@%
  52014. %@CR:TEACHEWaugh     @%%@NL@%
  52015.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  52016.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  52017. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52018. %@NL@%
  52019. %@NL@%
  52020. %@2@%A pure pedantic schoolmaster, sweeping his living from the%@EH@%
  52021. posteriors of little children.%@NL@%
  52022. %@CR:TEACHEJonson    @%%@NL@%
  52023.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  52024.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  52025. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52026. %@NL@%
  52027. %@NL@%
  52028.      %@2@%Well had the boding tremblers learned to trace%@NL@%
  52029.      The day's disasters in his morning face.%@NL@%
  52030. %@CR:TEACHEGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  52031.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  52032.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  52033. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52034. %@NL@%
  52035. %@NL@%
  52036. %@2@%A teacher should have maximal authority and minimal power.%@NL@%
  52037. %@CR:TEACHESzasz     @%%@NL@%
  52038.                                                     Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  52039.                                                      American psychiatrist%@NL@%
  52040. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52041. %@NL@%
  52042. %@NL@%
  52043. %@2@%The true teacher defends his pupils against his own personal%@EH@%
  52044. influence.%@NL@%
  52045. %@CR:TEACHEAlcott    @%%@NL@%
  52046.                                                   A. B. Alcott (1799-1888)%@NL@%
  52047.                                          American author, educator, mystic%@NL@%
  52048. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52049. %@NL@%
  52050. %@NL@%
  52051. %@2@%No bubble is so iridescent or floats longer than that blown%@EH@%
  52052. by the successful teacher.%@NL@%
  52053. %@CR:TEACHEOsler     @%%@NL@%
  52054.                                              Sir William Osler (1849-1919)%@NL@%
  52055.                                                         Canadian physician%@NL@%
  52056. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52057. %@NL@%
  52058. %@NL@%
  52059. %@2@%It is when the gods hate a man with uncommon abhorrence that%@EH@%
  52060. they drive him into the profession of a schoolmaster.%@NL@%
  52061. %@CR:TEACHESeneca    @%%@NL@%
  52062.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  52063.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  52064. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52065. %@NL@%
  52066. %@NL@%
  52067. %@2@%It were better to perish than to continue schoolmastering.%@NL@%
  52068. %@CR:TEACHECarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  52069.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  52070.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  52071. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52072. %@NL@%
  52073. %@NL@%
  52074. %@2@%The members of the most responsible, the least advertised,%@EH@%
  52075. the worst paid, and the most richly rewarded profession in the
  52076. world.%@NL@%
  52077. %@CR:TEACHEHay       @%%@NL@%
  52078.                                                        Ian Hay (1876-1952)%@NL@%
  52079.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  52080. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52081. %@NL@%
  52082. %@NL@%
  52083. %@2@%Therefore for the love of God appoint teachers and schoolmasters,%@EH@%
  52084. you that have the charge of youth; and give the teachers stipends
  52085. worthy of their pains.%@NL@%
  52086. %@CR:TEACHELatimer   @%%@NL@%
  52087.                                            Bishop Hugh Latimer (1485-1555)%@NL@%
  52088.                         English churchman, Protestant martyr, schoolmaster%@NL@%
  52089. %@AS@%                                                                  Teachers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52090. %@NL@%
  52091. %@NL@%
  52092. %@NL@%
  52093. %@1@%%@AS@%Technology%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52094. %@CR:TECHNOLOGY      @%%@NL@%
  52095. %@2@%See:%@QR:Technology@%%@NL@%
  52096.      %@AB@%Machinery%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          18d381@%%@NL@%
  52097.      %@AB@%Science%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          23a0e6@%%@NL@%
  52098.      Socialism: %@AB@%Gallo%@AE@%%@BO:          25e088@%%@NL@%
  52099. %@NL@%
  52100. %@2@%The drive toward complex technical achievement offers a%@EH@%
  52101. clue to why the US is good at space gadgetry and bad at slum problems.%@NL@%
  52102. %@CR:TECHNOGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  52103.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  52104.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  52105. %@AS@%                                                                Technology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52106. %@NL@%
  52107. %@NL@%
  52108. %@2@%Technology is the science of arranging life so that one need%@EH@%
  52109. not experience it.%@NL@%
  52110. %@CR:TECHNOGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  52111.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  52112. %@AS@%                                                                Technology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52113. %@NL@%
  52114. %@NL@%
  52115. %@2@%Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from%@EH@%
  52116. magic.%@NL@%
  52117. %@CR:TECHNOClarke1   @%%@NL@%
  52118.                                                 Arthur C. Clarke (b. 1917)%@NL@%
  52119.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  52120. %@AS@%                                                                Technology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52121. %@NL@%
  52122. %@NL@%
  52123. %@2@%I claim that in losing the spinning wheel we lost our left%@EH@%
  52124. lung. We are, therefore, suffering from galloping consumption.
  52125. The restoration of the wheel arrests the progress of the fell disease.%@NL@%
  52126. %@CR:TECHNOGandhi2   @%%@NL@%
  52127.                                             Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)%@NL@%
  52128.                                      Indian political and spiritual leader%@NL@%
  52129. %@AS@%                                                                Technology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52130. %@NL@%
  52131. %@NL@%
  52132. %@2@%One machine can do the work of fifty ordinary men. No machine%@EH@%
  52133. can do the work of one extraordinary man.%@NL@%
  52134. %@CR:TECHNOHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  52135.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  52136.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  52137. %@AS@%                                                                Technology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52138. %@NL@%
  52139. %@NL@%
  52140. %@NL@%
  52141. %@1@%%@AS@%Teeth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52142. %@CR:TEETH           @%%@NL@%
  52143. %@2@%See:%@QR:Teeth@%%@NL@%
  52144.      Science: %@AB@%Russell%@AE@%%@BO:          23c619@%%@NL@%
  52145. %@NL@%
  52146. %@2@%She laughs at everything you say. Why? Because she has fine%@EH@%
  52147. teeth.%@NL@%
  52148. %@CR:TEETH Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  52149.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  52150.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  52151. %@AS@%                                                                     Teeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52152. %@NL@%
  52153. %@NL@%
  52154. %@2@%Smiling as if she had teeth of sugar that were always melting.%@NL@%
  52155. %@CR:TEETH Rilke     @%%@NL@%
  52156.                                             Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)%@NL@%
  52157.                                                                German poet%@NL@%
  52158. %@AS@%                                                                     Teeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52159. %@NL@%
  52160. %@NL@%
  52161.      %@2@%The best of friends fall out, and so%@NL@%
  52162.      His teeth had done some years ago.%@NL@%
  52163. %@CR:TEETH Hood      @%%@NL@%
  52164.                                                    Thomas Hood (1799-1845)%@NL@%
  52165.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  52166. %@AS@%                                                                     Teeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52167. %@NL@%
  52168. %@NL@%
  52169. %@2@%When examined by the Divisional Surgeon, defendant was very%@EH@%
  52170. abusive, and when asked to clench his teeth he took them out, gave
  52171. them to the doctor and said "You clench them."%@NL@%
  52172. %@CR:TEETH Hood      @%%@NL@%
  52173.                                       Police report %@AI@%Woking Herald and News%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52174. %@AS@%                                                                     Teeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52175. %@NL@%
  52176. %@NL@%
  52177. %@NL@%
  52178. %@1@%%@AS@%Television%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52179. %@CR:TELEVISION      @%%@NL@%
  52180. %@2@%See:%@QR:Television@%%@NL@%
  52181.      Cinema: %@AB@%James%@AE@%%@BO:           6ba71@%%@NL@%
  52182. %@NL@%
  52183. %@2@%Television is the first truly democratic culture - the first%@EH@%
  52184. culture available to everybody and entirely governed by what the
  52185. people want. The most terrifying thing is what the people do want.%@NL@%
  52186. %@CR:TELEVIBarnes    @%%@NL@%
  52187.                                                     Clive Barnes (b. 1927)%@NL@%
  52188.                                                       British drama critic%@NL@%
  52189. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52190. %@NL@%
  52191. %@NL@%
  52192. %@2@%Almost from the moment the horror occurred, television changed.%@EH@%
  52193. It was no longer a small box containing entertainment, news, and
  52194. sports; suddenly, it was a window opening onto violently unpredictable
  52195. life in Washington and in Dallas, where a President had been assassinated.%@NL@%
  52196. %@CR:TELEVINEWSWEEK  @%%@NL@%
  52197.             %@AI@%Newsweek%@AE@% magazine, 1963 on coverage of Kennedy's assassination%@NL@%
  52198. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52199. %@NL@%
  52200. %@NL@%
  52201. %@2@%Television is a whore. Any man who wants her full favors can%@EH@%
  52202. have them in five minutes with a pistol.%@NL@%
  52203. %@CR:TELEVINEWSWEEK  @%%@NL@%
  52204.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  52205. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52206. %@NL@%
  52207. %@NL@%
  52208. %@2@%Television is now so desperately hungry for material that they're%@EH@%
  52209. scraping the top of the barrel.%@NL@%
  52210. %@CR:TELEVIVidal     @%%@NL@%
  52211.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  52212.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  52213. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52214. %@NL@%
  52215. %@NL@%
  52216. %@2@%Let's face it, there are no plain women on television.%@NL@%
  52217. %@CR:TELEVIFord1     @%%@NL@%
  52218.                                                        Anna Ford (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  52219.                                             British television personality%@NL@%
  52220. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52221. %@NL@%
  52222. %@NL@%
  52223. %@2@%TV has something in common with the world of racing: it is%@EH@%
  52224. crowded with untrustworthy characters and bristles with opportunities
  52225. to cheat.%@NL@%
  52226. %@CR:TELEVIJohnson5  @%%@NL@%
  52227.                                                     Paul Johnson (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  52228.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  52229. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52230. %@NL@%
  52231. %@NL@%
  52232. %@2@%You have debased [my] child  . . .  You have made him a laughing-stock%@EH@%
  52233. of intelligence  . . .  a stench in the nostrils of the gods of the
  52234. ionosphere.%@NL@%
  52235. %@CR:TELEVIdeForest  @%%@NL@%
  52236.                                               Dr. Leede Forest (1873-1961)%@NL@%
  52237.                                       American inventor of the audion tube%@NL@%
  52238.                                    to National Association of Broadcasters%@NL@%
  52239. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52240. %@NL@%
  52241. %@NL@%
  52242. %@2@%Television is an invention that permits you to be entertained%@EH@%
  52243. in your living room by people you wouldn't have in your home.%@NL@%
  52244. %@CR:TELEVIFrost1    @%%@NL@%
  52245.                                                      David Frost (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  52246.                                             British television personality%@NL@%
  52247. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52248. %@NL@%
  52249. %@NL@%
  52250. %@2@%It is a medium of entertainment which permits millions of people%@EH@%
  52251. to listen to the same joke at the same time, and yet remain lonesome.%@NL@%
  52252. %@CR:TELEVIEliot2    @%%@NL@%
  52253.                                                    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)%@NL@%
  52254.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  52255. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52256. %@NL@%
  52257. %@NL@%
  52258. %@2@%They are simple and true and they compose one.%@NL@%
  52259. %@CR:TELEVICasals    @%%@NL@%
  52260.                                                   Pablo Casals (1876-1973)%@NL@%
  52261.                                                 Spanish cellist, conductor%@NL@%
  52262.                                                                on westerns%@NL@%
  52263. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52264. %@NL@%
  52265. %@NL@%
  52266. %@2@%I find television very educational. Every time someone switches%@EH@%
  52267. it on I go into another room and read a good book.%@NL@%
  52268. %@CR:TELEVIMarx1     @%%@NL@%
  52269.                                                   Groucho Marx (1895-1977)%@NL@%
  52270.                                                       American comic actor%@NL@%
  52271. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52272. %@NL@%
  52273. %@NL@%
  52274. %@2@%I hate television. I hate it as much as peanuts. But I can't%@EH@%
  52275. stop eating peanuts.%@NL@%
  52276. %@CR:TELEVIWelles    @%%@NL@%
  52277.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  52278.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  52279. %@AS@%                                                                Television%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52280. %@NL@%
  52281. %@NL@%
  52282. %@NL@%
  52283. %@1@%%@AS@%Temper%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52284. %@CR:TEMPER          @%%@NL@%
  52285. %@2@%%@QR:Temper@%We boil at different degrees.%@NL@%
  52286. %@CR:TEMPEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  52287.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  52288.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  52289. %@AS@%                                                                    Temper%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52290. %@NL@%
  52291. %@NL@%
  52292. %@2@%A lady of what is commonly called an uncertain temper - a%@EH@%
  52293. phrase which being interpreted signifies a temper tolerably certain
  52294. to make everybody more or less uncomfortable.%@NL@%
  52295. %@CR:TEMPERDickens   @%%@NL@%
  52296.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  52297.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  52298. %@AS@%                                                                    Temper%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52299. %@NL@%
  52300. %@NL@%
  52301. %@2@%A tart temper never mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is%@EH@%
  52302. the only edged tool that grows keener with constant use.%@NL@%
  52303. %@CR:TEMPERIrving    @%%@NL@%
  52304.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  52305.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  52306. %@AS@%                                                                    Temper%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52307. %@NL@%
  52308. %@NL@%
  52309. %@NL@%
  52310. %@1@%%@AS@%Temptation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52311. %@CR:TEMPTATION      @%%@NL@%
  52312. %@2@%See:%@QR:Temptation@%%@NL@%
  52313.      Poverty: %@AB@%Plato%@AE@%%@BO:          1f6e0c@%%@NL@%
  52314. %@NL@%
  52315. %@2@%Thou strong seducer, Opportunity.%@NL@%
  52316. %@CR:TEMPTADryden    @%%@NL@%
  52317.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  52318.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  52319. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52320. %@NL@%
  52321. %@NL@%
  52322. %@2@%I am not over-fond of resisting temptation.%@NL@%
  52323. %@CR:TEMPTABeckford  @%%@NL@%
  52324.                                               William Beckford (1759-1844)%@NL@%
  52325.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  52326. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52327. %@NL@%
  52328. %@NL@%
  52329. %@2@%There are several good protections against temptation but the%@EH@%
  52330. surest is cowardice.%@NL@%
  52331. %@CR:TEMPTATwain     @%%@NL@%
  52332.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  52333.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  52334. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52335. %@NL@%
  52336. %@NL@%
  52337. %@2@%Do you really think it is weakness that yields to temptation?%@EH@%
  52338. I tell you that there are terrible temptations which it requires
  52339. strength, strength and courage, to yield to.%@NL@%
  52340. %@CR:TEMPTAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  52341.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  52342.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  52343. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52344. %@NL@%
  52345. %@NL@%
  52346. %@2@%"You oughtn't to yield to temptation."%@EH@%
  52347. "Well, somebody must, or the thing becomes absurd."%@NL@%
  52348. %@CR:TEMPTAHawkins   @%%@NL@%
  52349.                                           Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  52350.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  52351. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52352. %@NL@%
  52353. %@NL@%
  52354. %@2@%Why resist temptation - there will always be more.%@NL@%
  52355. %@CR:TEMPTAHerold    @%%@NL@%
  52356.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  52357.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  52358. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52359. %@NL@%
  52360. %@NL@%
  52361. %@2@%The resolution to avoid an evil is seldom framed till the evil%@EH@%
  52362. is so far advanced as to make avoidance impossible.%@NL@%
  52363. %@CR:TEMPTAHardy     @%%@NL@%
  52364.                                                   Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)%@NL@%
  52365.                                                     English novelist, poet%@NL@%
  52366. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52367. %@NL@%
  52368. %@NL@%
  52369. %@2@%The only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it.%@NL@%
  52370. %@CR:TEMPTAWilde     @%%@NL@%
  52371.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  52372.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  52373. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52374. %@NL@%
  52375. %@NL@%
  52376. %@2@%The devil tempted Christ, but it was Christ who tempted the%@EH@%
  52377. devil to tempt him.%@NL@%
  52378. %@CR:TEMPTAButler4   @%%@NL@%
  52379.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  52380.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  52381. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52382. %@NL@%
  52383. %@NL@%
  52384. %@2@%Honest bread is very well - it's the butter that makes the%@EH@%
  52385. temptation.%@NL@%
  52386. %@CR:TEMPTAJerrold   @%%@NL@%
  52387.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  52388.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  52389. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52390. %@NL@%
  52391. %@NL@%
  52392. %@2@%A little of what you fancy does you good.%@NL@%
  52393. %@CR:TEMPTALloyd     @%%@NL@%
  52394.                                                    Marie Lloyd (1870-1922)%@NL@%
  52395.                                             British music hall entertainer%@NL@%
  52396. %@AS@%                                                                Temptation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52397. %@NL@%
  52398. %@NL@%
  52399. %@NL@%
  52400. %@1@%%@AS@%Terrorism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52401. %@CR:TERRORISM       @%%@NL@%
  52402. %@2@%See:%@QR:Terrorism@%%@NL@%
  52403.      Guerrilla Warfare: %@AB@%Marighella%@AE@%%@BO:          11d13c@%%@NL@%
  52404. %@NL@%
  52405. %@2@%A little group of willful men reflecting no opinion but their%@EH@%
  52406. own have rendered the great Government of the United States helpless
  52407. and contemptible.%@NL@%
  52408. %@CR:TERRORWilson6   @%%@NL@%
  52409.                                                 Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)%@NL@%
  52410.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52411. %@AS@%                                                                 Terrorism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52412. %@NL@%
  52413. %@NL@%
  52414. %@2@%After seeing %@AI@%Rambo%@AE@% last night I know what to do next time%@EH@%
  52415. this happens.%@NL@%
  52416. %@CR:TERRORReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  52417.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  52418.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52419.     following the hijack of an airplane carrying American passengers, 1985%@NL@%
  52420. %@AS@%                                                                 Terrorism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52421. %@NL@%
  52422. %@NL@%
  52423. %@2@%They can run, but they can't hide.%@NL@%
  52424. %@CR:TERRORReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  52425.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  52426.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52427.             following the interception of the plane carrying the hijackers%@NL@%
  52428.                                     of the Achille Lauro cruise-ship, 1985%@NL@%
  52429. %@AS@%                                                                 Terrorism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52430. %@NL@%
  52431. %@NL@%
  52432. %@2@%No one can kill Americans and brag about it. No one.%@NL@%
  52433. %@CR:TERRORReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  52434.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  52435.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52436.                                      after the attack on Libya, March 1986%@NL@%
  52437. %@AS@%                                                                 Terrorism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52438. %@NL@%
  52439. %@NL@%
  52440. %@2@%The greatest danger of bombs is in the explosion of stupidity%@EH@%
  52441. that they provoke.%@NL@%
  52442. %@CR:TERRORMirabeau  @%%@NL@%
  52443.                                                Octave Mirabeau (1850-1917)%@NL@%
  52444.                                                   French writer, dramatist%@NL@%
  52445. %@AS@%                                                                 Terrorism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52446. %@NL@%
  52447. %@NL@%
  52448. %@NL@%
  52449. %@1@%%@AS@%Texas%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52450. %@CR:TEXAS           @%%@NL@%
  52451. %@2@%%@QR:Texas@%It is considerably smaller than Australia and British Somaliland%@EH@%
  52452. put together. As things stand at present there is nothing much
  52453. the Texans can do about this, and  . . .  they are inclined to shy
  52454. away from the subject in ordinary conversation, muttering defensively
  52455. about the size of oranges.%@NL@%
  52456. %@CR:TEXAS Atkinson1 @%%@NL@%
  52457.                                                              Alex Atkinson%@NL@%
  52458.                                                    British humorous writer%@NL@%
  52459. %@AS@%                                                                     Texas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52460. %@NL@%
  52461. %@NL@%
  52462. %@2@%If a man's from Texas, he'll tell you. If he's not, why embarrass%@EH@%
  52463. him by asking?%@NL@%
  52464. %@CR:TEXAS Gunther   @%%@NL@%
  52465.                                                   John Gunther (1901-1970)%@NL@%
  52466.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  52467. %@AS@%                                                                     Texas%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52468. %@NL@%
  52469. %@NL@%
  52470. %@NL@%
  52471. %@1@%%@AS@%Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52472. %@CR:THATCHER        @%%@NL@%
  52473. %@2@%%@QR:Margaret Thatcher@%She's the best man in England.%@NL@%
  52474. %@CR:THATCHReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  52475.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  52476.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52477. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52478. %@NL@%
  52479. %@NL@%
  52480. %@2@%If I were married to her, I'd be sure to have dinner ready%@EH@%
  52481. when she got home.%@NL@%
  52482. %@CR:THATCHShultz    @%%@NL@%
  52483.                                                    George Shultz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  52484.                         American Republican politician, secretary of state%@NL@%
  52485. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52486. %@NL@%
  52487. %@NL@%
  52488. %@2@%This woman is headstrong, obstinate and dangerously self-opinionated.%@NL@%
  52489. %@CR:THATCHShultz    @%%@NL@%
  52490.        report by Personnel Officer at ICI, rejecting her for a job in 1948%@NL@%
  52491. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52492. %@NL@%
  52493. %@NL@%
  52494. %@2@%I'll stay until I'm tired of it. So long as Britain needs me,%@EH@%
  52495. I shall never be tired of it.%@NL@%
  52496. %@CR:THATCHThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  52497.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  52498.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  52499. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52500. %@NL@%
  52501. %@NL@%
  52502. %@2@%It was then that the iron entered my soul.%@NL@%
  52503. %@CR:THATCHThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  52504.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  52505.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  52506.                                         on her time in Mr. Heath's Cabinet%@NL@%
  52507. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52508. %@NL@%
  52509. %@NL@%
  52510. %@2@%She has fought resolutely for the class she represents and%@EH@%
  52511. there are some lessons we might learn from that.%@NL@%
  52512. %@CR:THATCHBenn      @%%@NL@%
  52513.                                                        Tony Benn (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  52514.                                                  British Labour politician%@NL@%
  52515. %@AS@%                                                         Margaret Thatcher%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52516. %@NL@%
  52517. %@NL@%
  52518. %@NL@%
  52519. %@1@%%@AS@%Theater%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52520. %@CR:THEATER         @%%@NL@%
  52521. %@2@%See:%@QR:Theater@%%@NL@%
  52522.      Criticism: %@AB@%Brown%@AE@%%@BO:           8fbbf@%%@NL@%
  52523.      Tragedy: %@AB@%O'Neill%@AE@%%@BO:          290842@%%@NL@%
  52524.      Writers: %@AB@%Hall%@AE@%%@BO:          2c86b7@%%@NL@%
  52525. %@NL@%
  52526. %@2@%Can this cockpit hold the vasty fields of France?%@NL@%
  52527. %@CR:THEATEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  52528.                                                       Chorus, %@AI@%King Henry V%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52529.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  52530.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  52531. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52532. %@NL@%
  52533. %@NL@%
  52534. %@2@%The theatre is the best way of showing the gap between what%@EH@%
  52535. is said and what is seen to be done, and that is why, ragged and
  52536. gaptoothed as it is, it has still a far healthier potential than
  52537. some poorer, abandoned arts.%@NL@%
  52538. %@CR:THEATEHare2     @%%@NL@%
  52539.                                                       David Hare (b. 1947)%@NL@%
  52540.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  52541. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52542. %@NL@%
  52543. %@NL@%
  52544. %@2@%Every now and then, when you're on stage, you hear the best%@EH@%
  52545. sound a player can hear. It's a sound you can't get in movies or
  52546. in television. It is the sound of a wonderful, deep silence that
  52547. means you've hit them where they live.%@NL@%
  52548. %@CR:THEATEWinters   @%%@NL@%
  52549.                                                  Shelley Winters (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  52550.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  52551. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52552. %@NL@%
  52553. %@NL@%
  52554. %@2@%Long experience has taught me that in England nobody goes to%@EH@%
  52555. the theatre unless he or she has bronchitis.%@NL@%
  52556. %@CR:THEATEAgate     @%%@NL@%
  52557.                                                    James Agate (1877-1947)%@NL@%
  52558.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  52559. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52560. %@NL@%
  52561. %@NL@%
  52562. %@2@%I open with a clock striking, to beget an awful attention in%@EH@%
  52563. the audience: it also marks the time, which is four o'clock in
  52564. the morning, and saves a description of the rising sun, and a great
  52565. deal about gilding the eastern hemisphere.%@NL@%
  52566. %@CR:THEATESheridan  @%%@NL@%
  52567.                                      Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)%@NL@%
  52568.                                                      Anglo-Irish dramatist%@NL@%
  52569. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52570. %@NL@%
  52571. %@NL@%
  52572. %@2@%Drama is life with the dull bits cut out.%@NL@%
  52573. %@CR:THEATEHitchcock @%%@NL@%
  52574.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  52575.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  52576. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52577. %@NL@%
  52578. %@NL@%
  52579. %@2@%All tragedies are finish'd by death, all comedies are ended%@EH@%
  52580. by a marriage.%@NL@%
  52581. %@CR:THEATEByron2    @%%@NL@%
  52582.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  52583.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  52584. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52585. %@NL@%
  52586. %@NL@%
  52587.      %@2@%The drama's laws, the drama's patrons give,%@NL@%
  52588.      For we that live to please, must please to live.%@NL@%
  52589. %@CR:THEATEJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  52590.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  52591.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  52592. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52593. %@NL@%
  52594. %@NL@%
  52595. %@2@%A first night  . . .  notoriously distracting owing to the large%@EH@%
  52596. number of people who stand about looking famous.%@NL@%
  52597. %@CR:THEATEMackail   @%%@NL@%
  52598.                                                  Denis Mackail (1892-1971)%@NL@%
  52599.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  52600. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52601. %@NL@%
  52602. %@NL@%
  52603. %@2@%I have no time to read play-bills; one merely comes to meet%@EH@%
  52604. one's friends, and show that one's alive.%@NL@%
  52605. %@CR:THEATEBurney    @%%@NL@%
  52606.                                                   Fanny Burney (1752-1840)%@NL@%
  52607.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  52608. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52609. %@NL@%
  52610. %@NL@%
  52611. %@2@%It hath evermore been the notorious badge of prostituted Strumpets%@EH@%
  52612. and the lewdest Harlots, to ramble abroad to Plays, to Playhouses;
  52613. whither no honest, chaste or sober Girls or Women, but only branded
  52614. Whores and infamous Adulteresses, did usually resort in ancient
  52615. times.%@NL@%
  52616. %@CR:THEATEPrynne    @%%@NL@%
  52617.                                                 William Prynne (1600-1669)%@NL@%
  52618.                                                        Puritan pamphleteer%@NL@%
  52619. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52620. %@NL@%
  52621. %@NL@%
  52622. %@2@%To save the Theater, the Theater must be destroyed, and actors%@EH@%
  52623. and actresses all die of the Plague  . . .  they make art impossible.%@NL@%
  52624. %@CR:THEATEDuse      @%%@NL@%
  52625.                                                   Eleanor Duse (1859-1924)%@NL@%
  52626.                                                            Italian actress%@NL@%
  52627. %@AS@%                                                                   Theater%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52628. %@NL@%
  52629. %@NL@%
  52630. %@NL@%
  52631. %@1@%%@AS@%Theology%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52632. %@CR:THEOLOGY        @%%@NL@%
  52633. %@2@%%@QR:Theology@%Theology is the effort to explain the unknowable in terms of%@EH@%
  52634. the not worth knowing.%@NL@%
  52635. %@CR:THEOLOMencken   @%%@NL@%
  52636.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  52637.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  52638. %@AS@%                                                                  Theology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52639. %@NL@%
  52640. %@NL@%
  52641. %@2@%I have only a small flickering light to guide me in the darkness%@EH@%
  52642. of a thick forest. Up comes a theologian and blows it out.%@NL@%
  52643. %@CR:THEOLODiderot   @%%@NL@%
  52644.                                                  Denis Diderot (1713-1784)%@NL@%
  52645.                             French philosopher, %@AB@%encyclopediste%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52646. %@AS@%                                                                  Theology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52647. %@NL@%
  52648. %@NL@%
  52649. %@2@%In all systems of theology the devil figures as a male person.%@EH@%
  52650. Yet it is women who keep the church going.%@NL@%
  52651. %@CR:THEOLOMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  52652.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  52653.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  52654. %@AS@%                                                                  Theology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52655. %@NL@%
  52656. %@NL@%
  52657. %@2@%It is an old habit with theologians to beat the living with%@EH@%
  52658. the bones of the dead.%@NL@%
  52659. %@CR:THEOLOIngersoll @%%@NL@%
  52660.                                             Ralph G. Ingersoll (1833-1899)%@NL@%
  52661.                                                            American lawyer%@NL@%
  52662. %@AS@%                                                                  Theology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52663. %@NL@%
  52664. %@NL@%
  52665. %@2@%My theology, briefly, is that the universe was dictated but%@EH@%
  52666. not signed.%@NL@%
  52667. %@CR:THEOLOMorley1   @%%@NL@%
  52668.                                             Christopher Morley (1890-1957)%@NL@%
  52669.                                              American novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  52670. %@AS@%                                                                  Theology%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52671. %@NL@%
  52672. %@NL@%
  52673. %@NL@%
  52674. %@1@%%@AS@%Theories%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52675. %@CR:THEORIES        @%%@NL@%
  52676. %@2@%See:%@QR:Theories@%%@NL@%
  52677.      Action: %@AB@%Engels%@AE@%%@BO:            3a76@%%@NL@%
  52678.      Children: %@AB@%Wilmot%@AE@%%@BO:           61060@%%@NL@%
  52679.      Science: %@AB@%Huxley%@AE@%%@BO:          23c4ac@%%@NL@%
  52680. %@NL@%
  52681. %@2@%It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data.%@NL@%
  52682. %@CR:THEORIDoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  52683.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  52684.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  52685. %@AS@%                                                                  Theories%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52686. %@NL@%
  52687. %@NL@%
  52688. %@2@%You know very well that unless you're a scientist, it's much%@EH@%
  52689. more important for a theory to be shapely than for it to be true.%@NL@%
  52690. %@CR:THEORIHampton   @%%@NL@%
  52691.                                              Christopher Hampton (b. 1946)%@NL@%
  52692.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  52693. %@AS@%                                                                  Theories%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52694. %@NL@%
  52695. %@NL@%
  52696. %@2@%No theory is good except on condition that one uses it to go%@EH@%
  52697. beyond.%@NL@%
  52698. %@CR:THEORIGide      @%%@NL@%
  52699.                                                     Andre Gide (1869-1951)%@NL@%
  52700.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  52701. %@AS@%                                                                  Theories%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52702. %@NL@%
  52703. %@NL@%
  52704. %@2@%A theory can be proved by experiment; but no path leads from%@EH@%
  52705. experiment to the birth of a theory.%@NL@%
  52706. %@CR:THEORIEinstein  @%%@NL@%
  52707.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  52708.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  52709. %@AS@%                                                                  Theories%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52710. %@NL@%
  52711. %@NL@%
  52712. %@NL@%
  52713. %@1@%%@AS@%Therapy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52714. %@CR:THERAPY         @%%@NL@%
  52715. %@2@%%@QR:Therapy@%They all sit around feeling very spiritual, with their mental%@EH@%
  52716. hands on each other's knees, discussing sex as if it were the Art
  52717. of Fugue.%@NL@%
  52718. %@CR:THERAPOsborne   @%%@NL@%
  52719.                                                  Jimmy, %@AI@%Look Back in Anger%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52720.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  52721.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  52722. %@AS@%                                                                   Therapy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52723. %@NL@%
  52724. %@NL@%
  52725. %@NL@%
  52726. %@1@%%@AS@%Thinking%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52727. %@CR:THINKING        @%%@NL@%
  52728. %@2@%%@QR:Thinking@%An Englishman thinks seated; a Frenchman, standing; an American,%@EH@%
  52729. pacing; an Irishman, afterward.%@NL@%
  52730. %@CR:THINKIOMalley   @%%@NL@%
  52731.                                                Austin O'Malley (1858-1932)%@NL@%
  52732.                                                   American oculist, writer%@NL@%
  52733. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52734. %@NL@%
  52735. %@NL@%
  52736. %@2@%It is difficult, if not impossible, for most people to think%@EH@%
  52737. otherwise than in the fashion of their own period.%@NL@%
  52738. %@CR:THINKIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  52739.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  52740.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  52741. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52742. %@NL@%
  52743. %@NL@%
  52744. %@2@%[Men] use thought only to justify their injustices, and speech%@EH@%
  52745. only to disguise their thoughts.%@NL@%
  52746. %@CR:THINKIVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  52747.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  52748.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  52749. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52750. %@NL@%
  52751. %@NL@%
  52752. %@2@%There is no expedient to which man will not resort to avoid%@EH@%
  52753. the real labour of thinking.%@NL@%
  52754. %@CR:THINKIReynolds  @%%@NL@%
  52755.                                            Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792)%@NL@%
  52756.                                                            English painter%@NL@%
  52757. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52758. %@NL@%
  52759. %@NL@%
  52760. %@2@%The extra calories needed for one hour of intense mental effort%@EH@%
  52761. would be completely met by the eating of one oyster cracker or
  52762. one half of a salted peanut.%@NL@%
  52763. %@CR:THINKIBenedict  @%%@NL@%
  52764.                                            Francis G. Benedict (1870-1957)%@NL@%
  52765.                                                           American chemist%@NL@%
  52766. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52767. %@NL@%
  52768. %@NL@%
  52769. %@2@%Sixty minutes of thinking of any kind is bound to lead to confusion%@EH@%
  52770. and unhappiness.%@NL@%
  52771. %@CR:THINKIThurber   @%%@NL@%
  52772.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  52773.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  52774. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52775. %@NL@%
  52776. %@NL@%
  52777. %@2@%Thought would destroy their paradise.%@NL@%
  52778. %@CR:THINKIGray      @%%@NL@%
  52779.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  52780.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  52781. %@AS@%                                                                  Thinking%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52782. %@NL@%
  52783. %@NL@%
  52784. %@NL@%
  52785. %@1@%%@AS@%The Third World%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52786. %@CR:THETHIRDWORLD   @%%@NL@%
  52787. %@2@%%@QR:The Third World@%A nation's strength ultimately consists in what it can do on%@EH@%
  52788. its own, and not in what it can borrow from others.%@NL@%
  52789. %@CR:THETHIGandhi1   @%%@NL@%
  52790.                                                  Indira Gandhi (1917-1984)%@NL@%
  52791.                                                      Indian prime minister%@NL@%
  52792. %@AS@%                                                           The Third World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52793. %@NL@%
  52794. %@NL@%
  52795. %@2@%Our mistake was in the assumption that freedom - real freedom - would%@EH@%
  52796. necessarily and with little trouble follow liberation from alien
  52797. rule  . . .  Our countries are effectively being governed by people
  52798. who have only the most marginal interest in our affairs.%@NL@%
  52799. %@CR:THETHINyerere   @%%@NL@%
  52800.                                                   Julius Nyerere (b. 1921)%@NL@%
  52801.                                   African statesman, president of Tanzania%@NL@%
  52802. %@AS@%                                                           The Third World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52803. %@NL@%
  52804. %@NL@%
  52805. %@2@%The Third World is not a reality, but an ideology.%@NL@%
  52806. %@CR:THETHIArendt    @%%@NL@%
  52807.                                                  Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)%@NL@%
  52808.                                             American political philosopher%@NL@%
  52809. %@AS@%                                                           The Third World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52810. %@NL@%
  52811. %@NL@%
  52812. %@2@%Where there are two PhDs in a developing country, one is Head%@EH@%
  52813. of State and the other is in exile.%@NL@%
  52814. %@CR:THETHISamuel2   @%%@NL@%
  52815.                                                    Lord Samuel (1898-1978)%@NL@%
  52816.                                              British administrator, author%@NL@%
  52817. %@AS@%                                                           The Third World%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52818. %@NL@%
  52819. %@NL@%
  52820. %@NL@%
  52821. %@1@%%@AS@%Time%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52822. %@CR:TIME            @%%@NL@%
  52823. %@2@%See:%@QR:Time@%%@NL@%
  52824.      Happiness: %@AB@%Munro%@AE@%%@BO:          122102@%%@NL@%
  52825.      %@AB@%Punctuality%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          211ba7@%%@NL@%
  52826. %@NL@%
  52827. %@2@%Time, the avenger!%@NL@%
  52828. %@CR:TIME  Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  52829.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  52830.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  52831. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52832. %@NL@%
  52833. %@NL@%
  52834.      %@2@%Time, you old gipsy man,%@NL@%
  52835.      Will you not stay,%@NL@%
  52836.      Put up your caravan%@NL@%
  52837.      Just for one day?%@NL@%
  52838. %@CR:TIME  Hodgeson  @%%@NL@%
  52839.                                                 Ralph Hodgeson (1871-1962)%@NL@%
  52840.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  52841. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52842. %@NL@%
  52843. %@NL@%
  52844. %@2@%Time and I against any two.%@NL@%
  52845. %@CR:TIME  Hodgeson  @%%@NL@%
  52846.                                                            Spanish proverb%@NL@%
  52847. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52848. %@NL@%
  52849. %@NL@%
  52850. %@2@%Time: That which man is always trying to kill, but which ends%@EH@%
  52851. in killing him.%@NL@%
  52852. %@CR:TIME  Spencer   @%%@NL@%
  52853.                                                Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)%@NL@%
  52854.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  52855. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52856. %@NL@%
  52857. %@NL@%
  52858. %@2@%As if you could kill time without injuring eternity.%@NL@%
  52859. %@CR:TIME  Thoreau   @%%@NL@%
  52860.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  52861.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  52862. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52863. %@NL@%
  52864. %@NL@%
  52865.      %@2@%Time turns the old days to derision,%@NL@%
  52866.      Our loves into corpses or wives;%@NL@%
  52867.      And marriage and death and division%@NL@%
  52868.      Make barren our lives.%@NL@%
  52869. %@CR:TIME  Swinburne @%%@NL@%
  52870.                                                A. C. Swinburne (1837-1909)%@NL@%
  52871.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  52872. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52873. %@NL@%
  52874. %@NL@%
  52875. %@2@%The surest poison is time.%@NL@%
  52876. %@CR:TIME  Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  52877.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  52878.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  52879. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52880. %@NL@%
  52881. %@NL@%
  52882. %@2@%We must use time as a tool, not as a couch.%@NL@%
  52883. %@CR:TIME  Kennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  52884.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  52885.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  52886. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52887. %@NL@%
  52888. %@NL@%
  52889. %@2@%Time is very dangerous without a rigid routine. If you do the%@EH@%
  52890. same thing every day at the same time for the same length of time,
  52891. you'll save yourself from many a sink. Routine is a condition
  52892. of survival.%@NL@%
  52893. %@CR:TIME  OConnor   @%%@NL@%
  52894.                                              Flannery O'Connor (1925-1964)%@NL@%
  52895.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  52896. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52897. %@NL@%
  52898. %@NL@%
  52899. %@2@%It haunts me, the passage of time. I think time is a merciless%@EH@%
  52900. thing. I think life is a process of burning oneself out and time
  52901. is the fire that burns you. But I think the spirit of man is a
  52902. good adversary.%@NL@%
  52903. %@CR:TIME  Williams5 @%%@NL@%
  52904.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  52905.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  52906. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52907. %@NL@%
  52908. %@NL@%
  52909. %@2@%O, call back yesterday, bid time return!%@NL@%
  52910. %@CR:TIME  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  52911.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  52912.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  52913. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52914. %@NL@%
  52915. %@NL@%
  52916. %@2@%O, for an engine to keep back all clocks!%@NL@%
  52917. %@CR:TIME  Jonson    @%%@NL@%
  52918.                                                     Ben Jonson (1573-1637)%@NL@%
  52919.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  52920. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52921. %@NL@%
  52922. %@NL@%
  52923. %@2@%I recommend you to take care of the minutes: for hours will%@EH@%
  52924. take care of themselves.%@NL@%
  52925. %@CR:TIME  Chesterfie@%%@NL@%
  52926.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  52927.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  52928. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52929. %@NL@%
  52930. %@NL@%
  52931. %@2@%Time is a great legalizer, even in the field of morals.%@NL@%
  52932. %@CR:TIME  Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  52933.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  52934.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  52935. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52936. %@NL@%
  52937. %@NL@%
  52938.      %@2@%Time %@AI@%goes,%@AE@% you say? Ah, no!%@NL@%
  52939.      Alas, Time stays; %@AI@%we%@AE@% go.%@NL@%
  52940. %@CR:TIME  Dobson    @%%@NL@%
  52941.                                                  Austin Dobson (1840-1921)%@NL@%
  52942.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  52943. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52944. %@NL@%
  52945. %@NL@%
  52946. %@2@%%@AI@%Tout passe, tout casse, tout lasse.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52947. Everything passes, everything perishes, everything palls.%@NL@%
  52948. %@CR:TIME  Dobson    @%%@NL@%
  52949.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  52950. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52951. %@NL@%
  52952. %@NL@%
  52953. %@2@%And thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges.%@NL@%
  52954. %@CR:TIME  Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  52955.                                                       Feste, %@AI@%Twelfth Night%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52956.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  52957.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  52958. %@AS@%                                                                      Time%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52959. %@NL@%
  52960. %@NL@%
  52961. %@NL@%
  52962. %@1@%%@AS@%Tolerance%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  52963. %@CR:TOLERANCE       @%%@NL@%
  52964. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tolerance@%%@NL@%
  52965.      Fools: %@AB@%Jackson%@AE@%%@BO:           f6193@%%@NL@%
  52966. %@NL@%
  52967. %@2@%For ye suffer fools gladly, seeing ye yourselves are wise.%@NL@%
  52968. %@CR:TOLERASaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  52969.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  52970.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  52971. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52972. %@NL@%
  52973. %@NL@%
  52974. %@2@%To understand everything makes one very indulgent.%@NL@%
  52975. %@CR:TOLERAStael     @%%@NL@%
  52976.                                                Madame de Stael (1766-1817)%@NL@%
  52977.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  52978. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52979. %@NL@%
  52980. %@NL@%
  52981. %@2@%Broadmindedness is the result of flattening highmindedness%@EH@%
  52982. out.%@NL@%
  52983. %@CR:TOLERASaintsbury@%%@NL@%
  52984.                                              George Saintsbury (1845-1933)%@NL@%
  52985.                                                    English literary critic%@NL@%
  52986. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52987. %@NL@%
  52988. %@NL@%
  52989. %@2@%Toleration  . . .  is the greatest gift of the mind; it requires%@EH@%
  52990. the same effort of the brain that it takes to balance oneself on
  52991. a bicycle.%@NL@%
  52992. %@CR:TOLERAKeller    @%%@NL@%
  52993.                                                   Helen Keller (1880-1968)%@NL@%
  52994.                                                  American author, lecturer%@NL@%
  52995. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  52996. %@NL@%
  52997. %@NL@%
  52998. %@2@%There is, however, a limit at which forbearance ceases to be%@EH@%
  52999. a virtue.%@NL@%
  53000. %@CR:TOLERABurke2    @%%@NL@%
  53001.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  53002.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  53003. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53004. %@NL@%
  53005. %@NL@%
  53006. %@2@%By being civilized we mean that there is a certain list of%@EH@%
  53007. things about which we permit a man to have an opinion different
  53008. from ours. Usually they are things which we have ceased to care
  53009. about: for instance, the worship of God.%@NL@%
  53010. %@CR:TOLERAMenen     @%%@NL@%
  53011.                                                     Aubrey Menen (b. 1912)%@NL@%
  53012.                                                 British novelist, essayist%@NL@%
  53013. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53014. %@NL@%
  53015. %@NL@%
  53016. %@2@%The modern theory that you should always treat the religious%@EH@%
  53017. convictions of other people with profound respect finds no support
  53018. in the Gospels. Mutual tolerance of religious views is the product
  53019. not of faith, but of doubt.%@NL@%
  53020. %@CR:TOLERALunn      @%%@NL@%
  53021.                                                    Arnold Lunn (1888-1974)%@NL@%
  53022.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  53023. %@AS@%                                                                 Tolerance%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53024. %@NL@%
  53025. %@NL@%
  53026. %@NL@%
  53027. %@1@%%@AS@%Torture%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53028. %@CR:TORTURE         @%%@NL@%
  53029. %@2@%%@QR:Torture@%The healthy man does not torture others - generally it is%@EH@%
  53030. the tortured who turn into torturers.%@NL@%
  53031. %@CR:TORTURJung      @%%@NL@%
  53032.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  53033.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  53034. %@AS@%                                                                   Torture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53035. %@NL@%
  53036. %@NL@%
  53037. %@2@%Pain forces even the innocent to lie.%@NL@%
  53038. %@CR:TORTURPubliliusS@%%@NL@%
  53039.                                        Publilius Syrus (b. 1st century BC)%@NL@%
  53040.                                                      Roman writer of mimes%@NL@%
  53041. %@AS@%                                                                   Torture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53042. %@NL@%
  53043. %@NL@%
  53044. %@2@%There is only one thing that arouses animals more than pleasure,%@EH@%
  53045. and that is pain. Under torture you are as if under the dominion
  53046. of those grasses that produce visions. Everything you have heard
  53047. told, everything you have read returns to your mind, as if you
  53048. were being transported, not toward heaven, but toward hell. Under
  53049. torture you say not only what the inquisitor wants, but also what
  53050. you imagine might please him, because a bond (this, truly, diabolical)
  53051. is established between you and him.%@NL@%
  53052. %@CR:TORTUREco       @%%@NL@%
  53053.                                                      Umberto Eco (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  53054.                                                  Italian scholar, novelist%@NL@%
  53055. %@AS@%                                                                   Torture%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53056. %@NL@%
  53057. %@NL@%
  53058. %@NL@%
  53059. %@1@%%@AS@%Touch%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53060. %@CR:TOUCH           @%%@NL@%
  53061. %@2@%%@QR:Touch@%O why do you walk through the fields in gloves,%@NL@%
  53062.      Missing so much and so much?%@NL@%
  53063.      O fat white woman whom nobody loves,%@NL@%
  53064.      Why do you walk through the fields in gloves%@NL@%
  53065.      When the grass is soft as the breast of doves%@NL@%
  53066.      And shivering sweet to the touch?%@NL@%
  53067. %@CR:TOUCH Cornford2 @%%@NL@%
  53068.                                               Frances Cornford (1886-1960)%@NL@%
  53069.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  53070. %@AS@%                                                                     Touch%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53071. %@NL@%
  53072. %@NL@%
  53073. %@NL@%
  53074. %@1@%%@AS@%Tourism%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53075. %@CR:TOURISM         @%%@NL@%
  53076. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tourism@%%@NL@%
  53077.      The British: %@AB@%Morley%@AE@%%@BO:           4ba63@%%@NL@%
  53078.      Italy: %@AB@%Burney%@AE@%%@BO:          15c711@%%@NL@%
  53079.      Paris: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          1cd38a@%%@NL@%
  53080.      %@AB@%Travel%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          29278c@%%@NL@%
  53081. %@NL@%
  53082.      %@2@%Sailing round the world in a dirty gondola%@NL@%
  53083.      Oh, to be back in the land of%@NL@%
  53084.      Coca-Cola!%@NL@%
  53085. %@CR:TOURISDylan     @%%@NL@%
  53086.                                                        Bob Dylan (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  53087.                                                American singer, songwriter%@NL@%
  53088. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53089. %@NL@%
  53090. %@NL@%
  53091. %@2@%The vagabond, when rich, is called a tourist.%@NL@%
  53092. %@CR:TOURISRichard   @%%@NL@%
  53093.                                                   Paul Richard (1874-1960)%@NL@%
  53094. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53095. %@NL@%
  53096. %@NL@%
  53097. %@2@%%@AI@%C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas la gare.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53098. %@CR:TOURISRichard   @%%@NL@%
  53099.  anonymous taxi-passenger in Paris, Riviera-bound, delivered to St. Lazare%@NL@%
  53100. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53101. %@NL@%
  53102. %@NL@%
  53103. %@2@%The American arrives in Paris with a few French phrases he%@EH@%
  53104. has culled from a conversational guide or picked up from a friend
  53105. who owns a beret.%@NL@%
  53106. %@CR:TOURISAllen1    @%%@NL@%
  53107.                                                     Fred Allen (1894-1957)%@NL@%
  53108.                                                             American comic%@NL@%
  53109. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53110. %@NL@%
  53111. %@NL@%
  53112. %@2@%The time to enjoy a European trip is about three weeks after%@EH@%
  53113. unpacking.%@NL@%
  53114. %@CR:TOURISAde       @%%@NL@%
  53115.                                                     George Ade (1866-1944)%@NL@%
  53116.                                              American humorist, playwright%@NL@%
  53117. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53118. %@NL@%
  53119. %@NL@%
  53120. %@2@%Well, I learned a lot. You'd be surprised. They're all individual%@EH@%
  53121. countries.%@NL@%
  53122. %@CR:TOURISReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  53123.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  53124.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  53125.                                      following tour of South America, 1982%@NL@%
  53126. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53127. %@NL@%
  53128. %@NL@%
  53129. %@2@%Worth seeing? Yes; but not worth going to see.%@NL@%
  53130. %@CR:TOURISJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  53131.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  53132.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  53133.                   to Boswell's "Is not the Giant's Causeway worth seeing?"%@NL@%
  53134. %@AS@%                                                                   Tourism%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53135. %@NL@%
  53136. %@NL@%
  53137. %@NL@%
  53138. %@1@%%@AS@%Trade Unions%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53139. %@CR:TRADEUNIONS     @%%@NL@%
  53140. %@2@%%@QR:Trade Unions@%The history of all countries shows that the working class,%@EH@%
  53141. exclusively by its own effort, is able to develop only trade union
  53142. consciousness.%@NL@%
  53143. %@CR:TRADEULenin     @%%@NL@%
  53144.                                          Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924)%@NL@%
  53145.                                               Russian revolutionary leader%@NL@%
  53146. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53147. %@NL@%
  53148. %@NL@%
  53149. %@2@%Trade Unionism is not Socialism: it is the Capitalism of the%@EH@%
  53150. Proletariat.%@NL@%
  53151. %@CR:TRADEUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  53152.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  53153.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  53154. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53155. %@NL@%
  53156. %@NL@%
  53157. %@2@%Solidarity still exists inside us, even in those who deny it.%@NL@%
  53158. %@CR:TRADEUWalesa    @%%@NL@%
  53159.                                                      Lech Walesa (b. 1943)%@NL@%
  53160.                                                   Polish Solidarity leader%@NL@%
  53161. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53162. %@NL@%
  53163. %@NL@%
  53164. %@2@%It obviously hurt him to wear the dinner-jacket of respectability%@EH@%
  53165. instead of the boiler suit of revolt.%@NL@%
  53166. %@CR:TRADEUConnor    @%%@NL@%
  53167.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  53168.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  53169.            of Ted Hill, later Lord Hill, leader of the Boilermakers' Union%@NL@%
  53170. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53171. %@NL@%
  53172. %@NL@%
  53173. %@2@%No king on earth is as safe in his job as a Trade Union official.%@EH@%
  53174. There is only one thing that can get him sacked; and that is drink.
  53175. Not even that, as long as he doesn't actually fall down.%@NL@%
  53176. %@CR:TRADEUShaw      @%%@NL@%
  53177.                                                  Boanerges, %@AI@%The Apple Cart%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53178.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  53179.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  53180. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53181. %@NL@%
  53182. %@NL@%
  53183. %@2@%Unionism, seldom if ever, uses such power as it has to insure%@EH@%
  53184. better work; almost always it devotes a large part of that power
  53185. to safeguarding bad work.%@NL@%
  53186. %@CR:TRADEUMencken   @%%@NL@%
  53187.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  53188.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  53189. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53190. %@NL@%
  53191. %@NL@%
  53192. %@2@%With all their faults, trade-unions have done more for humanity%@EH@%
  53193. than any other organization of men that ever existed. They have
  53194. done more for decency, for honesty, for education, for the betterment
  53195. of the race, for the developing of character in man, than any other
  53196. association of men.%@NL@%
  53197. %@CR:TRADEUDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  53198.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  53199.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  53200. %@AS@%                                                              Trade Unions%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53201. %@NL@%
  53202. %@NL@%
  53203. %@NL@%
  53204. %@1@%%@AS@%Tradition%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53205. %@CR:TRADITION       @%%@NL@%
  53206. %@2@%%@QR:Tradition@%A precedent embalms a principle.%@NL@%
  53207. %@CR:TRADITDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  53208.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  53209.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  53210. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53211. %@NL@%
  53212. %@NL@%
  53213. %@2@%Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes - our%@EH@%
  53214. ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead. Tradition refuses to
  53215. submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely
  53216. happen to be walking around.%@NL@%
  53217. %@CR:TRADITChesterton@%%@NL@%
  53218.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  53219.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  53220. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53221. %@NL@%
  53222. %@NL@%
  53223. %@2@%People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward%@EH@%
  53224. to their ancestor.%@NL@%
  53225. %@CR:TRADITBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  53226.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  53227.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  53228. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53229. %@NL@%
  53230. %@NL@%
  53231. %@2@%Loyalty to petrified opinion never yet broke a chain or freed%@EH@%
  53232. a human soul.%@NL@%
  53233. %@CR:TRADITTwain     @%%@NL@%
  53234.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  53235.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53236. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53237. %@NL@%
  53238. %@NL@%
  53239. %@2@%The despotism of custom is everywhere the standing hindrance%@EH@%
  53240. to human advancement.%@NL@%
  53241. %@CR:TRADITMill      @%%@NL@%
  53242.                                               John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)%@NL@%
  53243.                                             English philosopher, economist%@NL@%
  53244. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53245. %@NL@%
  53246. %@NL@%
  53247. %@2@%How long soever it hath continued, if it be against reason,%@EH@%
  53248. it is of no force in law.%@NL@%
  53249. %@CR:TRADITCoke      @%%@NL@%
  53250.                                                Sir Edward Coke (1552-1634)%@NL@%
  53251.                                                             English lawyer%@NL@%
  53252. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53253. %@NL@%
  53254. %@NL@%
  53255. %@2@%There was never any thing by the wit of man so well devised,%@EH@%
  53256. or so sure established, which in continuance of time hath not been
  53257. corrupted.%@NL@%
  53258. %@CR:TRADITBOOKOFCOMM@%%@NL@%
  53259.                                                      Book of Common Prayer%@NL@%
  53260. %@AS@%                                                                 Tradition%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53261. %@NL@%
  53262. %@NL@%
  53263. %@NL@%
  53264. %@1@%%@AS@%Tragedy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53265. %@CR:TRAGEDY         @%%@NL@%
  53266. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tragedy@%%@NL@%
  53267.      Europe: %@AB@%Baldwin%@AE@%%@BO:           d34ef@%%@NL@%
  53268. %@NL@%
  53269. %@2@%Where the theater is concerned, one must have a dream and the%@EH@%
  53270. Greek dream in tragedy is the noblest ever.%@NL@%
  53271. %@CR:TRAGEDONeill    @%%@NL@%
  53272.                                                 Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953)%@NL@%
  53273.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  53274. %@AS@%                                                                   Tragedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53275. %@NL@%
  53276. %@NL@%
  53277. %@2@%Commonplace people dislike tragedy because they dare not suffer%@EH@%
  53278. and cannot exult.%@NL@%
  53279. %@CR:TRAGEDMasefield @%%@NL@%
  53280.                                                 John Masefield (1878-1967)%@NL@%
  53281.                                                   English poet, playwright%@NL@%
  53282. %@AS@%                                                                   Tragedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53283. %@NL@%
  53284. %@NL@%
  53285. %@2@%Tragedy on the stage is no longer enough for me, I shall bring%@EH@%
  53286. it into my own life.%@NL@%
  53287. %@CR:TRAGEDArtaud    @%%@NL@%
  53288.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  53289.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  53290. %@AS@%                                                                   Tragedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53291. %@NL@%
  53292. %@NL@%
  53293. %@2@%We begin to live when we have conceived life as a tragedy.%@NL@%
  53294. %@CR:TRAGEDYeats     @%%@NL@%
  53295.                                           William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)%@NL@%
  53296.                                               Anglo-Irish poet, playwright%@NL@%
  53297. %@AS@%                                                                   Tragedy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53298. %@NL@%
  53299. %@NL@%
  53300. %@NL@%
  53301. %@1@%%@AS@%Training%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53302. %@CR:TRAINING        @%%@NL@%
  53303. %@2@%%@QR:Training@%The helmsman is recognized in the tempest; the soldier is proven%@EH@%
  53304. in warfare.%@NL@%
  53305. %@CR:TRAINISaintCypri@%%@NL@%
  53306.                                Saint Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage (210-258)%@NL@%
  53307. %@AS@%                                                                  Training%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53308. %@NL@%
  53309. %@NL@%
  53310. %@2@%A man can seldom - very, very, seldom - fight a winning%@EH@%
  53311. fight against his training: the odds are too heavy.%@NL@%
  53312. %@CR:TRAINITwain     @%%@NL@%
  53313.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  53314.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53315. %@AS@%                                                                  Training%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53316. %@NL@%
  53317. %@NL@%
  53318. %@NL@%
  53319. %@1@%%@AS@%Tranquilizers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53320. %@CR:TRANQUILIZERS   @%%@NL@%
  53321. %@2@%%@QR:Tranquilizers@%Threre's nought, no doubt, so much the spirit calms%@NL@%
  53322.      As rum and true religion.%@NL@%
  53323. %@CR:TRANQUByron2    @%%@NL@%
  53324.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  53325.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53326. %@AS@%                                                             Tranquilizers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53327. %@NL@%
  53328. %@NL@%
  53329. %@NL@%
  53330. %@1@%%@AS@%Translation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53331. %@CR:TRANSLATION     @%%@NL@%
  53332. %@2@%See:%@QR:Translation@%%@NL@%
  53333.      Poetry: %@AB@%Frost%@AE@%%@BO:          1e12c7@%%@NL@%
  53334. %@NL@%
  53335. %@2@%A translator is to be like his author; it is not his business%@EH@%
  53336. to excel him.%@NL@%
  53337. %@CR:TRANSLJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  53338.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  53339.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  53340. %@AS@%                                                               Translation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53341. %@NL@%
  53342. %@NL@%
  53343. %@2@%%@AI@%Traduttori, traditori.%@AE@%%@EH@%
  53344. Translators, traitors.%@NL@%
  53345. %@CR:TRANSLJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  53346.                                                            Italian proverb%@NL@%
  53347. %@AS@%                                                               Translation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53348. %@NL@%
  53349. %@NL@%
  53350.      %@2@%Nor ought a genius less than his that writ%@NL@%
  53351.      Attempt translation.%@NL@%
  53352. %@CR:TRANSLDenham    @%%@NL@%
  53353.                                                Sir John Denham (1615-1669)%@NL@%
  53354.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53355. %@AS@%                                                               Translation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53356. %@NL@%
  53357. %@NL@%
  53358. %@2@%Humour is the first of the gifts to perish in a foreign tongue.%@NL@%
  53359. %@CR:TRANSLWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  53360.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  53361.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  53362. %@AS@%                                                               Translation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53363. %@NL@%
  53364. %@NL@%
  53365. %@NL@%
  53366. %@1@%%@AS@%Transport%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53367. %@CR:TRANSPORT       @%%@NL@%
  53368. %@2@%See:%@QR:Transport@%%@NL@%
  53369.      %@AB@%Cars%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           52e22@%%@NL@%
  53370.      The English: %@AB@%Greer%@AE@%%@BO:           cef20@%%@NL@%
  53371. %@NL@%
  53372.      %@2@%What is this that roareth thus?%@NL@%
  53373.      Can it be a Motor Bus?%@NL@%
  53374.      Yes, the smell and hideous hum%@NL@%
  53375.      Indicat Motorem Bum . . . %@NL@%
  53376.      Domine, defende nos%@NL@%
  53377.      Contra hos Motores Bos!%@NL@%
  53378. %@CR:TRANSPGodley    @%%@NL@%
  53379.                                               Alfred D. Godley (1856-1925)%@NL@%
  53380.                                                            British scholar%@NL@%
  53381. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53382. %@NL@%
  53383. %@NL@%
  53384.      %@2@%The tight compartment fills: our careful eyes%@NL@%
  53385.      Go to explore each other's destinies.%@NL@%
  53386. %@CR:TRANSPMunro1    @%%@NL@%
  53387.                                                   Harold Munro (1879-1932)%@NL@%
  53388.                                                       British poet, critic%@NL@%
  53389. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53390. %@NL@%
  53391. %@NL@%
  53392. %@2@%The coach jumbled us insensibly into some sort of familiarity.%@NL@%
  53393. %@CR:TRANSPSteele    @%%@NL@%
  53394.                                             Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)%@NL@%
  53395.                                        English essayist, dramatist, editor%@NL@%
  53396. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53397. %@NL@%
  53398. %@NL@%
  53399. %@2@%Most people sulk in stage-coaches; I always talk.%@NL@%
  53400. %@CR:TRANSPSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  53401.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  53402.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  53403. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53404. %@NL@%
  53405. %@NL@%
  53406. %@2@%Nothing helps scenery like ham and eggs.%@NL@%
  53407. %@CR:TRANSPTwain     @%%@NL@%
  53408.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  53409.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53410. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53411. %@NL@%
  53412. %@NL@%
  53413. %@2@%My experience of ships is that on them one makes an interesting%@EH@%
  53414. discovery about the world. One finds one can do without it completely.%@NL@%
  53415. %@CR:TRANSPBradbury  @%%@NL@%
  53416.                                                 Malcolm Bradbury (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  53417.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  53418. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53419. %@NL@%
  53420. %@NL@%
  53421. %@2@%I have done almost every human activity inside a taxi which%@EH@%
  53422. does not require main drainage.%@NL@%
  53423. %@CR:TRANSPBrien     @%%@NL@%
  53424.                                                       Alan Brien (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  53425.                                               British novelist, journalist%@NL@%
  53426. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53427. %@NL@%
  53428. %@NL@%
  53429. %@2@%Restore human legs as a means of travel. Pedestrians rely on%@EH@%
  53430. food for fuel and need no special parking facilities.%@NL@%
  53431. %@CR:TRANSPMumford2  @%%@NL@%
  53432.                                                  Lewis Mumford (1895-1990)%@NL@%
  53433.                                             American writer on environment%@NL@%
  53434. %@AS@%                                                                 Transport%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53435. %@NL@%
  53436. %@NL@%
  53437. %@NL@%
  53438. %@1@%%@AS@%Travel%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53439. %@CR:TRAVEL          @%%@NL@%
  53440. %@2@%See:%@QR:Travel@%%@NL@%
  53441.      Hermits: %@AB@%Kipling%@AE@%%@BO:          1282d3@%%@NL@%
  53442.      Independence: %@AB@%Thoreau%@AE@%%@BO:          14a352@%%@NL@%
  53443.      %@AB@%Tourism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          28e20a@%%@NL@%
  53444.      %@AB@%Transport%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2919b3@%%@NL@%
  53445. %@NL@%
  53446.      %@2@%But we have tasted wild fruit, listened to strange music;%@NL@%
  53447.      And all shores of the earth are but as doors of an inn.%@NL@%
  53448. %@CR:TRAVELBinyon    @%%@NL@%
  53449.                                                Laurence Binyon (1869-1943)%@NL@%
  53450.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  53451. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53452. %@NL@%
  53453. %@NL@%
  53454.      %@2@%%@AI@%Navigare necesse est,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53455.      %@AI@%Vivere non est necesse.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53456. %@NL@%
  53457. %@2@%Navigation is essential; life is not.%@NL@%
  53458. %@CR:TRAVELBinyon    @%%@NL@%
  53459.                                                          Hanseatic proverb%@NL@%
  53460. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53461. %@NL@%
  53462. %@NL@%
  53463. %@2@%When one realizes that his life is worthless he either commits%@EH@%
  53464. suicide or travels.%@NL@%
  53465. %@CR:TRAVELDahlberg  @%%@NL@%
  53466.                                                Edward Dahlberg (1900-1977)%@NL@%
  53467.                                            American novelist, poet, critic%@NL@%
  53468. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53469. %@NL@%
  53470. %@NL@%
  53471. %@2@%The whole object of travel is not to set foot on foreign land;%@EH@%
  53472. it is at last to set foot on one's own country as a foreign land.%@NL@%
  53473. %@CR:TRAVELChesterton@%%@NL@%
  53474.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  53475.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  53476. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53477. %@NL@%
  53478. %@NL@%
  53479. %@2@%To be really cosmopolitan a man must be at home even in his%@EH@%
  53480. own country.%@NL@%
  53481. %@CR:TRAVELHigginson @%%@NL@%
  53482.                                                T. W. Higginson (1823-1911)%@NL@%
  53483.                                                 American clergyman, writer%@NL@%
  53484. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53485. %@NL@%
  53486. %@NL@%
  53487. %@2@%I dislike feeling at home when I am abroad.%@NL@%
  53488. %@CR:TRAVELShaw      @%%@NL@%
  53489.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  53490.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  53491. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53492. %@NL@%
  53493. %@NL@%
  53494. %@2@%A man who leaves home to mend himself and others is a philosopher;%@EH@%
  53495. but he who goes from country to country, guided by the blind impulse
  53496. of curiosity, is a vagabond.%@NL@%
  53497. %@CR:TRAVELGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  53498.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  53499.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  53500. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53501. %@NL@%
  53502. %@NL@%
  53503. %@2@%All travelling becomes dull in exact proportion to its rapidity.%@NL@%
  53504. %@CR:TRAVELRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  53505.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  53506.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  53507. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53508. %@NL@%
  53509. %@NL@%
  53510. %@2@%Extensive travelling induces a feeling of encapsulation, and%@EH@%
  53511. travel, so broadening at first, contracts the mind.%@NL@%
  53512. %@CR:TRAVELTheroux   @%%@NL@%
  53513.                                                     Paul Theroux (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  53514.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53515. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53516. %@NL@%
  53517. %@NL@%
  53518. %@2@%In America there are two classes of travel - first-class%@EH@%
  53519. and with children.%@NL@%
  53520. %@CR:TRAVELBenchley  @%%@NL@%
  53521.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  53522.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  53523. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53524. %@NL@%
  53525. %@NL@%
  53526. %@2@%Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember,%@EH@%
  53527. and remember more than I have seen.%@NL@%
  53528. %@CR:TRAVELDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  53529.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  53530.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  53531. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53532. %@NL@%
  53533. %@NL@%
  53534. %@2@%Travel is glamorous only in retrospect.%@NL@%
  53535. %@CR:TRAVELTheroux   @%%@NL@%
  53536.                                                     Paul Theroux (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  53537.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53538. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53539. %@NL@%
  53540. %@NL@%
  53541. %@2@%"If you wish to be thoroughly misinformed about a country,%@EH@%
  53542. consult a man who has lived there for thirty years and speaks the
  53543. language like a native."%@NL@%
  53544. %@CR:TRAVELShaw      @%%@NL@%
  53545.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  53546.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  53547.                                                         quoting Palmerston%@NL@%
  53548. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53549. %@NL@%
  53550. %@NL@%
  53551. %@2@%I travel light; as light, that is, as a man can travel who%@EH@%
  53552. will still carry his body around because of its sentimental value.%@NL@%
  53553. %@CR:TRAVELFry       @%%@NL@%
  53554.                                                  Christopher Fry (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  53555.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  53556. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53557. %@NL@%
  53558. %@NL@%
  53559. %@2@%One should always have one's boots on and be ready to leave.%@NL@%
  53560. %@CR:TRAVELMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  53561.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  53562.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  53563. %@AS@%                                                                    Travel%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53564. %@NL@%
  53565. %@NL@%
  53566. %@NL@%
  53567. %@1@%%@AS@%Treachery%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53568. %@CR:TREACHERY       @%%@NL@%
  53569. %@2@%%@QR:Treachery@%Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason?%@NL@%
  53570.      For if it prosper, none dare call it treason.%@NL@%
  53571. %@CR:TREACHHarington @%%@NL@%
  53572.                                             Sir John Harington (1561-1612)%@NL@%
  53573.                                                   English writer, courtier%@NL@%
  53574. %@AS@%                                                                 Treachery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53575. %@NL@%
  53576. %@NL@%
  53577. %@2@%Combinations of wickedness would overwhelm the world did not%@EH@%
  53578. those who have long practised perfidy grow faithless to each other.%@NL@%
  53579. %@CR:TREACHJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  53580.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  53581.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  53582. %@AS@%                                                                 Treachery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53583. %@NL@%
  53584. %@NL@%
  53585. %@2@%Treason is loved of many, but the traitor hated of all.%@NL@%
  53586. %@CR:TREACHGreene2   @%%@NL@%
  53587.                                                  Robert Greene (1558-1592)%@NL@%
  53588.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  53589. %@AS@%                                                                 Treachery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53590. %@NL@%
  53591. %@NL@%
  53592. %@2@%All his usual formalities of perfidy were observed with scrupulous%@EH@%
  53593. technique.%@NL@%
  53594. %@CR:TREACHChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  53595.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  53596.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  53597.                                             of Hitler's invasion of Russia%@NL@%
  53598. %@AS@%                                                                 Treachery%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53599. %@NL@%
  53600. %@NL@%
  53601. %@NL@%
  53602. %@1@%%@AS@%Trials%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53603. %@CR:TRIALS          @%%@NL@%
  53604. %@2@%See:%@QR:Trials@%%@NL@%
  53605.      %@AB@%Litigation%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          17aafb@%%@NL@%
  53606. %@NL@%
  53607. %@2@%All trials are trials for one's life, just as all sentences%@EH@%
  53608. are sentences of death.%@NL@%
  53609. %@CR:TRIALSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  53610.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  53611.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  53612. %@AS@%                                                                    Trials%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53613. %@NL@%
  53614. %@NL@%
  53615. %@2@%Trial. A formal inquiry designed to prove and put upon record%@EH@%
  53616. the blameless characters of judges, advocates and jurors.%@NL@%
  53617. %@CR:TRIALSBierce    @%%@NL@%
  53618.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  53619.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53620. %@AS@%                                                                    Trials%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53621. %@NL@%
  53622. %@NL@%
  53623. %@2@%Appeal. In law, to put the dice into the box for another throw.%@NL@%
  53624. %@CR:TRIALSBierce    @%%@NL@%
  53625.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  53626.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53627. %@AS@%                                                                    Trials%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53628. %@NL@%
  53629. %@NL@%
  53630.      %@2@%The hungry judges soon the sentence sign,%@NL@%
  53631.      And wretches hang that jurymen may dine.%@NL@%
  53632. %@CR:TRIALSPope      @%%@NL@%
  53633.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  53634.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53635. %@AS@%                                                                    Trials%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53636. %@NL@%
  53637. %@NL@%
  53638. %@NL@%
  53639. %@1@%%@AS@%Trust%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53640. %@CR:TRUST           @%%@NL@%
  53641. %@2@%See:%@QR:Trust@%%@NL@%
  53642.      Royalty: %@AB@%Bible, Psalms%@AE@%%@BO:          233ea3@%%@NL@%
  53643.      Suckers: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          27364f@%%@NL@%
  53644.      Tyranny: %@AB@%Aeschylus%@AE@%%@BO:          2990e8@%%@NL@%
  53645.      Wives: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2b8d8e@%%@NL@%
  53646. %@NL@%
  53647. %@2@%Trust everybody, but cut the cards.%@NL@%
  53648. %@CR:TRUST Dunne     @%%@NL@%
  53649.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  53650.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  53651. %@AS@%                                                                     Trust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53652. %@NL@%
  53653. %@NL@%
  53654. %@2@%It is an equal failing to trust everybody, and to trust nobody.%@NL@%
  53655. %@CR:TRUST Dunne     @%%@NL@%
  53656.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  53657. %@AS@%                                                                     Trust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53658. %@NL@%
  53659. %@NL@%
  53660. %@2@%I cannot give them my confidence; pardon me, gentlemen, confidence%@EH@%
  53661. is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom: youth is the season
  53662. of credulity.%@NL@%
  53663. %@CR:TRUST Pitt1     @%%@NL@%
  53664.                                                   William Pitt (1708-1778)%@NL@%
  53665.                                         English politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  53666. %@AS@%                                                                     Trust%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53667. %@NL@%
  53668. %@NL@%
  53669. %@NL@%
  53670. %@1@%%@AS@%Truth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53671. %@CR:TRUTH           @%%@NL@%
  53672. %@2@%See:%@QR:Truth@%%@NL@%
  53673.      The Dead: %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:           975f1@%%@NL@%
  53674.      Death: Dying: %@AB@%Arnold%@AE@%%@BO:           9d0a1@%%@NL@%
  53675.      Lying: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          18b3e5@%%@NL@%
  53676.      Martyrdom: %@AB@%Voltaire%@AE@%%@BO:          19a902@%%@NL@%
  53677.      Newspapers: %@AB@%Scott%@AE@%%@BO:          1bd3ce@%%@NL@%
  53678.      Prayer: %@AB@%Seneca%@AE@%%@BO:          1fbce6@%%@NL@%
  53679.      Satire: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          236c55@%%@NL@%
  53680.      War Correspondents: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          2ac307@%%@NL@%
  53681. %@NL@%
  53682. %@2@%It is always the best policy to speak the truth, unless of%@EH@%
  53683. course you are an exceptionally good liar.%@NL@%
  53684. %@CR:TRUTH Jerome    @%%@NL@%
  53685.                                               Jerome K. Jerome (1859-1927)%@NL@%
  53686.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  53687. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53688. %@NL@%
  53689. %@NL@%
  53690. %@2@%It takes two to speak the truth - one to speak, and another%@EH@%
  53691. to hear.%@NL@%
  53692. %@CR:TRUTH Thoreau   @%%@NL@%
  53693.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  53694.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  53695. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53696. %@NL@%
  53697. %@NL@%
  53698. %@2@%Telling the truth to people who misunderstand you is generally%@EH@%
  53699. promoting falsehood.%@NL@%
  53700. %@CR:TRUTH Hawkins   @%%@NL@%
  53701.                                           Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  53702.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  53703. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53704. %@NL@%
  53705. %@NL@%
  53706.      %@2@%A truth that's told with bad intent%@NL@%
  53707.      Beats all the lies you can invent.%@NL@%
  53708. %@CR:TRUTH Blake     @%%@NL@%
  53709.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  53710.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  53711. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53712. %@NL@%
  53713. %@NL@%
  53714. %@2@%To become properly acquainted with a truth we must first have%@EH@%
  53715. disbelieved it, and disputed against it.%@NL@%
  53716. %@CR:TRUTH Bismarck  @%%@NL@%
  53717.                                       Prince Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)%@NL@%
  53718.                                                         Prussian statesman%@NL@%
  53719. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53720. %@NL@%
  53721. %@NL@%
  53722. %@2@%The terrible thing about the quest for truth is that you find%@EH@%
  53723. it.%@NL@%
  53724. %@CR:TRUTH deGourmont@%%@NL@%
  53725.                                               Remy de Gourmont (1858-1915)%@NL@%
  53726.                                                    French critic, novelist%@NL@%
  53727. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53728. %@NL@%
  53729. %@NL@%
  53730. %@2@%Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick%@EH@%
  53731. themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened.%@NL@%
  53732. %@CR:TRUTH Churchill3@%%@NL@%
  53733.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  53734.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  53735. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53736. %@NL@%
  53737. %@NL@%
  53738. %@2@%In this world, truth can wait; she's used to it.%@NL@%
  53739. %@CR:TRUTH Jerrold   @%%@NL@%
  53740.                                                Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857)%@NL@%
  53741.                                               English playwright, humorist%@NL@%
  53742. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53743. %@NL@%
  53744. %@NL@%
  53745. %@2@%The truth would become more popular if it were not always stating%@EH@%
  53746. ugly facts.%@NL@%
  53747. %@CR:TRUTH Haskins   @%%@NL@%
  53748.                                                 Henry S. Haskins (b. 1875)%@NL@%
  53749.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53750. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53751. %@NL@%
  53752. %@NL@%
  53753. %@2@%"It was as true," said Mr Barkis, "as taxes is. And nothing's%@EH@%
  53754. truer than them."%@NL@%
  53755. %@CR:TRUTH Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  53756.                                                          %@AI@%David Copperfield%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53757.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  53758.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  53759. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53760. %@NL@%
  53761. %@NL@%
  53762. %@2@%It is the customary fate of new truths, to begin as heresies,%@EH@%
  53763. and to end as superstitions.%@NL@%
  53764. %@CR:TRUTH Huxley2   @%%@NL@%
  53765.                                            Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895)%@NL@%
  53766.                                                          English biologist%@NL@%
  53767. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53768. %@NL@%
  53769. %@NL@%
  53770. %@2@%I am convinced that the desire to formulate truths is a virulent%@EH@%
  53771. disease.%@NL@%
  53772. %@CR:TRUTH James4    @%%@NL@%
  53773.                                                  William James (1842-1910)%@NL@%
  53774.                                         American psychologist, philosopher%@NL@%
  53775. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53776. %@NL@%
  53777. %@NL@%
  53778. %@2@%There are no whole truths; all truths are half-truths. It is%@EH@%
  53779. trying to treat them as whole truths that plays the devil.%@NL@%
  53780. %@CR:TRUTH Whitehead @%%@NL@%
  53781.                                         Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)%@NL@%
  53782.                                                        British philosopher%@NL@%
  53783. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53784. %@NL@%
  53785. %@NL@%
  53786. %@2@%Perhaps the mission of those who love mankind is to make people%@EH@%
  53787. laugh at the truth, %@AI@%to make truth laugh,%@AE@% because the only truth
  53788. lies in learning to free ourselves from insane passion for the
  53789. truth.%@NL@%
  53790. %@CR:TRUTH Eco       @%%@NL@%
  53791.                                                      Umberto Eco (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  53792.                                                  Italian scholar, novelist%@NL@%
  53793. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53794. %@NL@%
  53795. %@NL@%
  53796. %@2@%Truth  . . .  never comes into the world but like a bastard,%@EH@%
  53797. to the ignominy of him that brought her froth.%@NL@%
  53798. %@CR:TRUTH Milton    @%%@NL@%
  53799.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  53800.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53801. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53802. %@NL@%
  53803. %@NL@%
  53804. %@2@%God offers to every mind its choice between truth and repose.%@EH@%
  53805. Take which you please; you can never have both.%@NL@%
  53806. %@CR:TRUTH Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  53807.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  53808.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  53809. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53810. %@NL@%
  53811. %@NL@%
  53812. %@2@%It is the calling of great men, not so much to preach new truths,%@EH@%
  53813. as to rescue from oblivion those old truths which it is our wisdom
  53814. to remember and our weakness to forget.%@NL@%
  53815. %@CR:TRUTH Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  53816.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  53817.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  53818. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53819. %@NL@%
  53820. %@NL@%
  53821. %@2@%I tell the truth, not as much as I would but as much as I dare - and%@EH@%
  53822. I dare more and more as I grow older.%@NL@%
  53823. %@CR:TRUTH Montaigne @%%@NL@%
  53824.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  53825.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  53826. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53827. %@NL@%
  53828. %@NL@%
  53829. %@2@%An honest man speaks the truth, though it may give offence;%@EH@%
  53830. a vain man, in order that it may.%@NL@%
  53831. %@CR:TRUTH Hazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  53832.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  53833.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  53834. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53835. %@NL@%
  53836. %@NL@%
  53837. %@2@%Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize%@EH@%
  53838. it.%@NL@%
  53839. %@CR:TRUTH Twain     @%%@NL@%
  53840.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  53841.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  53842. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53843. %@NL@%
  53844. %@NL@%
  53845. %@2@%Truth is so important that it needs to be surrounded by a bodyguard%@EH@%
  53846. of lies.%@NL@%
  53847. %@CR:TRUTH Shultz    @%%@NL@%
  53848.                                                    George Shultz (b. 1920)%@NL@%
  53849.                         American Republican politician, secretary of state%@NL@%
  53850.                         on the disinformation campaign against Libya, 1986%@NL@%
  53851. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53852. %@NL@%
  53853. %@NL@%
  53854. %@2@%It is hard to believe that a man is telling the truth when%@EH@%
  53855. you know that you would lie if you were in his place.%@NL@%
  53856. %@CR:TRUTH Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  53857.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  53858.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  53859. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53860. %@NL@%
  53861. %@NL@%
  53862. %@2@%It is better to remain silent than speak the truth ill-humouredly,%@EH@%
  53863. and so spoil an excellent dish by covering it with bad sauce%@NL@%
  53864. %@CR:TRUTH Camus2    @%%@NL@%
  53865.                                              Jean-Pierre Camus (1584-1652)%@NL@%
  53866.                                                   French churchman, author%@NL@%
  53867. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53868. %@NL@%
  53869. %@NL@%
  53870.      %@2@%Truth that peeps%@NL@%
  53871.      Over the glass's edge when dinner's done.%@NL@%
  53872. %@CR:TRUTH Browning2 @%%@NL@%
  53873.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  53874.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53875. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53876. %@NL@%
  53877. %@NL@%
  53878. %@2@%Plato is dear to me, but dearer still is truth.%@NL@%
  53879. %@CR:TRUTH Aristotle @%%@NL@%
  53880.                                                     Aristotle (384-322 BC)%@NL@%
  53881.                                                          Greek philosopher%@NL@%
  53882. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53883. %@NL@%
  53884. %@NL@%
  53885. %@2@%The first wrote, wine is the strongest. The second wrote,%@EH@%
  53886. the king is the strongest. The third wrote, women are strongest:
  53887. but above all things truth beareth away the victory.%@NL@%
  53888. %@CR:TRUTH Apocrypha3@%%@NL@%
  53889.                                                        Apocrypha, Esdras I%@NL@%
  53890. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53891. %@NL@%
  53892. %@NL@%
  53893. %@2@%A man may be in as just possession of truth as of a city, and%@EH@%
  53894. yet be forced to surrender.%@NL@%
  53895. %@CR:TRUTH Browne1   @%%@NL@%
  53896.                                              Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682)%@NL@%
  53897.                                                  English physician, author%@NL@%
  53898. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53899. %@NL@%
  53900. %@NL@%
  53901. %@2@%When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains,%@EH@%
  53902. however improbable, must be the truth.%@NL@%
  53903. %@CR:TRUTH Doyle1    @%%@NL@%
  53904.                                         Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)%@NL@%
  53905.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  53906. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53907. %@NL@%
  53908. %@NL@%
  53909. %@2@%Let us begin by committing ourselves to the truth - to see%@EH@%
  53910. it like it is, and tell it like it is - to find the truth, to
  53911. speak the truth, and to live the truth.%@NL@%
  53912. %@CR:TRUTH Nixon     @%%@NL@%
  53913.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  53914.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  53915.                                    accepting presidential nomination, 1968%@NL@%
  53916. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53917. %@NL@%
  53918. %@NL@%
  53919. %@2@%What is truth? said jesting Pilate; and would not stay for%@EH@%
  53920. an answer.%@NL@%
  53921. %@CR:TRUTH Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  53922.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  53923.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  53924. %@AS@%                                                                     Truth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53925. %@NL@%
  53926. %@NL@%
  53927. %@NL@%
  53928. %@1@%%@AS@%Tyranny%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53929. %@CR:TYRANNY         @%%@NL@%
  53930. %@2@%See:%@QR:Tyranny@%%@NL@%
  53931.      %@AB@%Despotism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           a6ccb@%%@NL@%
  53932.      Mobs: %@AB@%Burke%@AE@%%@BO:          1a92b1@%%@NL@%
  53933.      The Public: %@AB@%Bulwer-Lytton%@AE@%%@BO:          20f6ec@%%@NL@%
  53934.      Revolution: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          22ccb9@%%@NL@%
  53935. %@NL@%
  53936. %@2@%I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against%@EH@%
  53937. every form of tyranny over the mind of man.%@NL@%
  53938. %@CR:TYRANNJefferson @%%@NL@%
  53939.                                               Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)%@NL@%
  53940.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  53941. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53942. %@NL@%
  53943. %@NL@%
  53944. %@2@%It is far easier to act under conditions of tyranny than to%@EH@%
  53945. think.%@NL@%
  53946. %@CR:TYRANNArendt    @%%@NL@%
  53947.                                                  Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)%@NL@%
  53948.                                             American political philosopher%@NL@%
  53949. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53950. %@NL@%
  53951. %@NL@%
  53952. %@2@%The worst form of tyranny the world has ever known: the tyranny%@EH@%
  53953. of the weak over the strong. It is the only tyranny that lasts.%@NL@%
  53954. %@CR:TYRANNWilde     @%%@NL@%
  53955.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  53956.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  53957. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53958. %@NL@%
  53959. %@NL@%
  53960. %@2@%Kings will be tyrants from policy, when subjects are rebels%@EH@%
  53961. from principle.%@NL@%
  53962. %@CR:TYRANNBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  53963.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  53964.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  53965. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53966. %@NL@%
  53967. %@NL@%
  53968.      %@2@%In every tyrant's heart there springs in the end%@NL@%
  53969.      This poison, that he cannot trust a friend.%@NL@%
  53970. %@CR:TYRANNAeschylus @%%@NL@%
  53971.                                                     Aeschylus (525-456 BC)%@NL@%
  53972.                                                          Greek tragic poet%@NL@%
  53973.                                                      trans. Gilbert Murray%@NL@%
  53974. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53975. %@NL@%
  53976. %@NL@%
  53977.      %@2@%Like Cato, give his little senate laws,%@NL@%
  53978.      And sit attentive to his own applause.%@NL@%
  53979. %@CR:TYRANNPope      @%%@NL@%
  53980.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  53981.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  53982. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53983. %@NL@%
  53984. %@NL@%
  53985. %@2@%In the groves of their academy, at the end of every vista,%@EH@%
  53986. you see nothing but the gallows.%@NL@%
  53987. %@CR:TYRANNBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  53988.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  53989.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  53990. %@AS@%                                                                   Tyranny%@AE@%%@NL@%
  53991. %@NL@%
  53992. %@NL@%
  53993. %@NL@%
  53994. %@1@%%@AS@%Understanding%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  53995. %@CR:UNDERSTANDING   @%%@NL@%
  53996. %@2@%See:%@QR:Understanding@%%@NL@%
  53997.      Intellectuals: %@AB@%Apocrypha%@AE@%%@BO:          1541d6@%%@NL@%
  53998. %@NL@%
  53999. %@2@%Where I am not understood, it shall be concluded that something%@EH@%
  54000. very useful and profound is couched underneath.%@NL@%
  54001. %@CR:UNDERSSwift     @%%@NL@%
  54002.                                                 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)%@NL@%
  54003.                                                       Anglo-Irish satirist%@NL@%
  54004. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54005. %@NL@%
  54006. %@NL@%
  54007. %@2@%I have suffered from being misunderstood, but I would have%@EH@%
  54008. suffered a hell of a lot more if I had been understood.%@NL@%
  54009. %@CR:UNDERSDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  54010.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  54011.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  54012. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54013. %@NL@%
  54014. %@NL@%
  54015. %@2@%Unless one is a genius, it is best to aim at being intelligible.%@NL@%
  54016. %@CR:UNDERSHawkins   @%%@NL@%
  54017.                                           Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933)%@NL@%
  54018.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  54019. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54020. %@NL@%
  54021. %@NL@%
  54022. %@2@%Nowadays to be intelligible is to be found out.%@NL@%
  54023. %@CR:UNDERSWilde     @%%@NL@%
  54024.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  54025.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  54026. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54027. %@NL@%
  54028. %@NL@%
  54029. %@2@%If one does not understand a person, one tends to regard him%@EH@%
  54030. as a fool.%@NL@%
  54031. %@CR:UNDERSJung      @%%@NL@%
  54032.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  54033.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  54034. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54035. %@NL@%
  54036. %@NL@%
  54037. %@2@%A lot of words get spilled as the urge to be understood clashes%@EH@%
  54038. with an aversion to being understood too well.%@NL@%
  54039. %@CR:UNDERSJung      @%%@NL@%
  54040.                                                       %@AI@%New York Times%@AE@%, 1985%@NL@%
  54041. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54042. %@NL@%
  54043. %@NL@%
  54044. %@2@%I strive to be brief but I become obscure.%@NL@%
  54045. %@CR:UNDERSHorace    @%%@NL@%
  54046.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  54047.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  54048. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54049. %@NL@%
  54050. %@NL@%
  54051. %@2@%If you are sure you understand everything that is going on,%@EH@%
  54052. you are hopelessly confused.%@NL@%
  54053. %@CR:UNDERSMondale   @%%@NL@%
  54054.                                                Walter F. Mondale (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  54055.                                             American Democratic politician%@NL@%
  54056. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54057. %@NL@%
  54058. %@NL@%
  54059. %@2@%Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating%@EH@%
  54060. than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill-will.%@NL@%
  54061. %@CR:UNDERSKing3     @%%@NL@%
  54062.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  54063.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  54064. %@AS@%                                                             Understanding%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54065. %@NL@%
  54066. %@NL@%
  54067. %@NL@%
  54068. %@1@%%@AS@%Unemployment%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54069. %@CR:UNEMPLOYMENT    @%%@NL@%
  54070. %@2@%See:%@QR:Unemployment@%%@NL@%
  54071.      Business: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:           4d7cc@%%@NL@%
  54072. %@NL@%
  54073. %@2@%You take my life when you take the means whereby I live.%@NL@%
  54074. %@CR:UNEMPLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54075.                                            Shylock, %@AI@%The Merchant of Venice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54076.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54077.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54078. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54079. %@NL@%
  54080. %@NL@%
  54081. %@2@%A man willing to work, and unable to find work, is perhaps%@EH@%
  54082. the saddest sight that fortune's inequality exhibits under this
  54083. sun.%@NL@%
  54084. %@CR:UNEMPLCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  54085.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  54086.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  54087. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54088. %@NL@%
  54089. %@NL@%
  54090. %@2@%To be idle and to be poor have always been reproaches, and%@EH@%
  54091. therefore every man endeavours with his utmost care to hide his
  54092. poverty from others, and his idleness from himself.%@NL@%
  54093. %@CR:UNEMPLJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  54094.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  54095.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  54096. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54097. %@NL@%
  54098. %@NL@%
  54099. %@2@%It's a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it's a depression%@EH@%
  54100. when you lose yours.%@NL@%
  54101. %@CR:UNEMPLTruman    @%%@NL@%
  54102.                                                Harry S. Truman (1884-1972)%@NL@%
  54103.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54104. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54105. %@NL@%
  54106. %@NL@%
  54107. %@2@%A man who has no office to go to - I don't care who he is - is%@EH@%
  54108. a trial of which you can have no conception.%@NL@%
  54109. %@CR:UNEMPLShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54110.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54111.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54112. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54113. %@NL@%
  54114. %@NL@%
  54115. %@2@%The loss of one's job is a misfortune which should be borne%@EH@%
  54116. with dignity and reticence.%@NL@%
  54117. %@CR:UNEMPLStJohnStev@%%@NL@%
  54118.                                           Norman St. John-Stevas (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  54119.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  54120. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54121. %@NL@%
  54122. %@NL@%
  54123. %@2@%He didn't riot. He got on his bike and looked for work.%@NL@%
  54124. %@CR:UNEMPLTebbit    @%%@NL@%
  54125.                                                    Norman Tebbit (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  54126.                                            British Conservative politician%@NL@%
  54127.                             of his unemployed father during the Depression%@NL@%
  54128. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54129. %@NL@%
  54130. %@NL@%
  54131. %@2@%Better wear out shoes than sheets.%@NL@%
  54132. %@CR:UNEMPLTebbit    @%%@NL@%
  54133.                                               17th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  54134. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54135. %@NL@%
  54136. %@NL@%
  54137. %@2@%Sometimes I've heard it said that conservatives have been associated%@EH@%
  54138. with unemployment. That's absolutely wrong. We'd have been drummed
  54139. out of office if we'd had this level of unemployment.%@NL@%
  54140. %@CR:UNEMPLThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  54141.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  54142.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  54143.                  May 1977, when there were 1,269,000 out of work in the UK%@NL@%
  54144. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54145. %@NL@%
  54146. %@NL@%
  54147.      %@2@%O that we now had here%@NL@%
  54148.      But one ten thousand of those men in England%@NL@%
  54149.      That do no work today!%@NL@%
  54150. %@CR:UNEMPLShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54151.                                                 Westmoreland, %@AI@%King Henry V%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54152.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54153.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54154. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54155. %@NL@%
  54156. %@NL@%
  54157. %@2@%We believe that if men have the talent to invent new machines%@EH@%
  54158. that put men out of work, they have the talent to put those men
  54159. back to work.%@NL@%
  54160. %@CR:UNEMPLKennedy1  @%%@NL@%
  54161.                                                John F. Kennedy (1917-1963)%@NL@%
  54162.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54163. %@AS@%                                                              Unemployment%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54164. %@NL@%
  54165. %@NL@%
  54166. %@NL@%
  54167. %@1@%%@AS@%Unhappiness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54168. %@CR:UNHAPPINESS     @%%@NL@%
  54169. %@2@%See:%@QR:Unhappiness@%%@NL@%
  54170.      %@AB@%Despair%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           a66b0@%%@NL@%
  54171.      %@AB@%Grief%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          11b192@%%@NL@%
  54172.      Money: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          1ac7fa@%%@NL@%
  54173. %@NL@%
  54174. %@2@%Unhappiness is not knowing what we want and killing ourselves%@EH@%
  54175. to get it.%@NL@%
  54176. %@CR:UNHAPPHerold    @%%@NL@%
  54177.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  54178.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  54179. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54180. %@NL@%
  54181. %@NL@%
  54182. %@2@%Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it%@EH@%
  54183. is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning
  54184. he cannot quite bury under the finite.%@NL@%
  54185. %@CR:UNHAPPCarlyle   @%%@NL@%
  54186.                                                 Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)%@NL@%
  54187.                                                            Scottish writer%@NL@%
  54188. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54189. %@NL@%
  54190. %@NL@%
  54191. %@2@%Unhappiness is best defined as the difference between our talents%@EH@%
  54192. and our expectations.%@NL@%
  54193. %@CR:UNHAPPdeBono    @%%@NL@%
  54194.                                                   Edward de Bono (b. 1933)%@NL@%
  54195.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  54196. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54197. %@NL@%
  54198. %@NL@%
  54199. %@2@%Let no one till his death be called unhappy. Measure not the%@EH@%
  54200. work until the day's out and the labour done.%@NL@%
  54201. %@CR:UNHAPPBrowning1 @%%@NL@%
  54202.                                     Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)%@NL@%
  54203.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  54204. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54205. %@NL@%
  54206. %@NL@%
  54207. %@2@%In deep sadness there is no sentimentality.%@NL@%
  54208. %@CR:UNHAPPBurroughs @%%@NL@%
  54209.                                             William S. Burroughs (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  54210.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  54211. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54212. %@NL@%
  54213. %@NL@%
  54214.      %@2@%When sorrows come, they come not single spies.%@NL@%
  54215.      But in battalions.%@NL@%
  54216. %@CR:UNHAPPShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54217.                                                               King, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54218.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54219.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54220. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54221. %@NL@%
  54222. %@NL@%
  54223. %@2@%He's simply got the instinct for being unhappy highly developed.%@NL@%
  54224. %@CR:UNHAPPMunro2    @%%@NL@%
  54225.                                             Saki (H. H. Munro) (1870-1916)%@NL@%
  54226.                                                            Scottish author%@NL@%
  54227. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54228. %@NL@%
  54229. %@NL@%
  54230. %@2@%Men who are unhappy, like men who sleep badly, are always proud%@EH@%
  54231. of the fact.%@NL@%
  54232. %@CR:UNHAPPRussell1  @%%@NL@%
  54233.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  54234.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  54235. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54236. %@NL@%
  54237. %@NL@%
  54238. %@2@%The world will never be long without some good reason to hate%@EH@%
  54239. the unhappy.%@NL@%
  54240. %@CR:UNHAPPJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  54241.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  54242.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  54243. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54244. %@NL@%
  54245. %@NL@%
  54246. %@2@%The secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother%@EH@%
  54247. about whether you are happy or not. The cure for it is occupation.%@NL@%
  54248. %@CR:UNHAPPShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54249.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54250.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54251. %@AS@%                                                               Unhappiness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54252. %@NL@%
  54253. %@NL@%
  54254. %@NL@%
  54255. %@1@%%@AS@%Uniforms%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54256. %@CR:UNIFORMS        @%%@NL@%
  54257. %@2@%%@QR:Uniforms@%This death's livery which walled its bearers from ordinary%@EH@%
  54258. life was sign that they have sold their wills and bodies to the
  54259. State: and contracted themselves into a service not the less abject
  54260. for that its beginning was voluntary.%@NL@%
  54261. %@CR:UNIFORLawrence2 @%%@NL@%
  54262.                                                 T. E. Lawrence (1888-1935)%@NL@%
  54263.                                                   British soldier, scholar%@NL@%
  54264. %@AS@%                                                                  Uniforms%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54265. %@NL@%
  54266. %@NL@%
  54267. %@2@%We know, Mr Weller - we, who are men of the world - that%@EH@%
  54268. a good uniform must work its way with the women, sooner or later.%@NL@%
  54269. %@CR:UNIFORDickens   @%%@NL@%
  54270.                                 The Gentleman in Blue, %@AI@%The Pickwick Papers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54271.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  54272.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  54273. %@AS@%                                                                  Uniforms%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54274. %@NL@%
  54275. %@NL@%
  54276. %@NL@%
  54277. %@1@%%@AS@%University%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54278. %@CR:UNIVERSITY      @%%@NL@%
  54279. %@2@%See:%@QR:University@%%@NL@%
  54280.      %@AB@%Education%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           c0bd6@%%@NL@%
  54281.      %@AB@%Examinations%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           d4bd7@%%@NL@%
  54282.      %@AB@%Oxford%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c967d@%%@NL@%
  54283.      %@AB@%Oxford and Cambridge%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c9f04@%%@NL@%
  54284. %@NL@%
  54285. %@2@%Europe crystallizes and slowly mummifies under the chains of%@EH@%
  54286. its frontiers, its factories, its law courts, its universities.
  54287. The frozen spirit cracks under the slabs of stone which press upon
  54288. it. It's the fault of your mouldy systems, your logic of two and
  54289. two makes four, it is your fault, University Chancellors, caught
  54290. in the nets of your own syllogisms.%@NL@%
  54291. %@CR:UNIVERArtaud    @%%@NL@%
  54292.                                                 Antonin Artaud (1896-1948)%@NL@%
  54293.                                   French theater producer, actor, theorist%@NL@%
  54294. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54295. %@NL@%
  54296. %@NL@%
  54297. %@2@%Universities incline wits to sophistry and affectation.%@NL@%
  54298. %@CR:UNIVERBacon     @%%@NL@%
  54299.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  54300.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  54301. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54302. %@NL@%
  54303. %@NL@%
  54304. %@2@%Life at a university with its intellectual and inconclusive%@EH@%
  54305. discussions at the postgraduate level is on the whole a bad training
  54306. for the real world. Only men of very strong character surmount
  54307. this handicap.%@NL@%
  54308. %@CR:UNIVERChambers  @%%@NL@%
  54309.                                              Sir Paul Chambers (1904-1981)%@NL@%
  54310.                                                      British industrialist%@NL@%
  54311. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54312. %@NL@%
  54313. %@NL@%
  54314. %@2@%A university is an %@AI@%alma mater,%@AE@% knowing her children one by%@EH@%
  54315. one, not a foundry, or a mint, or a treadmill.%@NL@%
  54316. %@CR:UNIVERNewman1   @%%@NL@%
  54317.                                           Cardinal John Newman (1801-1890)%@NL@%
  54318.                                              English churchman, theologian%@NL@%
  54319. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54320. %@NL@%
  54321. %@NL@%
  54322. %@2@%A university should be a place of light, of liberty, and of%@EH@%
  54323. learning.%@NL@%
  54324. %@CR:UNIVERDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  54325.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  54326.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  54327. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54328. %@NL@%
  54329. %@NL@%
  54330. %@2@%With one or two exceptions, colleges expect their players of%@EH@%
  54331. games to be reasonably literate.%@NL@%
  54332. %@CR:UNIVERBowra     @%%@NL@%
  54333.                                              Sir Maurice Bowra (1898-1971)%@NL@%
  54334.                       British classicist, Warden of Wadham College, Oxford%@NL@%
  54335. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54336. %@NL@%
  54337. %@NL@%
  54338. %@2@%'Tis well enough for a servant to be bred at university: but%@EH@%
  54339. the education is a little too pedantic for a gentleman.%@NL@%
  54340. %@CR:UNIVERCongreve  @%%@NL@%
  54341.                                               William Congreve (1670-1729)%@NL@%
  54342.                                                          English dramatist%@NL@%
  54343. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54344. %@NL@%
  54345. %@NL@%
  54346. %@2@%They teach you anything in universities today. You can major%@EH@%
  54347. in mud pies.%@NL@%
  54348. %@CR:UNIVERWelles    @%%@NL@%
  54349.                                                   Orson Welles (1915-1985)%@NL@%
  54350.                                                         American filmmaker%@NL@%
  54351. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54352. %@NL@%
  54353. %@NL@%
  54354. %@2@%Socrates gave no diplomas or degrees, and would have subjected%@EH@%
  54355. any disciple who demanded one to a disconcerting catechism on the
  54356. nature of true knowledge.%@NL@%
  54357. %@CR:UNIVERTrevelyan @%%@NL@%
  54358.                                                G. M. Trevelyan (1876-1962)%@NL@%
  54359.                                                          British historian%@NL@%
  54360. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54361. %@NL@%
  54362. %@NL@%
  54363. %@2@%Remote and ineffectual don.%@NL@%
  54364. %@CR:UNIVERBelloc    @%%@NL@%
  54365.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  54366.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  54367. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54368. %@NL@%
  54369. %@NL@%
  54370. %@2@%A professor is one who talks in someone else's sleep.%@NL@%
  54371. %@CR:UNIVERAuden     @%%@NL@%
  54372.                                                    W. H. Auden (1907-1973)%@NL@%
  54373.                                                        Anglo-American poet%@NL@%
  54374. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54375. %@NL@%
  54376. %@NL@%
  54377. %@2@%A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight%@EH@%
  54378. car; but if he has a university education, he may steal the whole
  54379. railroad.%@NL@%
  54380. %@CR:UNIVERRoosevelt3@%%@NL@%
  54381.                                             Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)%@NL@%
  54382.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54383. %@AS@%                                                                University%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54384. %@NL@%
  54385. %@NL@%
  54386. %@NL@%
  54387. %@1@%%@AS@%The USSR%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54388. %@CR:THEUSSR         @%%@NL@%
  54389. %@2@%See:%@QR:The USSR@%%@NL@%
  54390.      Apathy: %@AB@%Thurber%@AE@%%@BO:           22968@%%@NL@%
  54391.      Communism: %@AB@%Attlee%@AE@%%@BO:           75e7c@%%@NL@%
  54392.      Propaganda: %@AB@%Solzhenitsyn%@AE@%%@BO:          209932@%%@NL@%
  54393.      %@AB@%The Russians%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          23410d@%%@NL@%
  54394. %@NL@%
  54395. %@2@%I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle%@EH@%
  54396. wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.%@NL@%
  54397. %@CR:THEUSSChurchill3@%%@NL@%
  54398.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  54399.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  54400. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54401. %@NL@%
  54402. %@NL@%
  54403. %@2@%In the Soviet Union everything happens slowly. Always remember%@EH@%
  54404. that.%@NL@%
  54405. %@CR:THEUSSShevchenko@%%@NL@%
  54406.                                                 A. N. Shevchenko (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  54407.                                                  defecting Soviet diplomat%@NL@%
  54408. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54409. %@NL@%
  54410. %@NL@%
  54411. %@2@%The Soviet Union will remain a one-party nation even if an%@EH@%
  54412. opposition party were permitted - because everyone would join
  54413. that party.%@NL@%
  54414. %@CR:THEUSSReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  54415.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  54416.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54417. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54418. %@NL@%
  54419. %@NL@%
  54420. %@2@%The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is not just a country,%@EH@%
  54421. but an empire - the largest and probably the last, in history.%@NL@%
  54422. %@CR:THEUSSReagan3   @%%@NL@%
  54423.                                                        %@AI@%Time%@AE@% magazine, 1980%@NL@%
  54424. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54425. %@NL@%
  54426. %@NL@%
  54427. %@2@%No nation has ever devoured its heroes with such primordial%@EH@%
  54428. zest.%@NL@%
  54429. %@CR:THEUSSConnor    @%%@NL@%
  54430.                                  Cassandra, Sir William Connor (1909-1967)%@NL@%
  54431.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  54432. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54433. %@NL@%
  54434. %@NL@%
  54435. %@2@%For us in Russia, communism is a dead dog, while, for many%@EH@%
  54436. people in the West, it is still a living lion.%@NL@%
  54437. %@CR:THEUSSSolzhenits@%%@NL@%
  54438.                                           Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)%@NL@%
  54439.                                                           Russian novelist%@NL@%
  54440. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54441. %@NL@%
  54442. %@NL@%
  54443. %@2@%I have been over into the future, and it works.%@NL@%
  54444. %@CR:THEUSSSteffens  @%%@NL@%
  54445.                                               Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936)%@NL@%
  54446.                                                    American writer, editor%@NL@%
  54447.             to Bernard Baruch, on his return from the Soviet Union in 1919%@NL@%
  54448. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54449. %@NL@%
  54450. %@NL@%
  54451. %@2@%Our achievements leave class enemies breathless.%@NL@%
  54452. %@CR:THEUSSBrezhnev  @%%@NL@%
  54453.                                                Leonid Brezhnev (1906-1982)%@NL@%
  54454.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  54455. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54456. %@NL@%
  54457. %@NL@%
  54458. %@2@%Give us time and we shall produce panties for your wives in%@EH@%
  54459. colors which cannot be seen anywhere else.%@NL@%
  54460. %@CR:THEUSSKhrushchev@%%@NL@%
  54461.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  54462.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  54463. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54464. %@NL@%
  54465. %@NL@%
  54466. %@2@%They were right. The Soviet regime is not the embodiment%@EH@%
  54467. of evil as you think in the West. They have laws and I broke them.
  54468. I hate tea and they love tea. Who is wrong?%@NL@%
  54469. %@CR:THEUSSZinoviev  @%%@NL@%
  54470.                                               Alexander Zinoviev (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  54471.                                                         Soviet philosopher%@NL@%
  54472.                                  on his forced exile from the Soviet Union%@NL@%
  54473. %@AS@%                                                                  The USSR%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54474. %@NL@%
  54475. %@NL@%
  54476. %@NL@%
  54477. %@1@%%@AS@%Vanity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54478. %@CR:VANITY          @%%@NL@%
  54479. %@2@%See:%@QR:Vanity@%%@NL@%
  54480.      Respectability: %@AB@%Pinero%@AE@%%@BO:          228070@%%@NL@%
  54481.      Secrets: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          24034e@%%@NL@%
  54482. %@NL@%
  54483. %@2@%There was never yet fair woman but she made mouths in a glass.%@NL@%
  54484. %@CR:VANITYShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54485.                                                            Fool, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54486.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54487.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54488. %@AS@%                                                                    Vanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54489. %@NL@%
  54490. %@NL@%
  54491. %@2@%The time he can spare from the adornment of his person he devotes%@EH@%
  54492. to the neglect of his duties.%@NL@%
  54493. %@CR:VANITYJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  54494.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  54495.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  54496. %@AS@%                                                                    Vanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54497. %@NL@%
  54498. %@NL@%
  54499. %@2@%Cure yourself of the condition of bothering about how you look%@EH@%
  54500. to other people. Be concerned only  . . .  with the idea God has
  54501. of you.%@NL@%
  54502. %@CR:VANITYUnamuno   @%%@NL@%
  54503.                                              Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936)%@NL@%
  54504.                                        Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist%@NL@%
  54505. %@AS@%                                                                    Vanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54506. %@NL@%
  54507. %@NL@%
  54508. %@2@%We are so vain that we even care for the opinion of those we%@EH@%
  54509. don't care for.%@NL@%
  54510. %@CR:VANITYEbnerEsche@%%@NL@%
  54511.                                    Marie  von Ebner-Eschenbach (1830-1916)%@NL@%
  54512.                                                            Austrian author%@NL@%
  54513. %@AS@%                                                                    Vanity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54514. %@NL@%
  54515. %@NL@%
  54516. %@NL@%
  54517. %@1@%%@AS@%Vegetarians%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54518. %@CR:VEGETARIANS     @%%@NL@%
  54519. %@2@%%@QR:Vegetarians@%I have no doubt that it is a part of the destiny of the human%@EH@%
  54520. race, in its gradual improvement, to leave off eating animals,
  54521. as surely as the savage tribes have left off eating each other
  54522. when they came in contact with the more civilized.%@NL@%
  54523. %@CR:VEGETAThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  54524.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  54525.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  54526. %@AS@%                                                               Vegetarians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54527. %@NL@%
  54528. %@NL@%
  54529. %@2@%Most vegetarians I ever see looked enough like their food to%@EH@%
  54530. be classed as cannibals.%@NL@%
  54531. %@CR:VEGETADunne     @%%@NL@%
  54532.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  54533.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  54534. %@AS@%                                                               Vegetarians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54535. %@NL@%
  54536. %@NL@%
  54537. %@2@%A man of my spiritual intensity does not eat corpses.%@NL@%
  54538. %@CR:VEGETAShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54539.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54540.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54541. %@AS@%                                                               Vegetarians%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54542. %@NL@%
  54543. %@NL@%
  54544. %@NL@%
  54545. %@1@%%@AS@%Vice%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54546. %@CR:VICE            @%%@NL@%
  54547. %@2@%See:%@QR:Vice@%%@NL@%
  54548.      Gossip: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          114184@%%@NL@%
  54549.      Hypocrisy: %@AB@%Joad%@AE@%%@BO:          1405a8@%; %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          14070f@%%@NL@%
  54550.      Pleasure: %@AB@%Woollcott%@AE@%%@BO:          1dfb7e@%%@NL@%
  54551.      Religion: %@AB@%Massillon%@AE@%%@BO:          220fcf@%%@NL@%
  54552.      Self-denial: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2463e1@%%@NL@%
  54553.      Virtue: %@AB@%Lynd%@AE@%%@BO:          2a443a@%; %@AB@%Maurois%@AE@%%@BO:          2a42b2@%%@NL@%
  54554. %@NL@%
  54555. %@2@%It seems impossible to root out of an Englishman's mind the%@EH@%
  54556. notion that vice is delightful, and that abstention from it is
  54557. privation.%@NL@%
  54558. %@CR:VICE  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  54559.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54560.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54561. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54562. %@NL@%
  54563. %@NL@%
  54564. %@2@%Vice is a creature of such hideous mien that the more you see%@EH@%
  54565. it the better you like it.%@NL@%
  54566. %@CR:VICE  Dunne     @%%@NL@%
  54567.                                             Finley Peter Dunne (1867-1936)%@NL@%
  54568.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  54569. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54570. %@NL@%
  54571. %@NL@%
  54572. %@2@%No exile at the South Pole or on the summit of Mont Blanc separates%@EH@%
  54573. us more effectively from others than the practice of a hidden vice.%@NL@%
  54574. %@CR:VICE  Proust    @%%@NL@%
  54575.                                                  Marcel Proust (1871-1922)%@NL@%
  54576.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  54577. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54578. %@NL@%
  54579. %@NL@%
  54580. %@2@%How like herrings and onions our vices are in the morning after%@EH@%
  54581. we have committed them.%@NL@%
  54582. %@CR:VICE  Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  54583.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  54584.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  54585. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54586. %@NL@%
  54587. %@NL@%
  54588. %@2@%What maintains one vice would bring up two children.%@NL@%
  54589. %@CR:VICE  Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  54590.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  54591.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  54592. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54593. %@NL@%
  54594. %@NL@%
  54595.      %@2@%%@AI@%Le ciel defend,%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54596.      %@AI@%de vrai, certains contentements%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54597.      %@AI@%Mais on trouve avec lui des accommodements.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54598. %@NL@%
  54599. %@2@%It's true Heaven forbids some pleasures, but a compromise can
  54600. usually be found.%@NL@%
  54601. %@CR:VICE  Moliere   @%%@NL@%
  54602.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  54603.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  54604. %@AS@%                                                                      Vice%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54605. %@NL@%
  54606. %@NL@%
  54607. %@NL@%
  54608. %@1@%%@AS@%Victims%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54609. %@CR:VICTIMS         @%%@NL@%
  54610. %@2@%%@QR:Victims@%I am a man more sinn'd against than sinning.%@NL@%
  54611. %@CR:VICTIMShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54612.                                                            Lear, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54613.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54614.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54615. %@AS@%                                                                   Victims%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54616. %@NL@%
  54617. %@NL@%
  54618. %@2@%I hate victims who respect their executioners.%@NL@%
  54619. %@CR:VICTIMSartre    @%%@NL@%
  54620.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  54621.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  54622. %@AS@%                                                                   Victims%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54623. %@NL@%
  54624. %@NL@%
  54625. %@NL@%
  54626. %@1@%%@AS@%Vietnam%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54627. %@CR:VIETNAM         @%%@NL@%
  54628. %@2@%%@QR:Vietnam@%Vietnam was what we had instead of happy childhoods.%@NL@%
  54629. %@CR:VIETNAHerr      @%%@NL@%
  54630.                                                     Michael Herr (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  54631.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  54632. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54633. %@NL@%
  54634. %@NL@%
  54635. %@2@%This is not a jungle war, but a struggle for freedom on every%@EH@%
  54636. front of human activity.%@NL@%
  54637. %@CR:VIETNAJohnson4  @%%@NL@%
  54638.                                              Lyndon B. Johnson (1908-1973)%@NL@%
  54639.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54640. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54641. %@NL@%
  54642. %@NL@%
  54643. %@2@%North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States.%@EH@%
  54644. Only Americans can do that.%@NL@%
  54645. %@CR:VIETNANixon     @%%@NL@%
  54646.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  54647.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  54648.                                                              November 1969%@NL@%
  54649. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54650. %@NL@%
  54651. %@NL@%
  54652. %@2@%There is the guilt all soldiers feel for having broken the%@EH@%
  54653. taboo against killing, a guilt as old as war itself. Add to this
  54654. the soldier's sense of shame for having fought in actions that
  54655. resulted, indirectly or directly, in the deaths of civilians. Then
  54656. pile on top of that an attitude of social opprobrium, an attitude
  54657. that made the fighting man feel personally morally responsible
  54658. for the war, and you get your proverbial walking time bomb.%@NL@%
  54659. %@CR:VIETNACaputo    @%%@NL@%
  54660.                                                    Philip Caputo (b. 1941)%@NL@%
  54661.                                           American author, Vietnam veteran%@NL@%
  54662.                                              from his book, %@AI@%A Rumor of War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54663. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54664. %@NL@%
  54665. %@NL@%
  54666. %@2@%Above all, Vietnam was a war that asked everything of a few%@EH@%
  54667. and nothing of most in America.%@NL@%
  54668. %@CR:VIETNAMcPherson @%%@NL@%
  54669.                                                             Myra McPherson%@NL@%
  54670.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  54671.                                                     from %@AI@%Long Time Passing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54672. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54673. %@NL@%
  54674. %@NL@%
  54675. %@2@%I would like to ask a question. Would this sort of war or savage%@EH@%
  54676. bombing which has taken place in Vietnam have been tolerated for
  54677. so long had the people been European?%@NL@%
  54678. %@CR:VIETNAGandhi1   @%%@NL@%
  54679.                                                  Indira Gandhi (1917-1984)%@NL@%
  54680.                                                      Indian prime minister%@NL@%
  54681. %@AS@%                                                                   Vietnam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54682. %@NL@%
  54683. %@NL@%
  54684. %@NL@%
  54685. %@1@%%@AS@%Villains%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54686. %@CR:VILLAINS        @%%@NL@%
  54687. %@2@%See:%@QR:Villains@%%@NL@%
  54688.      Piety: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:          1db9a4@%%@NL@%
  54689. %@NL@%
  54690. %@2@%As there is a use in medicine for poison, so the world cannot%@EH@%
  54691. move without rogues.%@NL@%
  54692. %@CR:VILLAIEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  54693.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  54694.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  54695. %@AS@%                                                                  Villains%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54696. %@NL@%
  54697. %@NL@%
  54698. %@2@%In the old days villains had moustaches and kicked the dog.%@EH@%
  54699. Audiences are smarter today. They don't want their villain to be
  54700. thrown at them with green limelight on his face. They want an
  54701. ordinary human being with failings.%@NL@%
  54702. %@CR:VILLAIHitchcock @%%@NL@%
  54703.                                               Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980)%@NL@%
  54704.                                               Anglo-American film director%@NL@%
  54705. %@AS@%                                                                  Villains%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54706. %@NL@%
  54707. %@NL@%
  54708. %@2@%As for an authentic villain, the real thing, the absolute,%@EH@%
  54709. the artist, one rarely meets him even once in a lifetime. The ordinary
  54710. bad hat is always in part a decent fellow.%@NL@%
  54711. %@CR:VILLAIColette   @%%@NL@%
  54712.                                                        Colette (1873-1954)%@NL@%
  54713.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  54714. %@AS@%                                                                  Villains%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54715. %@NL@%
  54716. %@NL@%
  54717. %@2@%It takes a certain courage and a certain greatness even to%@EH@%
  54718. be truly base.%@NL@%
  54719. %@CR:VILLAIAnouilh   @%%@NL@%
  54720.                                                   Jean Anouilh (1910-1987)%@NL@%
  54721.                                                           French dramatist%@NL@%
  54722. %@AS@%                                                                  Villains%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54723. %@NL@%
  54724. %@NL@%
  54725. %@2@%Gamesters and highwaymen are generally very good to their whores,%@EH@%
  54726. but they are the very devils to their wives.%@NL@%
  54727. %@CR:VILLAIGay       @%%@NL@%
  54728.                                                Peachum, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54729.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  54730.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  54731. %@AS@%                                                                  Villains%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54732. %@NL@%
  54733. %@NL@%
  54734. %@NL@%
  54735. %@1@%%@AS@%Violence%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54736. %@CR:VIOLENCE        @%%@NL@%
  54737. %@2@%%@QR:Violence@%In violence we forget who we are.%@NL@%
  54738. %@CR:VIOLENMcCarthy2 @%%@NL@%
  54739.                                                  Mary McCarthy (1912-1989)%@NL@%
  54740.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  54741. %@AS@%                                                                  Violence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54742. %@NL@%
  54743. %@NL@%
  54744. %@2@%If you strike a child, take care that you strike it in anger,%@EH@%
  54745. even at the risk of maiming it for life. A blow in cold blood neither
  54746. can nor should be forgiven.%@NL@%
  54747. %@CR:VIOLENShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54748.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54749.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54750. %@AS@%                                                                  Violence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54751. %@NL@%
  54752. %@NL@%
  54753. %@2@%I write about violence as naturally as Jane Austen wrote about%@EH@%
  54754. manners. Violence shapes and obsesses our society, and if we do
  54755. not stop being violent we have no future.%@NL@%
  54756. %@CR:VIOLENBond      @%%@NL@%
  54757.                                                      Edward Bond (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  54758.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  54759. %@AS@%                                                                  Violence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54760. %@NL@%
  54761. %@NL@%
  54762. %@2@%Violence suits those who have nothing to lose.%@NL@%
  54763. %@CR:VIOLENSartre    @%%@NL@%
  54764.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  54765.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  54766. %@AS@%                                                                  Violence%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54767. %@NL@%
  54768. %@NL@%
  54769. %@NL@%
  54770. %@1@%%@AS@%Virtue%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54771. %@CR:VIRTUE          @%%@NL@%
  54772. %@2@%See:%@QR:Virtue@%%@NL@%
  54773.      Chastity: %@AB@%de Montaigne%@AE@%%@BO:           5e977@%%@NL@%
  54774.      Excellence: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:           d5db5@%%@NL@%
  54775.      Good Deeds: %@AB@%Wordsworth%@AE@%%@BO:          1122bf@%%@NL@%
  54776.      Hypocrisy: %@AB@%Joad%@AE@%%@BO:          1405a8@%; %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          14070f@%%@NL@%
  54777.      Posterity: %@AB@%Paine%@AE@%%@BO:          1f3f02@%%@NL@%
  54778.      Reputation: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          226ba9@%%@NL@%
  54779.      Respectability: %@AB@%Pinero%@AE@%%@BO:          228070@%; %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          228354@%%@NL@%
  54780. %@NL@%
  54781.      %@2@%Be virtuous: not too much; just what's correct.%@NL@%
  54782.      Excess in anything is a defect.%@NL@%
  54783. %@CR:VIRTUEMonvel    @%%@NL@%
  54784.                                                 Jacques Monvel (1745-1812)%@NL@%
  54785.                                                    French actor, dramatist%@NL@%
  54786. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54787. %@NL@%
  54788. %@NL@%
  54789. %@2@%Be virtuous and you will be eccentric.%@NL@%
  54790. %@CR:VIRTUETwain     @%%@NL@%
  54791.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  54792.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  54793. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54794. %@NL@%
  54795. %@NL@%
  54796. %@2@%What is virtue but the Trade Unionism of the married?%@NL@%
  54797. %@CR:VIRTUEShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54798.                                                 Don Juan, %@AI@%Man and Superman%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54799.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54800.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54801. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54802. %@NL@%
  54803. %@NL@%
  54804. %@2@%Men are virtuous because women are; women are virtuous from%@EH@%
  54805. necessity.%@NL@%
  54806. %@CR:VIRTUEHowe1     @%%@NL@%
  54807.                                                Ed (E. W.) Howe (1853-1937)%@NL@%
  54808.                                              American journalist, novelist%@NL@%
  54809. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54810. %@NL@%
  54811. %@NL@%
  54812. %@2@%There are few good women who do not tire of their role.%@NL@%
  54813. %@CR:VIRTUELaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  54814.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  54815.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  54816. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54817. %@NL@%
  54818. %@NL@%
  54819. %@2@%Feminine virtue is nothing but a convenient masculine intervention.%@NL@%
  54820. %@CR:VIRTUELenclos   @%%@NL@%
  54821.                                               Ninon de Lenclos (1620-1705)%@NL@%
  54822.                                                   French society lady, wit%@NL@%
  54823. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54824. %@NL@%
  54825. %@NL@%
  54826. %@2@%Virtue has its own reward, but no sale at the box office.%@NL@%
  54827. %@CR:VIRTUEWest1     @%%@NL@%
  54828.                                                       Mae West (1892-1980)%@NL@%
  54829.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  54830. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54831. %@NL@%
  54832. %@NL@%
  54833. %@2@%The virtues of society are the vices of the saint.%@NL@%
  54834. %@CR:VIRTUEEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  54835.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  54836.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  54837. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54838. %@NL@%
  54839. %@NL@%
  54840. %@2@%Virtue knows that it is quite impossible to get on without%@EH@%
  54841. compromise, and tunes herself, as it were, a trifle sharp to allow
  54842. for an inevitable fall in playing.%@NL@%
  54843. %@CR:VIRTUEButler4   @%%@NL@%
  54844.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  54845.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  54846. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54847. %@NL@%
  54848. %@NL@%
  54849.      %@2@%Fear God, and offend not the Prince nor his laws,%@NL@%
  54850.      And keep thyself out of the magistrate's claws.%@NL@%
  54851. %@CR:VIRTUETusser    @%%@NL@%
  54852.                                             Tomas Tusser (c. 1520-c. 1580)%@NL@%
  54853.                                              English writer on agriculture%@NL@%
  54854. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54855. %@NL@%
  54856. %@NL@%
  54857. %@2@%That mixture of Christian sorrow and mundane relish which the%@EH@%
  54858. virtuous employ in talking of the vicious.%@NL@%
  54859. %@CR:VIRTUEMaurois   @%%@NL@%
  54860.                                                  Andre Maurois (1885-1967)%@NL@%
  54861.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  54862. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54863. %@NL@%
  54864. %@NL@%
  54865. %@2@%By virtue we merely mean the avoidance of the vices that do%@EH@%
  54866. not attract us.%@NL@%
  54867. %@CR:VIRTUELynd      @%%@NL@%
  54868.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  54869.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  54870. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54871. %@NL@%
  54872. %@NL@%
  54873. %@2@%I cannot love anyone if I hate myself. That is the reason why%@EH@%
  54874. we feel so extremely uncomfortable in the presence of people who
  54875. are noted for their special virtuousness, for they radiate an
  54876. atmosphere of the torture they inflict on themselves. That is not
  54877. a virtue but a vice.%@NL@%
  54878. %@CR:VIRTUEJung      @%%@NL@%
  54879.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  54880.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  54881. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54882. %@NL@%
  54883. %@NL@%
  54884. %@2@%The chief assertion of religious morality is that white is%@EH@%
  54885. a colour. Virtue is not the absence of vices or the avoidance of
  54886. moral dangers; virtue is a vivid and separate thing, like pain
  54887. or a particular smell.%@NL@%
  54888. %@CR:VIRTUEChesterton@%%@NL@%
  54889.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  54890.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  54891. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54892. %@NL@%
  54893. %@NL@%
  54894.      %@2@%Men's evil manners live in brass, their virtues%@NL@%
  54895.      We write in water.%@NL@%
  54896. %@CR:VIRTUEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54897.                                                  Griffith, %@AI@%King Henry VIII%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54898.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54899.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54900. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54901. %@NL@%
  54902. %@NL@%
  54903. %@2@%Virtue shuns ease as a companion. It demands a rough and thorny%@EH@%
  54904. path.%@NL@%
  54905. %@CR:VIRTUEMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  54906.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  54907.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  54908. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54909. %@NL@%
  54910. %@NL@%
  54911. %@2@%Assume a virtue, if you have it not.%@NL@%
  54912. %@CR:VIRTUEShakespear@%%@NL@%
  54913.                                                             Hamlet, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54914.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  54915.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  54916. %@AS@%                                                                    Virtue%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54917. %@NL@%
  54918. %@NL@%
  54919. %@NL@%
  54920. %@1@%%@AS@%Visionaries%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  54921. %@CR:VISIONARIES     @%%@NL@%
  54922. %@2@%See:%@QR:Visionaries@%%@NL@%
  54923.      Christianity: %@AB@%Ellis%@AE@%%@BO:           63409@%%@NL@%
  54924.      Leadership: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          1709d1@%%@NL@%
  54925. %@NL@%
  54926. %@2@%How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth%@EH@%
  54927. good tidings, that publisheth peace.%@NL@%
  54928. %@CR:VISIONBibleIsaia@%%@NL@%
  54929.                                                              Bible, Isaiah%@NL@%
  54930. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54931. %@NL@%
  54932. %@NL@%
  54933. %@2@%Sir, the pretending to extraordinary revelations and gifts%@EH@%
  54934. of the Holy ghost is a horrid thing, a very horrid thing.%@NL@%
  54935. %@CR:VISIONButler1   @%%@NL@%
  54936.                                                  Joseph Butler (1692-1752)%@NL@%
  54937.                                                           Bishop of Durham%@NL@%
  54938.                                                             to John Wesley%@NL@%
  54939. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54940. %@NL@%
  54941. %@NL@%
  54942. %@2@%I just want to do God's will. And he's allowed me to go up%@EH@%
  54943. to the mountain. And I've looked over, and I've seen the Promised
  54944. Land.%@NL@%
  54945. %@CR:VISIONKing3     @%%@NL@%
  54946.                                             Martin Luther King (1929-1968)%@NL@%
  54947.                                               American civil rights leader%@NL@%
  54948. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54949. %@NL@%
  54950. %@NL@%
  54951. %@2@%You see things; and say "Why?" But I dream things that never%@EH@%
  54952. were; and I say "Why not?"%@NL@%
  54953. %@CR:VISIONShaw      @%%@NL@%
  54954.                                            The Serpent, %@AI@%Back to Methuselah%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54955.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  54956.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  54957. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54958. %@NL@%
  54959. %@NL@%
  54960. %@2@%Fear prophets  . . .  and those prepared to die for the truth,%@EH@%
  54961. for as a rule they make many others die with them, often before
  54962. them, at times instead of them.%@NL@%
  54963. %@CR:VISIONEco       @%%@NL@%
  54964.                                                      Umberto Eco (b. 1932)%@NL@%
  54965.                                                  Italian scholar, novelist%@NL@%
  54966. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54967. %@NL@%
  54968. %@NL@%
  54969. %@2@%The visionary lies to himself, the liar only to others.%@NL@%
  54970. %@CR:VISIONNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  54971.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  54972.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  54973. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54974. %@NL@%
  54975. %@NL@%
  54976. %@2@%Where there is not vision, the people perish.%@NL@%
  54977. %@CR:VISIONBibleProve@%%@NL@%
  54978.                                                            Bible, Proverbs%@NL@%
  54979. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54980. %@NL@%
  54981. %@NL@%
  54982. %@2@%"When the sun rises, do you not see a round disc of fire somewhat%@EH@%
  54983. like a guinea?" "O no, no, I see an innumerable company of the
  54984. heavenly host crying 'Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God Almighty!' "%@NL@%
  54985. %@CR:VISIONBlake     @%%@NL@%
  54986.                                                  William Blake (1757-1827)%@NL@%
  54987.                                                       English poet, artist%@NL@%
  54988. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54989. %@NL@%
  54990. %@NL@%
  54991. %@2@%St Teresa of Avila described our life in this world as like%@EH@%
  54992. a night at a second-class hotel.%@NL@%
  54993. %@CR:VISIONMuggeridge@%%@NL@%
  54994.                                               Malcolm Muggeridge (b. 1903)%@NL@%
  54995.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  54996. %@AS@%                                                               Visionaries%@AE@%%@NL@%
  54997. %@NL@%
  54998. %@NL@%
  54999. %@NL@%
  55000. %@1@%%@AS@%Vocation%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55001. %@CR:VOCATION        @%%@NL@%
  55002. %@2@%%@QR:Vocation@%Little monk, you are embarking on a difficult journey.%@NL@%
  55003. %@CR:VOCATILuther    @%%@NL@%
  55004.                                                  Martin Luther (1483-1546)%@NL@%
  55005.                                German leader of the Protestant Reformation%@NL@%
  55006.                                      on the eve of his departure for Worms%@NL@%
  55007. %@AS@%                                                                  Vocation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55008. %@NL@%
  55009. %@NL@%
  55010. %@2@%The test of a vocation is the love of the drudgery it involves.%@NL@%
  55011. %@CR:VOCATISmith6    @%%@NL@%
  55012.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  55013.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  55014. %@AS@%                                                                  Vocation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55015. %@NL@%
  55016. %@NL@%
  55017. %@2@%This is the true joy in life, the being used for a purpose%@EH@%
  55018. recognised by yourself as a mighty one; the being thoroughly worn
  55019. out before you are thrown on the scrap heap.%@NL@%
  55020. %@CR:VOCATIShaw      @%%@NL@%
  55021.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  55022.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  55023. %@AS@%                                                                  Vocation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55024. %@NL@%
  55025. %@NL@%
  55026.      %@2@%Cest une folie a nulle autre seconde,%@NL@%
  55027.      De vouloir se meler de corriger le monde.%@NL@%
  55028. %@NL@%
  55029. %@2@%Of all follies there is none greater than wanting to put the
  55030. world to rights.%@NL@%
  55031. %@CR:VOCATIMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  55032.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  55033.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  55034. %@AS@%                                                                  Vocation%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55035. %@NL@%
  55036. %@NL@%
  55037. %@NL@%
  55038. %@1@%%@AS@%Vulgarity%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55039. %@CR:VULGARITY       @%%@NL@%
  55040. %@2@%See:%@QR:Vulgarity@%%@NL@%
  55041.      War: %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:          2a9e14@%%@NL@%
  55042.      Writing: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          2ce9a7@%%@NL@%
  55043. %@NL@%
  55044. %@2@%Vulgarity is the garlic in the salad of taste.%@NL@%
  55045. %@CR:VULGARConnolly  @%%@NL@%
  55046.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  55047.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  55048. %@AS@%                                                                 Vulgarity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55049. %@NL@%
  55050. %@NL@%
  55051. %@2@%It's worse than wicked, my dear, it's vulgar.%@NL@%
  55052. %@CR:VULGARPUNCH     @%%@NL@%
  55053.                                                        %@AI@%Punch,%@AE@% 19th century%@NL@%
  55054. %@AS@%                                                                 Vulgarity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55055. %@NL@%
  55056. %@NL@%
  55057. %@2@%A thing is not vulgar merely because it is common.%@NL@%
  55058. %@CR:VULGARHazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  55059.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  55060.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  55061. %@AS@%                                                                 Vulgarity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55062. %@NL@%
  55063. %@NL@%
  55064. %@2@%The higher a man stands, the more the word "vulgar" become%@EH@%
  55065. unintelligible to him.%@NL@%
  55066. %@CR:VULGARRuskin    @%%@NL@%
  55067.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  55068.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  55069. %@AS@%                                                                 Vulgarity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55070. %@NL@%
  55071. %@NL@%
  55072. %@2@%Vulgarity is simply the conduct of other people.%@NL@%
  55073. %@CR:VULGARWilde     @%%@NL@%
  55074.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  55075.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  55076. %@AS@%                                                                 Vulgarity%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55077. %@NL@%
  55078. %@NL@%
  55079. %@NL@%
  55080. %@1@%%@AS@%Wales%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55081. %@CR:WALES           @%%@NL@%
  55082. %@2@%%@QR:Wales@%With its wild names like peals of bells in the darkness.%@NL@%
  55083. %@CR:WALES Thomas1   @%%@NL@%
  55084.                                                   Dylan Thomas (1914-1953)%@NL@%
  55085.                                                                 Welsh poet%@NL@%
  55086. %@AS@%                                                                     Wales%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55087. %@NL@%
  55088. %@NL@%
  55089.      %@2@%An impotent people, sick with inbreeding,%@NL@%
  55090.      Worrying the carcase of an old song.%@NL@%
  55091. %@CR:WALES Thomas2   @%%@NL@%
  55092.                                                     R. S. Thomas (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  55093.                                                      Welsh poet, clergyman%@NL@%
  55094. %@AS@%                                                                     Wales%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55095. %@NL@%
  55096. %@NL@%
  55097. %@NL@%
  55098. %@1@%%@AS@%War%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55099. %@CR:WAR             @%%@NL@%
  55100. %@2@%See:%@QR:War@%%@NL@%
  55101.      %@AB@%The Arms Race%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           28c1c@%%@NL@%
  55102.      Father: %@AB@%Croesus%@AE@%%@BO:           eaad7@%%@NL@%
  55103.      Generals: %@AB@%Clemenceau%@AE@%%@BO:          105e80@%; %@AB@%Bonaparte%@AE@%%@BO:          105d10@%%@NL@%
  55104.      Glory: %@AB@%Lincoln%@AE@%%@BO:          10cd2f@%%@NL@%
  55105.      %@AB@%Guerrilla Warfare%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          11cdbd@%%@NL@%
  55106.      The Law: %@AB@%Cicero%@AE@%%@BO:          16d3d6@%%@NL@%
  55107.      Nationalism: %@AB@%Mussolini%@AE@%%@BO:          1b6291@%%@NL@%
  55108.      %@AB@%Peace%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1d3a8a@%%@NL@%
  55109.      Royalty: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          232f00@%%@NL@%
  55110.      %@AB@%Vietnam%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2a132d@%%@NL@%
  55111.      %@AB@%War Correspondents%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2abeff@%%@NL@%
  55112.      %@AB@%War Crimes%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2ac7fe@%%@NL@%
  55113.      Winning: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          2b4984@%%@NL@%
  55114.      Youth: %@AB@%Graves%@AE@%%@BO:          2d3380@%%@NL@%
  55115. %@NL@%
  55116. %@2@%War's a brain-spattering, windpipe-splitting art.%@NL@%
  55117. %@CR:WAR   Byron2    @%%@NL@%
  55118.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  55119.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  55120. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55121. %@NL@%
  55122. %@NL@%
  55123. %@2@%War is nothing more than the continuation of politics by other%@EH@%
  55124. means.%@NL@%
  55125. %@CR:WAR   Clausewitz@%%@NL@%
  55126.                                           Karl  von Clausewitz (1780-1831)%@NL@%
  55127.                                               Prussian soldier, strategist%@NL@%
  55128. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55129. %@NL@%
  55130. %@NL@%
  55131. %@2@%War is only a cowardly escape from the problems of peace.%@NL@%
  55132. %@CR:WAR   Mann      @%%@NL@%
  55133.                                                    Thomas Mann (1875-1955)%@NL@%
  55134.                                                      German author, critic%@NL@%
  55135. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55136. %@NL@%
  55137. %@NL@%
  55138. %@2@%A long as there are sovereign nations possessing great power,%@EH@%
  55139. war is inevitable.%@NL@%
  55140. %@CR:WAR   Einstein  @%%@NL@%
  55141.                                                Albert Einstein (1879-1955)%@NL@%
  55142.                                      German-American theoretical physicist%@NL@%
  55143. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55144. %@NL@%
  55145. %@NL@%
  55146. %@2@%What a country calls its vital economic interests are not the%@EH@%
  55147. things which enable its citizens to live, but the things which
  55148. enable it to make war. Petrol is more likely than wheat to be a
  55149. cause of international conflict.%@NL@%
  55150. %@CR:WAR   Weil      @%%@NL@%
  55151.                                                    Simone Weil (1909-1943)%@NL@%
  55152.                                                 French mystic, philosopher%@NL@%
  55153. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55154. %@NL@%
  55155. %@NL@%
  55156.      %@2@%Roused by the lash of his own stubborn tail%@NL@%
  55157.      Our lion now will foreign fores assail.%@NL@%
  55158. %@CR:WAR   Dryden    @%%@NL@%
  55159.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  55160.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  55161. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55162. %@NL@%
  55163. %@NL@%
  55164.      %@2@%We go to gain a little patch of ground%@NL@%
  55165.      That hath in it no profit but the name.%@NL@%
  55166. %@CR:WAR   Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  55167.                                                            Captain, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55168.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  55169.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  55170. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55171. %@NL@%
  55172. %@NL@%
  55173. %@2@%The belief in the possibility of a short decisive war appears%@EH@%
  55174. to be one of the most ancient and dangerous of human illusions.%@NL@%
  55175. %@CR:WAR   Lynd      @%%@NL@%
  55176.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  55177.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  55178. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55179. %@NL@%
  55180. %@NL@%
  55181. %@2@%We are at a great disadvantage when we make war on people who%@EH@%
  55182. have nothing to lose.%@NL@%
  55183. %@CR:WAR   Guicciardi@%%@NL@%
  55184.                                         Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540)%@NL@%
  55185.                                               Italian historian, statesman%@NL@%
  55186. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55187. %@NL@%
  55188. %@NL@%
  55189. %@2@%Oh, the brave Music of a distant Drum!%@NL@%
  55190. %@CR:WAR   Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  55191.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55192.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  55193. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55194. %@NL@%
  55195. %@NL@%
  55196. %@2@%How good bad music and bad reasons sound when we march against%@EH@%
  55197. an enemy.%@NL@%
  55198. %@CR:WAR   Nietzsche @%%@NL@%
  55199.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  55200.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  55201. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55202. %@NL@%
  55203. %@NL@%
  55204. %@2@%The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them%@EH@%
  55205. lit again in our lifetime.%@NL@%
  55206. %@CR:WAR   Grey2     @%%@NL@%
  55207.                                           Lord Greyof Falloden (1862-1933)%@NL@%
  55208.                                                          British statesman%@NL@%
  55209.                                                             August 3, 1914%@NL@%
  55210. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55211. %@NL@%
  55212. %@NL@%
  55213.      %@2@%What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?%@NL@%
  55214.      Only the monstrous anger of the guns.%@NL@%
  55215. %@CR:WAR   Owen2     @%%@NL@%
  55216.                                                   Wilfred Owen (1893-1918)%@NL@%
  55217.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  55218. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55219. %@NL@%
  55220. %@NL@%
  55221. %@2@%The Angel of Death has been abroad throughout the land, you%@EH@%
  55222. may almost hear the beating of his wings.%@NL@%
  55223. %@CR:WAR   Bright    @%%@NL@%
  55224.                                                    John Bright (1811-1889)%@NL@%
  55225.                                                 English radical politician%@NL@%
  55226. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55227. %@NL@%
  55228. %@NL@%
  55229.      %@2@%Lo! thy dread empire, Chaos! is restor'd;%@NL@%
  55230.      Light dies before thy uncreating words:%@NL@%
  55231.      Thy hand, great Anarch! lets the curtain fall,%@NL@%
  55232.      And universal darkness buries all.%@NL@%
  55233. %@CR:WAR   Pope      @%%@NL@%
  55234.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  55235.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  55236. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55237. %@NL@%
  55238. %@NL@%
  55239. %@2@%They have caused Egypt to stagger as a drunken man staggereth%@EH@%
  55240. in his vomit.%@NL@%
  55241. %@CR:WAR   BenGurion @%%@NL@%
  55242.                                              David  Ben Gurion (1886-1973)%@NL@%
  55243.                                                          Israeli statesman%@NL@%
  55244.                              of the Israeli army in the 1956 Suez campaign%@NL@%
  55245. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55246. %@NL@%
  55247. %@NL@%
  55248. %@2@%History shows that there are no invincible armies.%@NL@%
  55249. %@CR:WAR   Stalin    @%%@NL@%
  55250.                                                   Josef Stalin (1879-1953)%@NL@%
  55251.                                                              USSR dictator%@NL@%
  55252. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55253. %@NL@%
  55254. %@NL@%
  55255.      %@2@%Here dead lie we because we did not choose%@NL@%
  55256.      To live and shame the land from which we sprung.%@NL@%
  55257.      Life to be sure, is nothing much to lose;%@NL@%
  55258.      But young men think it is, and we were young.%@NL@%
  55259. %@CR:WAR   Housman1  @%%@NL@%
  55260.                                                  A. E. Housman (1859-1936)%@NL@%
  55261.                                            British poet, classical scholar%@NL@%
  55262. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55263. %@NL@%
  55264. %@NL@%
  55265. %@2@%The war has already almost destroyed that nation . . .  I have%@EH@%
  55266. seen, I guess, as much blood and disaster as any living man and
  55267. it just turned my stomach the last time I was there. After I looked
  55268. at that wreckage and those thousands of women and children and
  55269. everything, I vomited.%@NL@%
  55270. %@CR:WAR   MacArthur @%%@NL@%
  55271.                                              Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964)%@NL@%
  55272.                                                           American general%@NL@%
  55273.                                                          of the Korean war%@NL@%
  55274. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55275. %@NL@%
  55276. %@NL@%
  55277. %@2@%I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.%@NL@%
  55278. %@CR:WAR   Churchill3@%%@NL@%
  55279.                                          Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  55280.                                                  British statesman, writer%@NL@%
  55281. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55282. %@NL@%
  55283. %@NL@%
  55284. %@2@% . . .  That strange feeling we had in the war. Have you found%@EH@%
  55285. anything in your lives since to equal it in strength? A sort of
  55286. splendid carelessness it was, holding us together.%@NL@%
  55287. %@CR:WAR   Coward    @%%@NL@%
  55288.                                                    Noel Coward (1899-1973)%@NL@%
  55289.                                        English playwright, actor, composer%@NL@%
  55290. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55291. %@NL@%
  55292. %@NL@%
  55293. %@2@%War is elevating, because the individual disappears before%@EH@%
  55294. the great conception of the state.%@NL@%
  55295. %@CR:WAR   Treitschke@%%@NL@%
  55296.                                       Heinrich  von Treitschke (1834-1896)%@NL@%
  55297.                                                           German historian%@NL@%
  55298. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55299. %@NL@%
  55300. %@NL@%
  55301. %@2@%The inevitableness, the idealism, and the blessing of war,%@EH@%
  55302. as an indispensable and stimulating law of development, must be
  55303. repeatedly emphasized.%@NL@%
  55304. %@CR:WAR   Bernhardi @%%@NL@%
  55305.                                        Friedrich von Bernhardi (1849-1930)%@NL@%
  55306.                                                          German militarist%@NL@%
  55307.                                                in %@AI@%Germany and the Next War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55308. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55309. %@NL@%
  55310. %@NL@%
  55311. %@2@%As long as war is regarded as wicked, it will always have its%@EH@%
  55312. fascination. When it is looked upon as vulgar, it will cease to
  55313. be popular.%@NL@%
  55314. %@CR:WAR   Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  55315.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  55316.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  55317. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55318. %@NL@%
  55319. %@NL@%
  55320.      %@2@%What is it, after all, the people get?%@NL@%
  55321.      Why! taxes, widows, wooden legs, and debt.%@NL@%
  55322. %@CR:WAR   Moore2    @%%@NL@%
  55323.                                                  Francis Moore (1656-1715)%@NL@%
  55324.                                              English astrologer, physician%@NL@%
  55325. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55326. %@NL@%
  55327. %@NL@%
  55328. %@2@%What we have gained by the war is, in one word, all that we%@EH@%
  55329. should have lost without it.%@NL@%
  55330. %@CR:WAR   Pitt2     @%%@NL@%
  55331.                                                   William Pitt (1759-1806)%@NL@%
  55332.                                         English politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  55333. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55334. %@NL@%
  55335. %@NL@%
  55336. %@2@%And while I am talking to you mothers and fathers, I give you%@EH@%
  55337. one more assurance. I have said this before, but I shall say it
  55338. again and again and again: Your boys are not going to be sent
  55339. into any foreign wars.%@NL@%
  55340. %@CR:WAR   Roosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  55341.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  55342.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  55343.                                                           October 30, 1940%@NL@%
  55344. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55345. %@NL@%
  55346. %@NL@%
  55347.      %@2@%War is the statesman's game, the priest's delight,%@NL@%
  55348.      The lawyer's jest, the hired assassin's trade.%@NL@%
  55349. %@CR:WAR   Shelley   @%%@NL@%
  55350.                                           Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)%@NL@%
  55351.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  55352. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55353. %@NL@%
  55354. %@NL@%
  55355. %@2@%War is the only sport that is genuinely amusing. And it is%@EH@%
  55356. the only sport that has any intelligible use.%@NL@%
  55357. %@CR:WAR   Mencken   @%%@NL@%
  55358.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  55359.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  55360. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55361. %@NL@%
  55362. %@NL@%
  55363. %@2@%What war has always been is a puberty ceremony. It's a very%@EH@%
  55364. rough one, but you went away a boy and came back a man, maybe with
  55365. an eye missing or whatever but godammit you were a man and people
  55366. had to call you a man thereafter.%@NL@%
  55367. %@CR:WAR   Vonnegut  @%%@NL@%
  55368.                                                    Kurt Vonnegut (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  55369.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  55370. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55371. %@NL@%
  55372. %@NL@%
  55373. %@2@%For a war to be just three things are necessary - public%@EH@%
  55374. authority, just cause, right motive.%@NL@%
  55375. %@CR:WAR   Aquinas   @%%@NL@%
  55376.                                           Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)%@NL@%
  55377.                                            Italian philosopher, theologian%@NL@%
  55378. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55379. %@NL@%
  55380. %@NL@%
  55381. %@2@%Force and fraud are in war the two cardinal virtues.%@NL@%
  55382. %@CR:WAR   Hobbes    @%%@NL@%
  55383.                                                  Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)%@NL@%
  55384.                                                        English philosopher%@NL@%
  55385. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55386. %@NL@%
  55387. %@NL@%
  55388. %@2@%If both sides dont' want war, how can war break out?%@NL@%
  55389. %@CR:WAR   Begin     @%%@NL@%
  55390.                                                   Menachem Begin (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  55391.                                         Israeli politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  55392.                                                                    in 1981%@NL@%
  55393. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55394. %@NL@%
  55395. %@NL@%
  55396. %@2@%The purpose of all war is peace.%@NL@%
  55397. %@CR:WAR   SaintAugus@%%@NL@%
  55398.                                                  Saint Augustine (354-430)%@NL@%
  55399.                                                                 theologian%@NL@%
  55400. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55401. %@NL@%
  55402. %@NL@%
  55403. %@2@%More than an end to war, we want an end to the beginnings of%@EH@%
  55404. all wars.%@NL@%
  55405. %@CR:WAR   Roosevelt2@%%@NL@%
  55406.                                          Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)%@NL@%
  55407.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  55408. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55409. %@NL@%
  55410. %@NL@%
  55411. %@2@%Of the four wars in my lifetime, none came about because the%@EH@%
  55412. U.S. was too strong.%@NL@%
  55413. %@CR:WAR   Reagan3   @%%@NL@%
  55414.                                                    Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)%@NL@%
  55415.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  55416. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55417. %@NL@%
  55418. %@NL@%
  55419. %@2@%My views with regard to war are well known. I grew up in a%@EH@%
  55420. tradition where we consider all wars immoral.%@NL@%
  55421. %@CR:WAR   Nixon     @%%@NL@%
  55422.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  55423.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  55424. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55425. %@NL@%
  55426. %@NL@%
  55427. %@2@%War has  . . .  become a luxury which only the small nations%@EH@%
  55428. can afford.%@NL@%
  55429. %@CR:WAR   Arendt    @%%@NL@%
  55430.                                                  Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)%@NL@%
  55431.                                             American political philosopher%@NL@%
  55432. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55433. %@NL@%
  55434. %@NL@%
  55435. %@2@%I'd like to see the government get out of war altogether and%@EH@%
  55436. leave the whole feud to private industry.%@NL@%
  55437. %@CR:WAR   Heller    @%%@NL@%
  55438.                                                    Joseph Heller (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  55439.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  55440. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55441. %@NL@%
  55442. %@NL@%
  55443. %@2@%At last, after innumerable glamorous and frightful years, mankind%@EH@%
  55444. approaches a war which is %@AI@%totally predictable from beginning to
  55445. %@AI@%end.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55446. %@CR:WAR   Raphael   @%%@NL@%
  55447.                                                 Frederic Raphael (b. 1931)%@NL@%
  55448.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  55449. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55450. %@NL@%
  55451. %@NL@%
  55452. %@2@%Child of God, therefore children of God, therefore brothers.%@EH@%
  55453. All wars are civil wars.%@NL@%
  55454. %@CR:WAR   Gill      @%%@NL@%
  55455.                                                      Eric Gill (1882-1940)%@NL@%
  55456.                                                           British sculptor%@NL@%
  55457. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55458. %@NL@%
  55459. %@NL@%
  55460. %@2@%They talk about who won and who lost. Human reason won. Mankind%@EH@%
  55461. won.%@NL@%
  55462. %@CR:WAR   Khrushchev@%%@NL@%
  55463.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  55464.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  55465.                                          of the Cuban missile crisis, 1962%@NL@%
  55466. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55467. %@NL@%
  55468. %@NL@%
  55469. %@2@%There never was a good war or a bad peace.%@NL@%
  55470. %@CR:WAR   Franklin  @%%@NL@%
  55471.                                              Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)%@NL@%
  55472.                                                 American statesman, writer%@NL@%
  55473. %@AS@%                                                                       War%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55474. %@NL@%
  55475. %@NL@%
  55476. %@NL@%
  55477. %@1@%%@AS@%War Correspondents%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55478. %@CR:WARCORRESPONDENT@%%@NL@%
  55479. %@2@%%@QR:War Correspondents@%That front-line face, he never got anything on film that he%@EH@%
  55480. didn't get on himself, after three years he'd turned into the thing
  55481. he came to photograph.%@NL@%
  55482. %@CR:WARCORHerr      @%%@NL@%
  55483.                                                     Michael Herr (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  55484.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  55485. %@AS@%                                                        War Correspondents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55486. %@NL@%
  55487. %@NL@%
  55488.      %@2@%I will put in my poems that with you is heroism upon land and sea,%@NL@%
  55489.      And I will report all heroism from an American point of view.%@NL@%
  55490. %@CR:WARCORWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  55491.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  55492.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  55493. %@AS@%                                                        War Correspondents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55494. %@NL@%
  55495. %@NL@%
  55496. %@2@%The first casualty when war comes is truth.%@NL@%
  55497. %@CR:WARCORJohnson3  @%%@NL@%
  55498.                                                  Hiram Johnson (1866-1945)%@NL@%
  55499.                                             American Republican politician%@NL@%
  55500. %@AS@%                                                        War Correspondents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55501. %@NL@%
  55502. %@NL@%
  55503. %@2@%The time to leave this place is when all white people begin%@EH@%
  55504. to look alike.%@NL@%
  55505. %@CR:WARCORHoffman2  @%%@NL@%
  55506.                                                     Paul Hoffman (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  55507.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  55508.                                                 on leaving the Congo, 1961%@NL@%
  55509. %@AS@%                                                        War Correspondents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55510. %@NL@%
  55511. %@NL@%
  55512. %@2@%We all knew that if you stayed too long you became one of those%@EH@%
  55513. poor bastards who had to have a war on all the time, and where
  55514. was that?%@NL@%
  55515. %@CR:WARCORHerr      @%%@NL@%
  55516.                                                     Michael Herr (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  55517.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  55518. %@AS@%                                                        War Correspondents%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55519. %@NL@%
  55520. %@NL@%
  55521. %@NL@%
  55522. %@1@%%@AS@%War Crimes%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55523. %@CR:WARCRIMES       @%%@NL@%
  55524. %@2@%%@QR:War Crimes@%The worst atrocities are probably committed by those who are%@EH@%
  55525. most afraid.%@NL@%
  55526. %@CR:WARCRIdAbernon  @%%@NL@%
  55527.                                                 Lord d'Abernon (1857-1941)%@NL@%
  55528.                                              British administrator, author%@NL@%
  55529. %@AS@%                                                                War Crimes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55530. %@NL@%
  55531. %@NL@%
  55532. %@2@%The next war criminals will come from the chemical and electronics%@EH@%
  55533. industries.%@NL@%
  55534. %@CR:WARCRIKrupp     @%%@NL@%
  55535.                                                   Alfred Krupp (1907-1967)%@NL@%
  55536.                                                   German arms manufacturer%@NL@%
  55537.                                      (imprisoned for war crimes 1948-1951)%@NL@%
  55538. %@AS@%                                                                War Crimes%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55539. %@NL@%
  55540. %@NL@%
  55541. %@NL@%
  55542. %@1@%%@AS@%Wealth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55543. %@CR:WEALTH          @%%@NL@%
  55544. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wealth@%%@NL@%
  55545.      %@AB@%Luxury%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          18a872@%%@NL@%
  55546.      Respectability: %@AB@%Twain%@AE@%%@BO:          228354@%%@NL@%
  55547.      %@AB@%The Rich%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          22d33e@%%@NL@%
  55548.      The Working Class: %@AB@%George%@AE@%%@BO:          2c4f8c@%%@NL@%
  55549. %@NL@%
  55550.      %@2@%Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,%@NL@%
  55551.      Where wealth accumulates, and men decay.%@NL@%
  55552. %@CR:WEALTHGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  55553.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  55554.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  55555. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55556. %@NL@%
  55557. %@NL@%
  55558. %@2@%It is the interest of the commercial world that wealth should%@EH@%
  55559. be found everywhere.%@NL@%
  55560. %@CR:WEALTHBurke2    @%%@NL@%
  55561.                                                   Edmund Burke (1729-1797)%@NL@%
  55562.                                               Irish philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  55563. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55564. %@NL@%
  55565. %@NL@%
  55566. %@2@%Better see rightly on a pound a week than squint on a million.%@NL@%
  55567. %@CR:WEALTHShaw      @%%@NL@%
  55568.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  55569.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  55570. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55571. %@NL@%
  55572. %@NL@%
  55573. %@2@%Let us not be too particular; it is better to have old second-hand%@EH@%
  55574. diamonds than none at all.%@NL@%
  55575. %@CR:WEALTHTwain     @%%@NL@%
  55576.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  55577.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  55578. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55579. %@NL@%
  55580. %@NL@%
  55581. %@2@%Wealth is not without its advantages and the case to the contrary,%@EH@%
  55582. although it has often been made, has never proved widely persuasive.%@NL@%
  55583. %@CR:WEALTHGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  55584.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  55585.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  55586. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55587. %@NL@%
  55588. %@NL@%
  55589. %@2@%There are few sorrows, however poignant, in which a good income%@EH@%
  55590. is of no avail.%@NL@%
  55591. %@CR:WEALTHSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  55592.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  55593.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  55594. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55595. %@NL@%
  55596. %@NL@%
  55597. %@2@%What I call loaded I'm not. What other people call loaded I%@EH@%
  55598. am.%@NL@%
  55599. %@CR:WEALTHGabor     @%%@NL@%
  55600.                                                    Zsa Zsa Gabor (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  55601.                                                     Hungarian film actress%@NL@%
  55602. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55603. %@NL@%
  55604. %@NL@%
  55605. %@2@%If you can actually count your money then you are not really%@EH@%
  55606. a rich man.%@NL@%
  55607. %@CR:WEALTHGetty1    @%%@NL@%
  55608.                                                  J. Paul Getty (1892-1976)%@NL@%
  55609.                                                American business executive%@NL@%
  55610. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55611. %@NL@%
  55612. %@NL@%
  55613. %@2@%I find all this money a considerable burden.%@NL@%
  55614. %@CR:WEALTHGetty2    @%%@NL@%
  55615.                                                        John Paul Getty Jr.%@NL@%
  55616.                                                American business executive%@NL@%
  55617.                                                                       1985%@NL@%
  55618. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55619. %@NL@%
  55620. %@NL@%
  55621. %@2@%What difference does it make how much you have? What you do%@EH@%
  55622. not have amounts to much more.%@NL@%
  55623. %@CR:WEALTHSeneca    @%%@NL@%
  55624.                                                           Seneca (c. 5-65)%@NL@%
  55625.                                       Roman writer, philosopher, statesman%@NL@%
  55626. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55627. %@NL@%
  55628. %@NL@%
  55629. %@2@%The secret point of money and power in America is neither the%@EH@%
  55630. things that money can buy nor power for power's sake  . . .  but
  55631. absolute personal freedom, mobility, privacy. It is the instinct
  55632. which drove America to the Pacific, all through the nineteenth
  55633. century, the desire to be able to find a restaurant open in case
  55634. you want a sandwich, to be a free agent, live by one's own rules.%@NL@%
  55635. %@CR:WEALTHDidion    @%%@NL@%
  55636.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  55637.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  55638. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55639. %@NL@%
  55640. %@NL@%
  55641. %@2@%What is called a high standard of living consists in considerable%@EH@%
  55642. measure in arrangements for avoiding muscular energy, increasing
  55643. sensual pleasure, and enhancing caloric intake beyond any conceivable
  55644. nutritional requirement. Nonetheless, the belief that increased
  55645. production is a worthy social goal is very nearly absolute.%@NL@%
  55646. %@CR:WEALTHGalbraith @%%@NL@%
  55647.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  55648.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  55649. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55650. %@NL@%
  55651. %@NL@%
  55652.      %@2@%Wealth, howsoever got, in England makes%@NL@%
  55653.      Lords of mechanics, gentlemen of rakes;%@NL@%
  55654.      Antiquity and birth are needless here;%@NL@%
  55655.      'Tis impudence and money makes a peer.%@NL@%
  55656. %@CR:WEALTHDefoe     @%%@NL@%
  55657.                                                   Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)%@NL@%
  55658.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  55659. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55660. %@NL@%
  55661. %@NL@%
  55662. %@2@%Wealth will be a protection against political corruption. The%@EH@%
  55663. English statesman is bribed not to be bribed. He is born with a
  55664. silver spoon in his mouth, so that he may never afterwards be
  55665. found with the silver spoons in his pocket.%@NL@%
  55666. %@CR:WEALTHChesterton@%%@NL@%
  55667.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  55668.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  55669. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55670. %@NL@%
  55671. %@NL@%
  55672.      %@2@%But Satan now is wiser than of yore,%@NL@%
  55673.      And tempts by making rich, not making poor.%@NL@%
  55674. %@CR:WEALTHPope      @%%@NL@%
  55675.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  55676.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  55677. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55678. %@NL@%
  55679. %@NL@%
  55680. %@2@%If you look up a dictionary of quotations you will find few%@EH@%
  55681. reasons for a sensible man to desire to become wealthy.%@NL@%
  55682. %@CR:WEALTHLynd      @%%@NL@%
  55683.                                                    Robert Lynd (1879-1949)%@NL@%
  55684.                                           Anglo-Irish essayist, journalist%@NL@%
  55685. %@AS@%                                                                    Wealth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55686. %@NL@%
  55687. %@NL@%
  55688. %@NL@%
  55689. %@1@%%@AS@%The Weather%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55690. %@CR:THEWEATHER      @%%@NL@%
  55691. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Weather@%%@NL@%
  55692.      England: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:           cb5d8@%; %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:           ca668@%; %@AB@%Phelps%@AE@%%@BO:           ca383@%; %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           ca507@%; %@AB@%Walpole%@AE@%%@BO:           ca7ce@%%@NL@%
  55693.      %@AB@%Rain%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          218555@%%@NL@%
  55694. %@NL@%
  55695. %@2@%He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and%@EH@%
  55696. sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.%@NL@%
  55697. %@CR:THEWEAJesus     @%%@NL@%
  55698.                                                         Jesus (4 BC-29 AD)%@NL@%
  55699.                                                    founder of Christianity%@NL@%
  55700. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55701. %@NL@%
  55702. %@NL@%
  55703. %@2@%It was so cold the other day, I almost got married.%@NL@%
  55704. %@CR:THEWEAWinters   @%%@NL@%
  55705.                                                  Shelley Winters (b. 1922)%@NL@%
  55706.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  55707. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55708. %@NL@%
  55709. %@NL@%
  55710. %@2@%Heat, ma'am!  . . .  it was so dreadful here that I found there%@EH@%
  55711. was nothing left for it but to take off my flesh and sit in my
  55712. bones.%@NL@%
  55713. %@CR:THEWEASmith8    @%%@NL@%
  55714.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  55715.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  55716. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55717. %@NL@%
  55718. %@NL@%
  55719. %@2@%Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything%@EH@%
  55720. about it.%@NL@%
  55721. %@CR:THEWEAWarner    @%%@NL@%
  55722.                                              Charles D. Warner (1829-1900)%@NL@%
  55723.                                                American essayist, novelist%@NL@%
  55724. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55725. %@NL@%
  55726. %@NL@%
  55727. %@2@%Don't knock the weather; nine-tenths of the people couldn't%@EH@%
  55728. start a conversation if it didn't change once in a while.%@NL@%
  55729. %@CR:THEWEAHubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  55730.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  55731.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  55732. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55733. %@NL@%
  55734. %@NL@%
  55735. %@2@%People get a bad impression of it [the English climate] by%@EH@%
  55736. continually trying to treat it as if it was a bank clerk, who ought
  55737. to be on time on Tuesday next, instead of philosophically seeing
  55738. it as a painter, who may do anything so long as you don't try
  55739. to predict what.%@NL@%
  55740. %@CR:THEWEAWhitehorn @%%@NL@%
  55741.                                              Katharine Whitehorn (b. 1926)%@NL@%
  55742.                                                         British journalist%@NL@%
  55743. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55744. %@NL@%
  55745. %@NL@%
  55746. %@2@%There is really no such thing as bad weather, only different%@EH@%
  55747. kinds of good weather.%@NL@%
  55748. %@CR:THEWEARuskin    @%%@NL@%
  55749.                                                    John Ruskin (1819-1900)%@NL@%
  55750.                                                             English critic%@NL@%
  55751. %@AS@%                                                               The Weather%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55752. %@NL@%
  55753. %@NL@%
  55754. %@NL@%
  55755. %@1@%%@AS@%Weddings%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55756. %@CR:WEDDINGS        @%%@NL@%
  55757. %@2@%%@QR:Weddings@%Of all actions of a man's life his marriage does least concern%@EH@%
  55758. other people; yet of all actions of our life it is most meddled
  55759. with by other people.%@NL@%
  55760. %@CR:WEDDINSelden    @%%@NL@%
  55761.                                                    John Selden (1584-1654)%@NL@%
  55762.                                                  English jurist, statesman%@NL@%
  55763. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55764. %@NL@%
  55765. %@NL@%
  55766. %@2@%If it were not for the presents, an elopement would be preferable.%@NL@%
  55767. %@CR:WEDDINAde       @%%@NL@%
  55768.                                                     George Ade (1866-1944)%@NL@%
  55769.                                              American humorist, playwright%@NL@%
  55770. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55771. %@NL@%
  55772. %@NL@%
  55773. %@2@%Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these%@EH@%
  55774. poor fools decoyed into our condition.%@NL@%
  55775. %@CR:WEDDINPepys     @%%@NL@%
  55776.                                                   Samuel Pepys (1633-1703)%@NL@%
  55777.                                                            English diarist%@NL@%
  55778. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55779. %@NL@%
  55780. %@NL@%
  55781. %@2@%That is ever the way. 'Tis all jealousy to the bride and good%@EH@%
  55782. wishes to the corpse.%@NL@%
  55783. %@CR:WEDDINBarrie2   @%%@NL@%
  55784.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  55785.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  55786. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55787. %@NL@%
  55788. %@NL@%
  55789. %@2@%A man looks pretty small at a wedding, George. All those good%@EH@%
  55790. women standing shoulder to shoulder, making sure that the knot's
  55791. tied in a mighty public way.%@NL@%
  55792. %@CR:WEDDINWilder2   @%%@NL@%
  55793.                                                Thornton Wilder (1897-1975)%@NL@%
  55794.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  55795. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55796. %@NL@%
  55797. %@NL@%
  55798. %@2@%The wedding march always reminds me of the music played when%@EH@%
  55799. soldiers go into battle.%@NL@%
  55800. %@CR:WEDDINHeine     @%%@NL@%
  55801.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  55802.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  55803. %@AS@%                                                                  Weddings%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55804. %@NL@%
  55805. %@NL@%
  55806. %@NL@%
  55807. %@1@%%@AS@%Welfare%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55808. %@CR:WELFARE         @%%@NL@%
  55809. %@2@%%@QR:Welfare@%'Tis not enough to help the feeble up, but to support him after.%@NL@%
  55810. %@CR:WELFARShakespear@%%@NL@%
  55811.                                                     Timon, %@AI@%Timon of Athens%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55812.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  55813.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  55814. %@AS@%                                                                   Welfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55815. %@NL@%
  55816. %@NL@%
  55817. %@2@%Benefits should be granted a little at a time, so that they%@EH@%
  55818. may be the better enjoyed.%@NL@%
  55819. %@CR:WELFARMachiavell@%%@NL@%
  55820.                                            Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)%@NL@%
  55821.                                              Italian political philosopher%@NL@%
  55822. %@AS@%                                                                   Welfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55823. %@NL@%
  55824. %@NL@%
  55825. %@2@%Religion was nearly dead because there was no longer real belief%@EH@%
  55826. in future life; but something was struggling to take its place - service - 
  55827. social
  55828. service - the ants' creed, the bees' creed.%@NL@%
  55829. %@CR:WELFARGalsworthy@%%@NL@%
  55830.                                                John Galsworthy (1867-1933)%@NL@%
  55831.                                                English novelist, dramatist%@NL@%
  55832. %@AS@%                                                                   Welfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55833. %@NL@%
  55834. %@NL@%
  55835. %@2@%We are faced with a choice between the work ethic that built%@EH@%
  55836. this nation's character - and the new welfare ethic that could
  55837. cause the American character to weaken.%@NL@%
  55838. %@CR:WELFARNixon     @%%@NL@%
  55839.                                                    Richard Nixon (b. 1913)%@NL@%
  55840.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  55841. %@AS@%                                                                   Welfare%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55842. %@NL@%
  55843. %@NL@%
  55844. %@NL@%
  55845. %@1@%%@AS@%Whimsy%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55846. %@CR:WHIMSY          @%%@NL@%
  55847. %@2@%%@QR:Whimsy@%Unpredictability, too, can become monotonous.%@NL@%
  55848. %@CR:WHIMSYHoffer    @%%@NL@%
  55849.                                                    Eric Hoffer (1902-1983)%@NL@%
  55850.                                                       American philosopher%@NL@%
  55851. %@AS@%                                                                    Whimsy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55852. %@NL@%
  55853. %@NL@%
  55854. %@2@%She has a whim of iron.%@NL@%
  55855. %@CR:WHIMSYHerford   @%%@NL@%
  55856.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  55857.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  55858.                                                                of his wife%@NL@%
  55859. %@AS@%                                                                    Whimsy%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55860. %@NL@%
  55861. %@NL@%
  55862. %@NL@%
  55863. %@1@%%@AS@%Wickedness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55864. %@CR:WICKEDNESS      @%%@NL@%
  55865. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wickedness@%%@NL@%
  55866.      Delinquency: %@AB@%Mencken%@AE@%%@BO:           a2f35@%%@NL@%
  55867.      %@AB@%Evil%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           d3a84@%%@NL@%
  55868.      Vulgarity: %@AB@%Punch%@AE@%%@BO:          2a68c6@%%@NL@%
  55869.      Women: %@AB@%Ecclesiasticus%@AE@%%@BO:          2bb38a@%%@NL@%
  55870. %@NL@%
  55871. %@2@%Wickedness is a myth invented by good people to account for%@EH@%
  55872. the curious attractiveness of others.%@NL@%
  55873. %@CR:WICKEDWilde     @%%@NL@%
  55874.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  55875.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  55876. %@AS@%                                                                Wickedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55877. %@NL@%
  55878. %@NL@%
  55879. %@2@%Some wicked people would be less dangerous had they no redeeming%@EH@%
  55880. qualities.%@NL@%
  55881. %@CR:WICKEDLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  55882.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  55883.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  55884. %@AS@%                                                                Wickedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55885. %@NL@%
  55886. %@NL@%
  55887. %@2@%It is a fact that cannot be denied: the wickedness of others%@EH@%
  55888. becomes our own wickedness because it kindles something evil in
  55889. our own hearts.%@NL@%
  55890. %@CR:WICKEDJung      @%%@NL@%
  55891.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  55892.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  55893. %@AS@%                                                                Wickedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55894. %@NL@%
  55895. %@NL@%
  55896. %@2@%Wicked is not much worse than indiscreet.%@NL@%
  55897. %@CR:WICKEDDonne     @%%@NL@%
  55898.                                                     John Donne (1572-1631)%@NL@%
  55899.                                          English divine, metaphysical poet%@NL@%
  55900. %@AS@%                                                                Wickedness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55901. %@NL@%
  55902. %@NL@%
  55903. %@NL@%
  55904. %@1@%%@AS@%Widowhood%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55905. %@CR:WIDOWHOOD       @%%@NL@%
  55906. %@2@%See:%@QR:Widowhood@%%@NL@%
  55907.      Tact: %@AB@%MacManus%@AE@%%@BO:          27bc35@%%@NL@%
  55908. %@NL@%
  55909. %@2@%Take example by your father, my boy, and be wery careful o'%@EH@%
  55910. vidders all your life, specially if they've kept a public house,
  55911. Sammy.%@NL@%
  55912. %@CR:WIDOWHDickens   @%%@NL@%
  55913.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  55914.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  55915. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55916. %@NL@%
  55917. %@NL@%
  55918. %@2@%Sorrow for a husband is like a pain in the elbow, sharp and%@EH@%
  55919. short.%@NL@%
  55920. %@CR:WIDOWHFuller3   @%%@NL@%
  55921.                                                  Thomas Fuller (1654-1734)%@NL@%
  55922.                                                          English physician%@NL@%
  55923. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55924. %@NL@%
  55925. %@NL@%
  55926. %@2@%The comfortable estate of widowhood is the only hope that keeps%@EH@%
  55927. up a wife's spirits.%@NL@%
  55928. %@CR:WIDOWHGay       @%%@NL@%
  55929.                                                Peachum, %@AI@%The Beggar's Opera%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55930.                                                       John Gay (1685-1732)%@NL@%
  55931.                                                   English playwright, poet%@NL@%
  55932. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55933. %@NL@%
  55934. %@NL@%
  55935. %@2@%Of course I am shocked by his death, but not nearly as shocked%@EH@%
  55936. as when he walked out on me.%@NL@%
  55937. %@CR:WIDOWHGay       @%%@NL@%
  55938.     Lady George-Brown of her husband, British politician Lord George-Brown%@NL@%
  55939. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55940. %@NL@%
  55941. %@NL@%
  55942. %@2@%Widows are divided into two classes - the bereaved and relieved.%@NL@%
  55943. %@CR:WIDOWHGay       @%%@NL@%
  55944.                                                                  anonymous%@NL@%
  55945. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55946. %@NL@%
  55947. %@NL@%
  55948.      %@2@%He first deceased; she for a little tried%@NL@%
  55949.      To live without him, liked it not, and died.%@NL@%
  55950. %@CR:WIDOWHWotton    @%%@NL@%
  55951.                                               Sir Henry Wotton (1568-1639)%@NL@%
  55952.                                                     English diplomat, poet%@NL@%
  55953. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55954. %@NL@%
  55955. %@NL@%
  55956. %@2@%Give unto them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning.%@NL@%
  55957. %@CR:WIDOWHBibleIsaia@%%@NL@%
  55958.                                                              Bible, Isaiah%@NL@%
  55959. %@AS@%                                                                 Widowhood%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55960. %@NL@%
  55961. %@NL@%
  55962. %@NL@%
  55963. %@1@%%@AS@%Wills%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55964. %@CR:WILLS           @%%@NL@%
  55965. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wills@%%@NL@%
  55966.      Lawyers: %@AB@%Howe%@AE@%%@BO:          16e965@%%@NL@%
  55967. %@NL@%
  55968. %@2@%Die, and endow a college, or a cat.%@NL@%
  55969. %@CR:WILLS Pope      @%%@NL@%
  55970.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  55971.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  55972. %@AS@%                                                                     Wills%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55973. %@NL@%
  55974. %@NL@%
  55975. %@2@%He that defers his charity until he is dead is, if a man weighs%@EH@%
  55976. it rightly, rather liberal of another man's goods than his own.%@NL@%
  55977. %@CR:WILLS Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  55978.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  55979.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  55980. %@AS@%                                                                     Wills%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55981. %@NL@%
  55982. %@NL@%
  55983. %@2@%The man who waits to make an entirely reasonable will dies%@EH@%
  55984. intestate.%@NL@%
  55985. %@CR:WILLS Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  55986.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  55987.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  55988. %@AS@%                                                                     Wills%@AE@%%@NL@%
  55989. %@NL@%
  55990. %@NL@%
  55991. %@NL@%
  55992. %@1@%%@AS@%Wine%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  55993. %@CR:WINE            @%%@NL@%
  55994. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wine@%%@NL@%
  55995.      %@AB@%Drink%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           b7206@%%@NL@%
  55996. %@NL@%
  55997.      %@2@%You know, my Friends, with what a brave Carouse%@NL@%
  55998.      I made a Second Marriage in my house;%@NL@%
  55999.      Divorced old barren Reason for my Bed,%@NL@%
  56000.      And took the Daughter of the Vine to Spouse.%@NL@%
  56001. %@CR:WINE  Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  56002.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56003.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  56004. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56005. %@NL@%
  56006. %@NL@%
  56007. %@2@%Nothing equals the joy of the drinker, except the joy of the%@EH@%
  56008. wine in being drunk.%@NL@%
  56009. %@CR:WINE  Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  56010.                                                              French saying%@NL@%
  56011. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56012. %@NL@%
  56013. %@NL@%
  56014. %@2@%Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's%@EH@%
  56015. sake and thine often infirmities.%@NL@%
  56016. %@CR:WINE  SaintPaul @%%@NL@%
  56017.                                                          Saint Paul (3-67)%@NL@%
  56018.                                                    Apostle to the Gentiles%@NL@%
  56019. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56020. %@NL@%
  56021. %@NL@%
  56022. %@2@%No poems can please for long or live that are written by water-drinkers.%@NL@%
  56023. %@CR:WINE  Horace    @%%@NL@%
  56024.                                                           Horace (65-8 BC)%@NL@%
  56025.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  56026. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56027. %@NL@%
  56028. %@NL@%
  56029. %@2@%Water for oxen, wine for kings.%@NL@%
  56030. %@CR:WINE  Horace    @%%@NL@%
  56031.                                                            Spanish proverb%@NL@%
  56032. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56033. %@NL@%
  56034. %@NL@%
  56035. %@2@%A mind of the calibre of mine cannot derive its nutriment from%@EH@%
  56036. cows.%@NL@%
  56037. %@CR:WINE  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  56038.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  56039.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  56040. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56041. %@NL@%
  56042. %@NL@%
  56043.      %@2@%The Grape that can with Logic absolute%@NL@%
  56044.      The Two-and-Seventy jarring Sects confute.%@NL@%
  56045. %@CR:WINE  Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  56046.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56047.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  56048. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56049. %@NL@%
  56050. %@NL@%
  56051. %@2@%One of the disadvantages of wine is that it makes a man mistake%@EH@%
  56052. words for thoughts.%@NL@%
  56053. %@CR:WINE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  56054.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  56055.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  56056. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56057. %@NL@%
  56058. %@NL@%
  56059. %@2@%I may not here omit those two main plagues, and common dotages%@EH@%
  56060. of human kind, wine and women, which have infatuated and besotted
  56061. myriads of people. They go commonly together.%@NL@%
  56062. %@CR:WINE  Burton2   @%%@NL@%
  56063.                                                  Robert Burton (1577-1640)%@NL@%
  56064.                                                  English clergyman, author%@NL@%
  56065. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56066. %@NL@%
  56067. %@NL@%
  56068. %@2@%The dipsomaniac and the abstainer are not only both mistaken,%@EH@%
  56069. but they both make the same mistake. They both regard wine as a
  56070. drug and not a drink.%@NL@%
  56071. %@CR:WINE  Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  56072.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  56073.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  56074. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56075. %@NL@%
  56076. %@NL@%
  56077. %@2@%Wine gives a man nothing . . .  It only puts in motion what had%@EH@%
  56078. been locked up in frost.%@NL@%
  56079. %@CR:WINE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  56080.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  56081.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  56082. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56083. %@NL@%
  56084. %@NL@%
  56085. %@2@%There is a devil in every berry of the grape.%@NL@%
  56086. %@CR:WINE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  56087.                                                                     Qu'ran%@NL@%
  56088. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56089. %@NL@%
  56090. %@NL@%
  56091. %@2@%I prefer the gout.%@NL@%
  56092. %@CR:WINE  Derby1    @%%@NL@%
  56093.                                                     Lord Derby (1865-1948)%@NL@%
  56094.                                                      British administrator%@NL@%
  56095.              on trying a South African port recommended for gout sufferers%@NL@%
  56096. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56097. %@NL@%
  56098. %@NL@%
  56099. %@2@%It's a Naive Domestic Burgundy without Any Breeding, But%@EH@%
  56100. I Think You'll be Amused by its Presumption.%@NL@%
  56101. %@CR:WINE  Thurber   @%%@NL@%
  56102.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  56103.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  56104.                                                            cartoon caption%@NL@%
  56105. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56106. %@NL@%
  56107. %@NL@%
  56108.      %@2@%I often wonder what the Vintners buy%@NL@%
  56109.      One-half so precious as the stuff they sell.%@NL@%
  56110. %@CR:WINE  Fitzgerald@%%@NL@%
  56111.                                          from %@AI@%The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56112.                                       trans. Edward Fitzgerald (1809-1883)%@NL@%
  56113. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56114. %@NL@%
  56115. %@NL@%
  56116.      %@2@%Ah! bouteille, ma mie,%@NL@%
  56117.      Pourquoi vous videz-vous?%@NL@%
  56118. %@NL@%
  56119. %@2@%Ah, bottle, my friend, why do you empty yourself?%@NL@%
  56120. %@CR:WINE  Moliere   @%%@NL@%
  56121.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  56122.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  56123. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56124. %@NL@%
  56125. %@NL@%
  56126. %@2@%Wine makes a man better pleased with himself; I do not%@EH@%
  56127. say that it makes him more pleasing to others.%@NL@%
  56128. %@CR:WINE  Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  56129.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  56130.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  56131. %@AS@%                                                                      Wine%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56132. %@NL@%
  56133. %@NL@%
  56134. %@NL@%
  56135. %@1@%%@AS@%Winning%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  56136. %@CR:WINNING         @%%@NL@%
  56137. %@2@%See:%@QR:Winning@%%@NL@%
  56138.      Foul play: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           f8e63@%%@NL@%
  56139.      Getting Ahead: %@AB@%Tomlin%@AE@%%@BO:          10c270@%%@NL@%
  56140.      War: %@AB@%Khrushchev%@AE@%%@BO:          2abbeb@%; %@AB@%Pitt%@AE@%%@BO:          2aa141@%%@NL@%
  56141. %@NL@%
  56142. %@2@%Your first win is like making love and you enjoy it so much%@EH@%
  56143. the first time that you want to do it again and again.%@NL@%
  56144. %@CR:WINNINMansell   @%%@NL@%
  56145.                                                    Nigel Mansell (b. 1953)%@NL@%
  56146.                                                      British racing driver%@NL@%
  56147.   on winning South African Grand Prix soon after his British victory, 1985%@NL@%
  56148. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56149. %@NL@%
  56150. %@NL@%
  56151. %@2@%I never thought myself beaten so long as I could present a%@EH@%
  56152. front to the enemy. If I was beaten at one point I went to another,
  56153. and in that way I won all my victories.%@NL@%
  56154. %@CR:WINNINDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  56155.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  56156.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  56157. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56158. %@NL@%
  56159. %@NL@%
  56160. %@2@%We will get everything out of her [Germany] that you can%@EH@%
  56161. squeeze out of a lemon and a bit more . . .  I will squeeze her until
  56162. you can hear the pips squeak.%@NL@%
  56163. %@CR:WINNINGeddes    @%%@NL@%
  56164.                                                Sir Eric Geddes (1875-1937)%@NL@%
  56165.                                           Scottish Conservative politician%@NL@%
  56166.                               on war reparations after the First World War%@NL@%
  56167. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56168. %@NL@%
  56169. %@NL@%
  56170. %@2@%An intelligent victor will, whenever possible, present his%@EH@%
  56171. demands to the vanquished in installments.%@NL@%
  56172. %@CR:WINNINHitler    @%%@NL@%
  56173.                                                   Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  56174.                                                            German dictator%@NL@%
  56175.                                                                 Mein Kampf%@NL@%
  56176. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56177. %@NL@%
  56178. %@NL@%
  56179. %@2@%Even victors are by victories undone.%@NL@%
  56180. %@CR:WINNINDryden    @%%@NL@%
  56181.                                                    John Dryden (1631-1700)%@NL@%
  56182.                                            English poet, dramatist, critic%@NL@%
  56183. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56184. %@NL@%
  56185. %@NL@%
  56186. %@2@%Thrusting my nose firmly between his teeth, I threw him heavily%@EH@%
  56187. to the ground on top of me.%@NL@%
  56188. %@CR:WINNINTwain     @%%@NL@%
  56189.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  56190.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56191. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56192. %@NL@%
  56193. %@NL@%
  56194. %@2@%A victory recounted in detail is hard to distinguish from a%@EH@%
  56195. defeat.%@NL@%
  56196. %@CR:WINNINSartre    @%%@NL@%
  56197.                                               Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980)%@NL@%
  56198.                                                 French philosopher, author%@NL@%
  56199. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56200. %@NL@%
  56201. %@NL@%
  56202. %@2@%That is the whole secret of successful fighting. Get your enemy%@EH@%
  56203. at a disadvantage; and never, on any account, fight him on equal
  56204. terms.%@NL@%
  56205. %@CR:WINNINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  56206.                                                  Sergius, %@AI@%Arms and the Man%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56207.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  56208.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  56209. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56210. %@NL@%
  56211. %@NL@%
  56212. %@2@%You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it.%@NL@%
  56213. %@CR:WINNINThatcher  @%%@NL@%
  56214.                                                Margaret Thatcher (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  56215.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  56216. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56217. %@NL@%
  56218. %@NL@%
  56219. %@2@%Nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a%@EH@%
  56220. battle won.%@NL@%
  56221. %@CR:WINNINDukeOfWell@%%@NL@%
  56222.                                             Duke of Wellington (1769-1852)%@NL@%
  56223.                                                 English soldier, statesman%@NL@%
  56224. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56225. %@NL@%
  56226. %@NL@%
  56227. %@2@%When in doubt, win the trick.%@NL@%
  56228. %@CR:WINNINHoyle1    @%%@NL@%
  56229.                                                   Edmond Hoyle (1672-1769)%@NL@%
  56230.                                                    English writer on cards%@NL@%
  56231. %@AS@%                                                                   Winning%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56232. %@NL@%
  56233. %@NL@%
  56234. %@NL@%
  56235. %@1@%%@AS@%Wisdom%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  56236. %@CR:WISDOM          @%%@NL@%
  56237. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wisdom@%%@NL@%
  56238.      Education: %@AB@%Kingsley%@AE@%%@BO:           c2496@%%@NL@%
  56239.      Epigrams: %@AB@%Birrell%@AE@%%@BO:           d1990@%%@NL@%
  56240.      Excess: %@AB@%Blake%@AE@%%@BO:           d626d@%%@NL@%
  56241.      Ignorance: %@AB@%Gray%@AE@%%@BO:          144f9b@%%@NL@%
  56242.      Royalty: %@AB@%Massinger%@AE@%%@BO:          230b47@%%@NL@%
  56243.      Youth: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          2d2626@%%@NL@%
  56244. %@NL@%
  56245. %@2@%Some folks are wise, and some are otherwise.%@NL@%
  56246. %@CR:WISDOMSmollett  @%%@NL@%
  56247.                                                Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)%@NL@%
  56248.                                                 Scottish novelist, surgeon%@NL@%
  56249. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56250. %@NL@%
  56251. %@NL@%
  56252. %@2@%There is somebody wiser than any of us, and that is everybody.%@NL@%
  56253. %@CR:WISDOMNapoleonBo@%%@NL@%
  56254.                                             Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)%@NL@%
  56255.                                                          Emperor of France%@NL@%
  56256. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56257. %@NL@%
  56258. %@NL@%
  56259. %@2@%Every law which originated in ignorance and malice, and gratifies%@EH@%
  56260. the passions from which it sprang, we call the wisdom of our ancestors.%@NL@%
  56261. %@CR:WISDOMSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  56262.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  56263.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  56264. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56265. %@NL@%
  56266. %@NL@%
  56267. %@2@%The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.%@NL@%
  56268. %@CR:WISDOMBiblePsalm@%%@NL@%
  56269.                                                              Bible, Psalms%@NL@%
  56270. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56271. %@NL@%
  56272. %@NL@%
  56273.      %@2@%Truth from his lips prevailed with double sway,%@NL@%
  56274.      And fools, who came to scoff, remained to pray.%@NL@%
  56275. %@CR:WISDOMGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  56276.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  56277.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  56278. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56279. %@NL@%
  56280. %@NL@%
  56281. %@2@%It is the province of knowledge to speak, and it is the privilege%@EH@%
  56282. of wisdom to listen.%@NL@%
  56283. %@CR:WISDOMHolmes1   @%%@NL@%
  56284.                                      Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)%@NL@%
  56285.                                                 American writer, physician%@NL@%
  56286. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56287. %@NL@%
  56288. %@NL@%
  56289. %@2@%Tomorrow a stranger will say with masterly good sense precisely%@EH@%
  56290. what we have thought and felt all the time.%@NL@%
  56291. %@CR:WISDOMEmerson   @%%@NL@%
  56292.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  56293.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  56294. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56295. %@NL@%
  56296. %@NL@%
  56297. %@2@%Clever people master life; the wise illuminate it and create%@EH@%
  56298. fresh difficulties.%@NL@%
  56299. %@CR:WISDOMNolde     @%%@NL@%
  56300.                                                     Emil Nolde (1867-1956)%@NL@%
  56301.                                                             German painter%@NL@%
  56302. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56303. %@NL@%
  56304. %@NL@%
  56305. %@2@%History teaches us that men and nations behave wisely once%@EH@%
  56306. they have exhausted all other alternatives.%@NL@%
  56307. %@CR:WISDOMEban      @%%@NL@%
  56308.                                                        Abba Eban (b. 1915)%@NL@%
  56309.                                                         Israeli politician%@NL@%
  56310. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56311. %@NL@%
  56312. %@NL@%
  56313. %@2@%Many a crown of wisdom is but the golden chamberpot of success,%@EH@%
  56314. worn with pompous dignity.%@NL@%
  56315. %@CR:WISDOMEldridge  @%%@NL@%
  56316.                                                    Paul Eldridge (b. 1888)%@NL@%
  56317.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  56318. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56319. %@NL@%
  56320. %@NL@%
  56321. %@2@%He who is only wise lives a sad life.%@NL@%
  56322. %@CR:WISDOMVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  56323.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  56324.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  56325. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56326. %@NL@%
  56327. %@NL@%
  56328. %@2@%It's the height of folly to want to be the only wise one.%@NL@%
  56329. %@CR:WISDOMLaRochefou@%%@NL@%
  56330.                              Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)%@NL@%
  56331.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  56332. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56333. %@NL@%
  56334. %@NL@%
  56335. %@2@%So wise so young, they say, do never live long.%@NL@%
  56336. %@CR:WISDOMShakespear@%%@NL@%
  56337.                                               Gloucester, %@AI@%King Richard III%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56338.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  56339.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  56340. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56341. %@NL@%
  56342. %@NL@%
  56343. %@2@%It is costly wisdom that is bought by experience.%@NL@%
  56344. %@CR:WISDOMAscham    @%%@NL@%
  56345.                                                   Roger Ascham (1515-1568)%@NL@%
  56346.                                          English writer, classical scholar%@NL@%
  56347. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56348. %@NL@%
  56349. %@NL@%
  56350. %@2@%The cat, having sat upon a hot stove lid, will not sit upon%@EH@%
  56351. a hot stove lid again. Nor upon a cold stove lid.%@NL@%
  56352. %@CR:WISDOMTwain     @%%@NL@%
  56353.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  56354.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56355. %@AS@%                                                                    Wisdom%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56356. %@NL@%
  56357. %@NL@%
  56358. %@NL@%
  56359. %@1@%%@AS@%Wit%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  56360. %@CR:WIT             @%%@NL@%
  56361. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wit@%%@NL@%
  56362.      Lord Byron: %@AB@%Moore%@AE@%%@BO:           4faf7@%%@NL@%
  56363.      Fools: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:           f54ea@%; %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           f59a8@%%@NL@%
  56364.      The Scots: %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          23de24@%%@NL@%
  56365. %@NL@%
  56366. %@2@%Wit lies in recognizing the resemblance among things which%@EH@%
  56367. differ and the difference between things which are alike.%@NL@%
  56368. %@CR:WIT   Stael     @%%@NL@%
  56369.                                                Madame de Stael (1766-1817)%@NL@%
  56370.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  56371. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56372. %@NL@%
  56373. %@NL@%
  56374. %@2@%Wit is the clash and reconcilement of incongruities, the%@EH@%
  56375. meeting of extremes round a corner.%@NL@%
  56376. %@CR:WIT   Hunt      @%%@NL@%
  56377.                                                     Leigh Hunt (1784-1859)%@NL@%
  56378.                                             English poet, critic, essayist%@NL@%
  56379. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56380. %@NL@%
  56381. %@NL@%
  56382.      %@2@%True wit is nature to advantage dressed,%@NL@%
  56383.      What oft was thought but ne'er so well expressed.%@NL@%
  56384. %@CR:WIT   Pope      @%%@NL@%
  56385.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  56386.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56387. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56388. %@NL@%
  56389. %@NL@%
  56390. %@2@%Wit is a sword; it is meant to make people feel the point as%@EH@%
  56391. well as see it.%@NL@%
  56392. %@CR:WIT   Chesterton@%%@NL@%
  56393.                                               G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)%@NL@%
  56394.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  56395. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56396. %@NL@%
  56397. %@NL@%
  56398. %@2@%Surprise is so essential an ingredient of wit that no wit will%@EH@%
  56399. bear repetition.%@NL@%
  56400. %@CR:WIT   Smith8    @%%@NL@%
  56401.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  56402.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  56403. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56404. %@NL@%
  56405. %@NL@%
  56406. %@2@%He's winding up the watch of his wit; by and by it will strike.%@NL@%
  56407. %@CR:WIT   Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  56408.                                                     Sebastian, %@AI@%The Tempest%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56409.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  56410.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  56411. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56412. %@NL@%
  56413. %@NL@%
  56414. %@2@%A witty things never excites laughter; it pleases only the%@EH@%
  56415. mind and never distorts the countenance.%@NL@%
  56416. %@CR:WIT   Chesterfie@%%@NL@%
  56417.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  56418.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  56419. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56420. %@NL@%
  56421. %@NL@%
  56422. %@2@%There's a helluva distance between wisecracking and wit. Wit%@EH@%
  56423. has truth in it; wisecracking is simply callisthenics with words.%@NL@%
  56424. %@CR:WIT   Parker1   @%%@NL@%
  56425.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  56426.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  56427. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56428. %@NL@%
  56429. %@NL@%
  56430. %@2@%Wit and Humor - if any difference it is in duration - lightning%@EH@%
  56431. and electric light. Same material, apparently; but one is vivid,
  56432. and can do damage - the other fools along and enjoys elaboration.%@NL@%
  56433. %@CR:WIT   Twain     @%%@NL@%
  56434.                                                     Mark Twain (1835-1910)%@NL@%
  56435.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56436. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56437. %@NL@%
  56438. %@NL@%
  56439. %@2@%Humour is consistent with pathos, whilst wit is not.%@NL@%
  56440. %@CR:WIT   Coleridge @%%@NL@%
  56441.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  56442.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56443. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56444. %@NL@%
  56445. %@NL@%
  56446. %@2@%Wit is the salt of conversation, not the food.%@NL@%
  56447. %@CR:WIT   Hazlitt   @%%@NL@%
  56448.                                                William Hazlitt (1778-1830)%@NL@%
  56449.                                                           English essayist%@NL@%
  56450. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56451. %@NL@%
  56452. %@NL@%
  56453. %@2@%Brevity is the soul of wit.%@NL@%
  56454. %@CR:WIT   Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  56455.                                                           Polonius, %@AI@%Hamlet%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56456.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  56457.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  56458. %@AS@%                                                                       Wit%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56459. %@NL@%
  56460. %@NL@%
  56461. %@NL@%
  56462. %@1@%%@AS@%Wives%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  56463. %@CR:WIVES           @%%@NL@%
  56464. %@2@%See:%@QR:Wives@%%@NL@%
  56465.      %@AB@%Husbands%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          13d033@%%@NL@%
  56466.      %@AB@%Marriage%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          191f14@%%@NL@%
  56467.      Success: %@AB@%Dewar%@AE@%%@BO:          272781@%%@NL@%
  56468.      %@AB@%Widowhood%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b1420@%%@NL@%
  56469. %@NL@%
  56470. %@2@%Wives are young men's mistresses, companions for middle age,%@EH@%
  56471. and old men's nurses.%@NL@%
  56472. %@CR:WIVES Bacon     @%%@NL@%
  56473.                                                  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)%@NL@%
  56474.                                              English philosopher, essayist%@NL@%
  56475. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56476. %@NL@%
  56477. %@NL@%
  56478. %@2@%To suckle fools, and chronicle small beer.%@NL@%
  56479. %@CR:WIVES Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  56480.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  56481.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  56482. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56483. %@NL@%
  56484. %@NL@%
  56485. %@2@%I chose my wife, as she did her wedding-gown, not for a fine%@EH@%
  56486. glossy surface, but such qualities as would wear well.%@NL@%
  56487. %@CR:WIVES Goldsmith @%%@NL@%
  56488.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  56489.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  56490. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56491. %@NL@%
  56492. %@NL@%
  56493.      %@2@%He will hold thee, when his passion shall have spent its novel force,%@NL@%
  56494.      Something better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse.%@NL@%
  56495. %@CR:WIVES Tennyson  @%%@NL@%
  56496.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  56497.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56498. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56499. %@NL@%
  56500. %@NL@%
  56501. %@2@%In that second it dawned on me that I had been living here%@EH@%
  56502. for eight years with a strange man and had borne him three children.%@NL@%
  56503. %@CR:WIVES Ibsen     @%%@NL@%
  56504.                                                   Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)%@NL@%
  56505.                                                        Norwegian dramatist%@NL@%
  56506. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56507. %@NL@%
  56508. %@NL@%
  56509.      %@2@%Matrimonial devotion%@NL@%
  56510.      Doesn't seem to suit her notion.%@NL@%
  56511. %@CR:WIVES Gilbert2  @%%@NL@%
  56512.                                             William S. Gilbert (1836-1911)%@NL@%
  56513.                                                         English librettist%@NL@%
  56514. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56515. %@NL@%
  56516. %@NL@%
  56517. %@2@%One can always recognise women who trust their husbands; they%@EH@%
  56518. look so thoroughly unhappy.%@NL@%
  56519. %@CR:WIVES Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  56520.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  56521.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  56522. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56523. %@NL@%
  56524. %@NL@%
  56525. %@2@%The woman who cannot evolve a good lie in defense of the man%@EH@%
  56526. she loves is unworthy the name of wife.%@NL@%
  56527. %@CR:WIVES Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  56528.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  56529.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56530. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56531. %@NL@%
  56532. %@NL@%
  56533. %@2@%This comes of James teaching me to think for myself, and never%@EH@%
  56534. to hold back out of fear of what other people may think of me.
  56535. It works beautifully as long as I think the same things as he
  56536. does.%@NL@%
  56537. %@CR:WIVES Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  56538.                                                           Candida, %@AI@%Candida%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56539.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  56540.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  56541. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56542. %@NL@%
  56543. %@NL@%
  56544. %@2@%It's my old girl that advises. She has the head. But I never%@EH@%
  56545. own to it before her. Discipline must be maintained.%@NL@%
  56546. %@CR:WIVES Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  56547.                                                    Mr. Bagnet, %@AI@%Bleak House%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56548.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  56549.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  56550. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56551. %@NL@%
  56552. %@NL@%
  56553. %@2@%Good wives and private soldiers should be ignorant.%@NL@%
  56554. %@CR:WIVES Wycherley @%%@NL@%
  56555.                                              William Wycherley (1640-1716)%@NL@%
  56556.                                                         English dramatist
  56557. %@NL@%
  56558. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56559. %@NL@%
  56560. %@NL@%
  56561. %@2@%That's what a man wants in a wife, mostly; he wants to make%@EH@%
  56562. sure o' one fool as'll tell him he's wise.%@NL@%
  56563. %@CR:WIVES Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  56564.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  56565.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  56566. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56567. %@NL@%
  56568. %@NL@%
  56569. %@2@%A man likes his wife to be just clever enough to comprehend%@EH@%
  56570. his cleverness, and just stupid enough to admire it.%@NL@%
  56571. %@CR:WIVES Zangwill  @%%@NL@%
  56572.                                                Israel Zangwill (1864-1926)%@NL@%
  56573.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  56574. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56575. %@NL@%
  56576. %@NL@%
  56577. %@2@%If a woman has her PhD in physics, has mastered in quantum%@EH@%
  56578. theory, plays flawless Chopin, was once a cheerleader, and is now
  56579. married to a man who plays baseball, she will forever be "former
  56580. cheerleader married to star athlete."%@NL@%
  56581. %@CR:WIVES Simmons   @%%@NL@%
  56582.                                                   Maryanne Ellison Simmons%@NL@%
  56583.                                       wife of baseball catcher Ted Simmons%@NL@%
  56584. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56585. %@NL@%
  56586. %@NL@%
  56587. %@2@%A man is in general better pleased when he has a good dinner%@EH@%
  56588. upon his table, than when his wife talks Greek.%@NL@%
  56589. %@CR:WIVES Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  56590.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  56591.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  56592. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56593. %@NL@%
  56594. %@NL@%
  56595. %@2@%Kissing don't last: cookery do!%@NL@%
  56596. %@CR:WIVES Meredith  @%%@NL@%
  56597.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  56598.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  56599. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56600. %@NL@%
  56601. %@NL@%
  56602. %@2@%There is one thing more exasperating than a wife who can cook%@EH@%
  56603. and won't, and that's the wife who can't cook and will.%@NL@%
  56604. %@CR:WIVES Frost2    @%%@NL@%
  56605.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  56606.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  56607. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56608. %@NL@%
  56609. %@NL@%
  56610. %@2@%Accidents will occur in the best regulated families, and in%@EH@%
  56611. families not regulated by that pervading influence which sanctifies
  56612. while it enhances the - a - I would say, in short, by the
  56613. influence of Woman, in the lofty character of Wife, they may be
  56614. expected with confidence and must be borne with philosophy.%@NL@%
  56615. %@CR:WIVES Dickens   @%%@NL@%
  56616.                                            Mr. Micawber, %@AI@%David Copperfield%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56617.                                                Charles Dickens (1812-1870)%@NL@%
  56618.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  56619. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56620. %@NL@%
  56621. %@NL@%
  56622. %@2@%She'd have you spew up what you've drunk when you were out.%@NL@%
  56623. %@CR:WIVES Caecilius @%%@NL@%
  56624.                                               Caecilius (b. 2d century BC)%@NL@%
  56625.                                                                 Latin poet%@NL@%
  56626. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56627. %@NL@%
  56628. %@NL@%
  56629. %@2@%Many men owe their success to their wives. I owe my wife to%@EH@%
  56630. my success.%@NL@%
  56631. %@CR:WIVES Caecilius @%%@NL@%
  56632.                                                      anonymous millionaire%@NL@%
  56633. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56634. %@NL@%
  56635. %@NL@%
  56636. %@2@%An ideal wife is any woman who has an ideal husband.%@NL@%
  56637. %@CR:WIVES Tarkington@%%@NL@%
  56638.                                               Booth Tarkington (1869-1946)%@NL@%
  56639.                                              American novelist, playwright%@NL@%
  56640. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56641. %@NL@%
  56642. %@NL@%
  56643.      %@2@%Those graceful acts, those thousand decencies,%@NL@%
  56644.      That daily flow from all her words and actions.%@NL@%
  56645. %@CR:WIVES Milton    @%%@NL@%
  56646.                                                    John Milton (1608-1674)%@NL@%
  56647.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56648. %@AS@%                                                                     Wives%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56649. %@NL@%
  56650. %@NL@%
  56651. %@NL@%
  56652. %@1@%%@AS@%Women%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  56653. %@CR:WOMEN           @%%@NL@%
  56654. %@2@%See:%@QR:Women@%%@NL@%
  56655.      Age: %@AB@%Bierce%@AE@%%@BO:            e5a5@%; %@AB@%Engel%@AE@%%@BO:            e73b@%; %@AB@%de Lenclos%@AE@%%@BO:            e3e3@%; %@AB@%Mizner%@AE@%%@BO:            df1c@%; %@AB@%de Poitiers%@AE@%%@BO:            e23c@%%@NL@%
  56656.      Age: Old Age: %@AB@%Coleridge%@AE@%%@BO:           113d5@%%@NL@%
  56657.      Antipathy: %@AB@%Pugh%@AE@%%@BO:           2189e@%%@NL@%
  56658.      Anxiety: %@AB@%Glasgow%@AE@%%@BO:           2213b@%%@NL@%
  56659.      Argument: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:           271a3@%%@NL@%
  56660.      Bloodsports: %@AB@%Surtees%@AE@%%@BO:           43c93@%%@NL@%
  56661.      Crying: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           92a33@%; %@AB@%Wilde%@AE@%%@BO:           92d45@%; %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:           92bc7@%%@NL@%
  56662.      Discretion: %@AB@%Bible, Proverbs%@AE@%%@BO:           ae094@%%@NL@%
  56663.      Dress: %@AB@%Muhammad%@AE@%%@BO:           b671c@%%@NL@%
  56664.      %@AB@%Feminism%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           ec69a@%%@NL@%
  56665.      Flattery: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:           f1a63@%%@NL@%
  56666.      Flirting: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:           f2782@%%@NL@%
  56667.      %@AB@%Goddesses%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          111045@%%@NL@%
  56668.      Hair: %@AB@%Collins%@AE@%%@BO:          11f52c@%%@NL@%
  56669.      %@AB@%Ladies%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          16925f@%%@NL@%
  56670.      Love: First Love: %@AB@%Byron%@AE@%%@BO:          185663@%%@NL@%
  56671.      Manners: %@AB@%von Goethe%@AE@%%@BO:          1914d2@%%@NL@%
  56672.      %@AB@%Men: and Women%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a1bdf@%%@NL@%
  56673.      %@AB@%Men and Women%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1a342c@%%@NL@%
  56674.      Opinion: %@AB@%Hinkson%@AE@%%@BO:          1c51c1@%%@NL@%
  56675.      Politicians: %@AB@%Cassandra%@AE@%%@BO:          1eea14@%%@NL@%
  56676.      Quarrels: %@AB@%d'Aurevilly%@AE@%%@BO:          21512c@%%@NL@%
  56677.      Regret: %@AB@%Pinero%@AE@%%@BO:          21f939@%%@NL@%
  56678.      Reputation: %@AB@%La Rochefoucauld%@AE@%%@BO:          226ba9@%%@NL@%
  56679.      Seduction: %@AB@%de Lenclos%@AE@%%@BO:          2429c8@%%@NL@%
  56680.      Status: %@AB@%Hubbard%@AE@%%@BO:          26ded1@%%@NL@%
  56681.      Wine: %@AB@%Burton%@AE@%%@BO:          2b31c3@%%@NL@%
  56682.      %@AB@%Wives%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2b824a@%%@NL@%
  56683.      Writers: %@AB@%Finch%@AE@%%@BO:          2ca70d@%; %@AB@%Woolf%@AE@%%@BO:          2cb015@%%@NL@%
  56684. %@NL@%
  56685. %@2@%Woman - a foe to friendship, an unescapable punishment,%@EH@%
  56686. a necessary evil.%@NL@%
  56687. %@CR:WOMEN Chrysostom@%%@NL@%
  56688.                                                  John Chrysostom (345-407)%@NL@%
  56689.                                                   Greek ecclesiast, hermit%@NL@%
  56690. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56691. %@NL@%
  56692. %@NL@%
  56693. %@2@%All wickedness is but little to the wickedness of a woman.%@NL@%
  56694. %@CR:WOMEN Apocrypha2@%%@NL@%
  56695.                                                  Apocrypha, Ecclesiasticus%@NL@%
  56696. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56697. %@NL@%
  56698. %@NL@%
  56699. %@2@%Women give themselves to God when the Devil wants nothing more%@EH@%
  56700. to do with them.%@NL@%
  56701. %@CR:WOMEN Arnould   @%%@NL@%
  56702.                                                 Sophie Arnould (1740-1802)%@NL@%
  56703.                                                    French operatic soprano%@NL@%
  56704. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56705. %@NL@%
  56706. %@NL@%
  56707. %@2@%The judgment of God upon your sex endures even today; and with%@EH@%
  56708. it inevitably endures your position of criminal at the bar of justice.
  56709. You are the gateway to the devil.%@NL@%
  56710. %@CR:WOMEN Tertullian@%%@NL@%
  56711.                                                    Tertullian (c. 160-240)%@NL@%
  56712.                                                           Roman theologian%@NL@%
  56713. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56714. %@NL@%
  56715. %@NL@%
  56716. %@2@%Woman's place is in the wrong.%@NL@%
  56717. %@CR:WOMEN Thurber   @%%@NL@%
  56718.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  56719.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  56720. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56721. %@NL@%
  56722. %@NL@%
  56723. %@2@%Women have a wonderful sense of right and wrong, but little%@EH@%
  56724. sense of right and left.%@NL@%
  56725. %@CR:WOMEN Herold    @%%@NL@%
  56726.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  56727.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  56728. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56729. %@NL@%
  56730. %@NL@%
  56731. %@2@%Give a woman an inch an she'll park a car on it.%@NL@%
  56732. %@CR:WOMEN White2    @%%@NL@%
  56733.                                                   E. P. B. White (b. 1914)%@NL@%
  56734.                                         Chief Constable of Gloucestershire%@NL@%
  56735. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56736. %@NL@%
  56737. %@NL@%
  56738. %@2@%A woman's appearance depends upon two things: the clothes she%@EH@%
  56739. wears and the time she gives to her toilet  . . .  Against the first
  56740. we bring the charge of ostentation, against the second of harlotry.%@NL@%
  56741. %@CR:WOMEN Tertullian@%%@NL@%
  56742.                                                    Tertullian (c. 160-240)%@NL@%
  56743.                                                           Roman theologian%@NL@%
  56744. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56745. %@NL@%
  56746. %@NL@%
  56747. %@2@%Aren't women prudes if they don't and prostitutes if they do?%@NL@%
  56748. %@CR:WOMEN Millet    @%%@NL@%
  56749.                                                      Kate Millet (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  56750.                                                   American feminist writer%@NL@%
  56751. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56752. %@NL@%
  56753. %@NL@%
  56754. %@2@%Taught from infancy that beauty is woman's sceptre, the mind%@EH@%
  56755. shapes itself to the body, and roaming round its gilt cage, only
  56756. seeks to adorn its prison.%@NL@%
  56757. %@CR:WOMEN Wollstonec@%%@NL@%
  56758.                                            Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)%@NL@%
  56759.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  56760. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56761. %@NL@%
  56762. %@NL@%
  56763. %@2@%Women are not much, but they are the best other sex we have.%@NL@%
  56764. %@CR:WOMEN Herold    @%%@NL@%
  56765.                                                     Don Herold (1889-1966)%@NL@%
  56766.                                          American humorist, writer, artist%@NL@%
  56767. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56768. %@NL@%
  56769. %@NL@%
  56770. %@2@%When children cease to be altogether desirable women cease%@EH@%
  56771. to be altogether necessary.%@NL@%
  56772. %@CR:WOMEN LangdonDav@%%@NL@%
  56773.                                            John Langdon-Davies (1897-1971)%@NL@%
  56774.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  56775. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56776. %@NL@%
  56777. %@NL@%
  56778. %@2@%A woman is like a teabag - only in hot water do you realize%@EH@%
  56779. how strong she is.%@NL@%
  56780. %@CR:WOMEN Reagan2   @%%@NL@%
  56781.                                                     Nancy Reagan (b. 1923)%@NL@%
  56782.                                                 American former First Lady%@NL@%
  56783. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56784. %@NL@%
  56785. %@NL@%
  56786. %@2@%If women got a slap round the face more often, they'd be a%@EH@%
  56787. bit more reasonable.%@NL@%
  56788. %@CR:WOMEN Rampling  @%%@NL@%
  56789.                                               Charlotte Rampling (b. 1945)%@NL@%
  56790.                                                       British film actress%@NL@%
  56791. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56792. %@NL@%
  56793. %@NL@%
  56794. %@2@%Most women have no character at all.%@NL@%
  56795. %@CR:WOMEN Pope      @%%@NL@%
  56796.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  56797.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56798. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56799. %@NL@%
  56800. %@NL@%
  56801. %@2@%The opinion I have of the generality of women - who appear%@EH@%
  56802. to me as children to whom I would rather give a sugar plum than
  56803. my time, forms a barrier against matrimony which I rejoice in.%@NL@%
  56804. %@CR:WOMEN Keats     @%%@NL@%
  56805.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  56806.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  56807. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56808. %@NL@%
  56809. %@NL@%
  56810. %@2@%A woman might claim to retain some of the child's faculties,%@EH@%
  56811. although very limited and defused, simply because she has not been
  56812. encouraged to learn methods of thought and develop a disciplined
  56813. mind. As long as education remains largely induction ignorance
  56814. will retain these advantages over learning and it is time that
  56815. women impudently put them to work.%@NL@%
  56816. %@CR:WOMEN Greer     @%%@NL@%
  56817.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  56818.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  56819. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56820. %@NL@%
  56821. %@NL@%
  56822. %@2@%She was a gentlewoman, a scholar and a saint, and after having%@EH@%
  56823. been three times married she took the vow of celibacy. What more
  56824. could be expected of any woman?%@NL@%
  56825. %@CR:WOMEN Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  56826.                                           Elizabeth Wordsworth (1840-1932)%@NL@%
  56827.                                                           English educator%@NL@%
  56828. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56829. %@NL@%
  56830. %@NL@%
  56831. %@2@%As artists they're rot, but as providers they're oil wells;%@EH@%
  56832. they gush. Norris said she never wrote a story unless it was fun
  56833. to do. I understand Ferber whistles at her typewriter. And there
  56834. was that poor sucker Flaubert rolling around on his floor for
  56835. three days looking for the right word.%@NL@%
  56836. %@CR:WOMEN Parker1   @%%@NL@%
  56837.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  56838.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  56839. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56840. %@NL@%
  56841. %@NL@%
  56842. %@2@%A woman, especially, if she have the misfortune of knowing%@EH@%
  56843. anything, should conceal it as well as she can.%@NL@%
  56844. %@CR:WOMEN Austen    @%%@NL@%
  56845.                                                    Jane Austen (1775-1817)%@NL@%
  56846.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  56847. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56848. %@NL@%
  56849. %@NL@%
  56850.      %@2@%Thus women's secrets I've surveyed%@NL@%
  56851.      And let them see how curiously they're made,%@NL@%
  56852.      And that, tho' they of different sexes be,%@NL@%
  56853.      Yet in the whole they are the same as we.%@NL@%
  56854. %@CR:WOMEN Greer     @%%@NL@%
  56855.                 from %@AI@%The Works of Aristotle in Four Parts%@AE@%, 1822, quoted by%@NL@%
  56856.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  56857.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  56858. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56859. %@NL@%
  56860. %@NL@%
  56861. %@2@%When a woman behaves like a man why doesn't she behave like%@EH@%
  56862. a nice man?%@NL@%
  56863. %@CR:WOMEN Evans     @%%@NL@%
  56864.                                               Dame Edith Evans (1888-1976)%@NL@%
  56865.                                                            British actress%@NL@%
  56866. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56867. %@NL@%
  56868. %@NL@%
  56869. %@2@%I am glad that I am not a man, as I should be obliged to marry%@EH@%
  56870. a woman.%@NL@%
  56871. %@CR:WOMEN Stael     @%%@NL@%
  56872.                                                Madame de Stael (1766-1817)%@NL@%
  56873.                                                         French writer, wit%@NL@%
  56874. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56875. %@NL@%
  56876. %@NL@%
  56877. %@2@%In the divorce court women complain of losing weight. Outside%@EH@%
  56878. the divorce court they complain of putting it on.%@NL@%
  56879. %@CR:WOMEN Davies2   @%%@NL@%
  56880.                                             Sir Arthian Davies (1901-1979)%@NL@%
  56881.                                                              British judge%@NL@%
  56882. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56883. %@NL@%
  56884. %@NL@%
  56885. %@2@%A woman will always sacrifice herself if you give her the opportunity.%@EH@%
  56886. It is her favourite form of self-indulgence.%@NL@%
  56887. %@CR:WOMEN Maugham   @%%@NL@%
  56888.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  56889.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  56890. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56891. %@NL@%
  56892. %@NL@%
  56893. %@2@%Good women always think it is their fault when someone else%@EH@%
  56894. is being offensive. Bad women never take the blame for anything.%@NL@%
  56895. %@CR:WOMEN Brookner  @%%@NL@%
  56896.                                                   Anita Brookner (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  56897.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  56898. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56899. %@NL@%
  56900. %@NL@%
  56901. %@2@%There is only one real tragedy in a woman's life. The fact%@EH@%
  56902. that her past is always her lover, and her future invariably her
  56903. husband.%@NL@%
  56904. %@CR:WOMEN Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  56905.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  56906.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  56907. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56908. %@NL@%
  56909. %@NL@%
  56910. %@2@%A woman's whole life is a history of the affections.%@NL@%
  56911. %@CR:WOMEN Irving    @%%@NL@%
  56912.                                              Washington Irving (1783-1859)%@NL@%
  56913.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56914. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56915. %@NL@%
  56916. %@NL@%
  56917. %@2@%The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.%@NL@%
  56918. %@CR:WOMEN Eliot1    @%%@NL@%
  56919.                                                   George Eliot (1819-1880)%@NL@%
  56920.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  56921. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56922. %@NL@%
  56923. %@NL@%
  56924. %@2@%There is no spectacle on earth more appealing than that of%@EH@%
  56925. a beautiful woman in the act of cooking dinner for someone she
  56926. loves.%@NL@%
  56927. %@CR:WOMEN Wolfe2    @%%@NL@%
  56928.                                                   Thomas Wolfe (1900-1938)%@NL@%
  56929.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  56930. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56931. %@NL@%
  56932. %@NL@%
  56933. %@2@%If all men are born free, how is it that all women are born%@EH@%
  56934. slaves?%@NL@%
  56935. %@CR:WOMEN Astell    @%%@NL@%
  56936.                                                    Mary Astell (1666-1735)%@NL@%
  56937.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  56938. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56939. %@NL@%
  56940. %@NL@%
  56941. %@2@%The slavery of women happened when the men were slaves of kings.%@NL@%
  56942. %@CR:WOMEN Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  56943.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  56944.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  56945. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56946. %@NL@%
  56947. %@NL@%
  56948. %@2@%Women live like Bats or Owls, labour like Beasts, and die like%@EH@%
  56949. Worms.%@NL@%
  56950. %@CR:WOMEN Cavendish @%%@NL@%
  56951.                       Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle (1623-1673)%@NL@%
  56952.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  56953. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56954. %@NL@%
  56955. %@NL@%
  56956. %@2@%You can always rely on a society of equals taking it out on%@EH@%
  56957. the woman.%@NL@%
  56958. %@CR:WOMEN Sillitoe  @%%@NL@%
  56959.                                                    Alan Sillitoe (b. 1938)%@NL@%
  56960.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  56961. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56962. %@NL@%
  56963. %@NL@%
  56964. %@2@%If ever there was a colonized race on this planet it's the%@EH@%
  56965. female race, there's no question about that.%@NL@%
  56966. %@CR:WOMEN Maclaine  @%%@NL@%
  56967.                                                 Shirley Maclaine (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  56968.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  56969. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56970. %@NL@%
  56971. %@NL@%
  56972. %@2@%Th' hand that rocks th' cradle is just as liable to rock the%@EH@%
  56973. country.%@NL@%
  56974. %@CR:WOMEN Hubbard2  @%%@NL@%
  56975.                                      Kin (F. McKinney) Hubbard (1868-1930)%@NL@%
  56976.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  56977. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56978. %@NL@%
  56979. %@NL@%
  56980. %@2@%The great question that has never been answered, and which%@EH@%
  56981. I have not yet been able to answer despite my thirty years of research
  56982. into the feminine soul, is: What does a woman want?%@NL@%
  56983. %@CR:WOMEN Freud     @%%@NL@%
  56984.                                                  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)%@NL@%
  56985.                                                      Austrian psychiatrist%@NL@%
  56986. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56987. %@NL@%
  56988. %@NL@%
  56989. %@2@%For my part I distrust %@AI@%all%@AE@% generalisations about women, favourable%@EH@%
  56990. and unfavourable, masculine and feminine, ancient and modern.%@NL@%
  56991. %@CR:WOMEN Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  56992.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  56993.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  56994. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  56995. %@NL@%
  56996. %@NL@%
  56997. %@2@%Being a woman is of special interest only to aspiring male%@EH@%
  56998. transsexuals. To actual women it is merely a good excuse not to
  56999. play football.%@NL@%
  57000. %@CR:WOMEN Lebowitz  @%%@NL@%
  57001.                                                    Fran Lebowitz (b. 1951)%@NL@%
  57002.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  57003. %@AS@%                                                                     Women%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57004. %@NL@%
  57005. %@NL@%
  57006. %@NL@%
  57007. %@1@%%@AS@%Women: and Men%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57008. %@CR:ANDMEN          @%%@NL@%
  57009. %@2@%%@QR:Women: and Men@%Women are told from their infancy and taught by the example%@EH@%
  57010. of their mothers, that a little knowledge of human weakness, justly
  57011. termed cunning, softness of temper, "outward" obedience and
  57012. a scrupulous attention to a puerile kind of properiety, will obtain
  57013. for them the protection of man.%@NL@%
  57014. %@CR:ANDMENWollstonec@%%@NL@%
  57015.                                            Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)%@NL@%
  57016.                                                    English feminist writer%@NL@%
  57017. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57018. %@NL@%
  57019. %@NL@%
  57020. %@2@%The only way for a woman to provide for herself decently is%@EH@%
  57021. for her to be good to some man that can afford to be good to her.%@NL@%
  57022. %@CR:ANDMENShaw      @%%@NL@%
  57023.                                      Mrs. Warren, %@AI@%Mrs. Warren's Profession%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57024.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  57025.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  57026. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57027. %@NL@%
  57028. %@NL@%
  57029. %@2@%Brigands demand your money or your life; women demand both.%@NL@%
  57030. %@CR:ANDMENButler4   @%%@NL@%
  57031.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  57032.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  57033. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57034. %@NL@%
  57035. %@NL@%
  57036. %@2@%The way to fight a woman is with your hat - grab it and%@EH@%
  57037. run.%@NL@%
  57038. %@CR:ANDMENBarrymore2@%%@NL@%
  57039.                                                 John Barrymore (1882-1942)%@NL@%
  57040.                                              American stage and film actor%@NL@%
  57041. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57042. %@NL@%
  57043. %@NL@%
  57044. %@2@%Woman begins by resisting a man's advances and ends by blocking%@EH@%
  57045. his retreat.%@NL@%
  57046. %@CR:ANDMENWilde     @%%@NL@%
  57047.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  57048.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  57049. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57050. %@NL@%
  57051. %@NL@%
  57052. %@2@%Here's to man! Would that we could fall into her arms without%@EH@%
  57053. falling into her hands.%@NL@%
  57054. %@CR:ANDMENBierce    @%%@NL@%
  57055.                                                 Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)%@NL@%
  57056.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  57057. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57058. %@NL@%
  57059. %@NL@%
  57060. %@2@%She plucked from my lapel the invisible strand of lint (the%@EH@%
  57061. universal act of woman to proclaim ownership).%@NL@%
  57062. %@CR:ANDMENHenry1    @%%@NL@%
  57063.                                                       O. Henry (1862-1910)%@NL@%
  57064.                                                American short story writer%@NL@%
  57065. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57066. %@NL@%
  57067. %@NL@%
  57068. %@2@%As much as women belong to us, we no longer belong to them.%@NL@%
  57069. %@CR:ANDMENMontaigne @%%@NL@%
  57070.                                            Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)%@NL@%
  57071.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  57072. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57073. %@NL@%
  57074. %@NL@%
  57075. %@2@%Most women set out to try to change a man, and when they have%@EH@%
  57076. changed them they do not like him.%@NL@%
  57077. %@CR:ANDMENDietrich  @%%@NL@%
  57078.                                                 Marlene Dietrich (b. 1901)%@NL@%
  57079.                                               German-American film actress%@NL@%
  57080. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57081. %@NL@%
  57082. %@NL@%
  57083. %@2@%The only time a woman really succeeds in changing a man is%@EH@%
  57084. when he's a baby.%@NL@%
  57085. %@CR:ANDMENWood      @%%@NL@%
  57086.                                                   Natalie Wood (1938-1981)%@NL@%
  57087.                                                      American film actress%@NL@%
  57088. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57089. %@NL@%
  57090. %@NL@%
  57091. %@2@%There is nothing women hate so much as to see men selfishly%@EH@%
  57092. enjoying themselves without the solace of feminine society.%@NL@%
  57093. %@CR:ANDMENHinkson   @%%@NL@%
  57094.                                        Katharine Tynan Hinkson (1861-1931)%@NL@%
  57095.                                                       Irish poet, novelist%@NL@%
  57096. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57097. %@NL@%
  57098. %@NL@%
  57099. %@2@%A woman must choose: with a man liked by women, she is not%@EH@%
  57100. sure; with a man disliked by women, she is not happy.%@NL@%
  57101. %@CR:ANDMENFrance    @%%@NL@%
  57102.                                                 Anatole France (1844-1924)%@NL@%
  57103.                                                              French author%@NL@%
  57104. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57105. %@NL@%
  57106. %@NL@%
  57107. %@2@%A woman may very well form a friendship with a man, but for%@EH@%
  57108. this to endure, it must be assisted by a little physical antipathy.%@NL@%
  57109. %@CR:ANDMENNietzsche @%%@NL@%
  57110.                                            Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)%@NL@%
  57111.                                                         German philosopher%@NL@%
  57112. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57113. %@NL@%
  57114. %@NL@%
  57115. %@2@%A man of sense only trifles with them, plays with them, humours%@EH@%
  57116. and flatters them, as he does with a sprightly and forward child;
  57117. but he neither consults them about, nor trusts them with, serious
  57118. matters.%@NL@%
  57119. %@CR:ANDMENChesterfie@%%@NL@%
  57120.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  57121.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  57122. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57123. %@NL@%
  57124. %@NL@%
  57125. %@2@%Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing%@EH@%
  57126. the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at
  57127. twice its natural size.%@NL@%
  57128. %@CR:ANDMENWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  57129.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  57130.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  57131. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57132. %@NL@%
  57133. %@NL@%
  57134. %@2@%A man's women folk, whatever their outward show of respect%@EH@%
  57135. for his merit and authority, always regard him secretly as an ass,
  57136. and with something akin to pity  . . .  In this fact, perhaps, lies
  57137. one of the best proofs of feminine intelligence or, as the common
  57138. phrase makes it, feminine intuition.%@NL@%
  57139. %@CR:ANDMENMencken   @%%@NL@%
  57140.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  57141.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  57142. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57143. %@NL@%
  57144. %@NL@%
  57145. %@2@%Perhaps women have always been in closer contact with reality%@EH@%
  57146. than men: it would seem to be the just recompense for being deprived
  57147. of idealism.%@NL@%
  57148. %@CR:ANDMENGreer     @%%@NL@%
  57149.                                                   Germaine Greer (b. 1939)%@NL@%
  57150.                                                 Australian feminist writer%@NL@%
  57151. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57152. %@NL@%
  57153. %@NL@%
  57154. %@2@%Women are not angels. They are as foolish as men in many ways;%@EH@%
  57155. but they have had to devote themselves to life whilst men have
  57156. had to devote themselves to death  . . .  Women have been forced
  57157. to fear whilst men have been forced to dare: the heroism of a woman
  57158. is to nurse and protect life, and of a man to destroy it and court
  57159. death.%@NL@%
  57160. %@CR:ANDMENShaw      @%%@NL@%
  57161.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  57162.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  57163. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57164. %@NL@%
  57165. %@NL@%
  57166. %@2@%Being a woman is a terribly difficult trade, since it consists%@EH@%
  57167. principally of dealing with men.%@NL@%
  57168. %@CR:ANDMENConrad    @%%@NL@%
  57169.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  57170.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  57171. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57172. %@NL@%
  57173. %@NL@%
  57174. %@2@%I expect that Woman will be the last thing civilised by Man.%@NL@%
  57175. %@CR:ANDMENMeredith  @%%@NL@%
  57176.                                                George Meredith (1828-1909)%@NL@%
  57177.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  57178. %@AS@%                                                            Women: and Men%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57179. %@NL@%
  57180. %@NL@%
  57181. %@NL@%
  57182. %@1@%%@AS@%Words%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57183. %@CR:WORDS           @%%@NL@%
  57184. %@2@%See:%@QR:Words@%%@NL@%
  57185.      %@AB@%Language%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          16a0fd@%%@NL@%
  57186.      %@AB@%Speech%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          26517f@%%@NL@%
  57187. %@NL@%
  57188. %@2@%Words are the clothes that thoughts wear - only the clothes.%@NL@%
  57189. %@CR:WORDS Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  57190.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  57191.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  57192. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57193. %@NL@%
  57194. %@NL@%
  57195. %@2@%Words, like eyeglasses, blur everything that they do not make%@EH@%
  57196. clearer.%@NL@%
  57197. %@CR:WORDS Joubert   @%%@NL@%
  57198.                                                 Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)%@NL@%
  57199.                                                  French essayist, moralist%@NL@%
  57200. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57201. %@NL@%
  57202. %@NL@%
  57203. %@2@%Words ought to be a little wild for they are the assault of%@EH@%
  57204. thoughts on the unthinking.%@NL@%
  57205. %@CR:WORDS Keynes    @%%@NL@%
  57206.                                            John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)%@NL@%
  57207.                                                          English economist%@NL@%
  57208. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57209. %@NL@%
  57210. %@NL@%
  57211. %@2@%"When %@AI@%I%@AE@% use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful%@EH@%
  57212. tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more
  57213. nor less."%@NL@%
  57214. %@CR:WORDS Carroll   @%%@NL@%
  57215.                                                  Lewis Carroll (1832-1898)%@NL@%
  57216.                                              English writer, mathematician%@NL@%
  57217. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57218. %@NL@%
  57219. %@NL@%
  57220. %@2@%Would you repeat that again, sir, for it soun's sae sonorous%@EH@%
  57221. that the words droon the ideas?%@NL@%
  57222. %@CR:WORDS Wilson4   @%%@NL@%
  57223.                                                    John Wilson (1785-1854)%@NL@%
  57224.                                                       Scottish philosopher%@NL@%
  57225. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57226. %@NL@%
  57227. %@NL@%
  57228. %@2@%One forgets words as one forgets names. One's vocabulary needs%@EH@%
  57229. consent fertilisation or it will die.%@NL@%
  57230. %@CR:WORDS Waugh     @%%@NL@%
  57231.                                                   Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)%@NL@%
  57232.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  57233. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57234. %@NL@%
  57235. %@NL@%
  57236. %@2@%Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind.%@NL@%
  57237. %@CR:WORDS Kipling   @%%@NL@%
  57238.                                                Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)%@NL@%
  57239.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  57240. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57241. %@NL@%
  57242. %@NL@%
  57243. %@2@%In fact, words are well adapted for description and arousing%@EH@%
  57244. of emotions, but for many kinds of precise thought other symbols
  57245. are much better.%@NL@%
  57246. %@CR:WORDS Haldane   @%%@NL@%
  57247.                                               J. B. S. Haldane (1892-1964)%@NL@%
  57248.                                                          British scientist%@NL@%
  57249. %@AS@%                                                                     Words%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57250. %@NL@%
  57251. %@NL@%
  57252. %@NL@%
  57253. %@1@%%@AS@%Work%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57254. %@CR:WORK            @%%@NL@%
  57255. %@2@%See:%@QR:Work@%%@NL@%
  57256.      Communism: %@AB@%Marx%@AE@%%@BO:           75cee@%%@NL@%
  57257.      Humility: %@AB@%Chesterton%@AE@%%@BO:          13b657@%%@NL@%
  57258.      Illusions: of Grandeur: %@AB@%Schapp%@AE@%%@BO:          146b1f@%%@NL@%
  57259.      %@AB@%The Office%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          1c353b@%%@NL@%
  57260.      Slavery: %@AB@%Ruskin%@AE@%%@BO:          257e64@%%@NL@%
  57261. %@NL@%
  57262. %@2@%My father taught me to work; he did not teach me to love it.%@NL@%
  57263. %@CR:WORK  Lincoln   @%%@NL@%
  57264.                                                Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)%@NL@%
  57265.                                                         American president%@NL@%
  57266. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57267. %@NL@%
  57268. %@NL@%
  57269. %@2@%I like work; it fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for%@EH@%
  57270. hours. I love to keep it by me; the idea of getting rid of it nearly
  57271. breaks my heart.%@NL@%
  57272. %@CR:WORK  Jerome    @%%@NL@%
  57273.                                               Jerome K. Jerome (1859-1927)%@NL@%
  57274.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  57275. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57276. %@NL@%
  57277. %@NL@%
  57278. %@2@%Work with some men is as besetting a sin as idleness.%@NL@%
  57279. %@CR:WORK  Butler4   @%%@NL@%
  57280.                                                  Samuel Butler (1835-1902)%@NL@%
  57281.                                                             English author%@NL@%
  57282. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57283. %@NL@%
  57284. %@NL@%
  57285. %@2@%Work is the curse of the drinking classes.%@NL@%
  57286. %@CR:WORK  Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  57287.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  57288.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  57289. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57290. %@NL@%
  57291. %@NL@%
  57292. %@2@%Perpetual devotion to what a man calls his business is only%@EH@%
  57293. to be sustained by perpetual neglect of many other things.%@NL@%
  57294. %@CR:WORK  Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  57295.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  57296.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  57297. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57298. %@NL@%
  57299. %@NL@%
  57300. %@2@%Unchanging work at a uniform task kills the explosive flow%@EH@%
  57301. of a man's animal spirits, which draw refreshing zest from a simple
  57302. change of activity.%@NL@%
  57303. %@CR:WORK  Marx2     @%%@NL@%
  57304.                                                      Karl Marx (1818-1883)%@NL@%
  57305.                                   German social philosopher, revolutionary%@NL@%
  57306. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57307. %@NL@%
  57308. %@NL@%
  57309. %@2@%Clearly the most unfortunate people are those who must do the%@EH@%
  57310. same thing over and over again, every minute, or perhaps twenty
  57311. to the minute. They deserve the shortest hours and the highest
  57312. pay.%@NL@%
  57313. %@CR:WORK  Galbraith @%%@NL@%
  57314.                                           John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  57315.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  57316. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57317. %@NL@%
  57318. %@NL@%
  57319. %@2@%Work is of two kinds: first, altering the position of matter%@EH@%
  57320. at or near the earth's surface relatively to other such matter;
  57321. second, telling other people to do so. The first kind is unpleasant
  57322. and ill-paid; the second is pleasant and highly paid.%@NL@%
  57323. %@CR:WORK  Russell1  @%%@NL@%
  57324.                                               Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)%@NL@%
  57325.                        British philosopher, mathematician, social reformer%@NL@%
  57326. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57327. %@NL@%
  57328. %@NL@%
  57329. %@2@%Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work%@EH@%
  57330. he is %@AI@%supposed%@AE@% to be doing at that moment.%@NL@%
  57331. %@CR:WORK  Benchley  @%%@NL@%
  57332.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  57333.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  57334. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57335. %@NL@%
  57336. %@NL@%
  57337. %@2@%Nothing is really work unless you would rather be doing something%@EH@%
  57338. else.%@NL@%
  57339. %@CR:WORK  Barrie2   @%%@NL@%
  57340.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  57341.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  57342. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57343. %@NL@%
  57344. %@NL@%
  57345. %@2@%If you have genius, industry will improve it; if you have none,%@EH@%
  57346. industry will supply its place.%@NL@%
  57347. %@CR:WORK  Reynolds  @%%@NL@%
  57348.                                            Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792)%@NL@%
  57349.                                                            English painter%@NL@%
  57350. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57351. %@NL@%
  57352. %@NL@%
  57353. %@2@%We must cultivate our own garden. When man was put in the garden%@EH@%
  57354. of Eden he was put there so that he should work, which proves that
  57355. man was not born to rest. Let us work without questioning, it
  57356. is the only way to make life tolerable.%@NL@%
  57357. %@CR:WORK  Voltaire  @%%@NL@%
  57358.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  57359.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  57360. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57361. %@NL@%
  57362. %@NL@%
  57363. %@2@%We must hold a man amenable to reason for the choice of his%@EH@%
  57364. daily craft or profession. It is not an excuse any longer for his
  57365. deeds that they are the custom of his trade. What business has
  57366. he with an evil trade?%@NL@%
  57367. %@CR:WORK  Emerson   @%%@NL@%
  57368.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  57369.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  57370. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57371. %@NL@%
  57372. %@NL@%
  57373. %@2@%All professions are conspiracies against the laity.%@NL@%
  57374. %@CR:WORK  Shaw      @%%@NL@%
  57375.                                          Sir Patrick, %@AI@%The Doctor's Dilemma%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57376.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  57377.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  57378. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57379. %@NL@%
  57380. %@NL@%
  57381. %@2@%By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may eventually%@EH@%
  57382. get to be a boss and work twelve hours a day.%@NL@%
  57383. %@CR:WORK  Frost2    @%%@NL@%
  57384.                                                   Robert Frost (1874-1963)%@NL@%
  57385.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  57386. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57387. %@NL@%
  57388. %@NL@%
  57389. %@2@%When I was young I worked for a capitalist twelve hours a day%@EH@%
  57390. and I was always tired. Now I work for myself twenty hours a day
  57391. and I never get tired.%@NL@%
  57392. %@CR:WORK  Khrushchev@%%@NL@%
  57393.                                              Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971)%@NL@%
  57394.                                                             Soviet premier%@NL@%
  57395. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57396. %@NL@%
  57397. %@NL@%
  57398. %@2@%Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.%@NL@%
  57399. %@CR:WORK  Parkinson @%%@NL@%
  57400.                                           C. Northcote Parkinson (b. 1909)%@NL@%
  57401.                                                  British historian, author%@NL@%
  57402. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57403. %@NL@%
  57404. %@NL@%
  57405. %@2@%The really efficient laborer will be found not to crowd his%@EH@%
  57406. day with work, but will saunter to his task surrounded by a wide
  57407. halo of ease and lesiure.%@NL@%
  57408. %@CR:WORK  Thoreau   @%%@NL@%
  57409.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  57410.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  57411. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57412. %@NL@%
  57413. %@NL@%
  57414. %@2@%It is too difficult to think nobly when one thinks only of%@EH@%
  57415. earning a living.%@NL@%
  57416. %@CR:WORK  Rousseau  @%%@NL@%
  57417.                                          Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)%@NL@%
  57418.                               Swiss-French philosopher, political theorist%@NL@%
  57419. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57420. %@NL@%
  57421. %@NL@%
  57422. %@2@%Nothing dignifies human labour so much as the saving of it.%@NL@%
  57423. %@CR:WORK  Rodgers   @%%@NL@%
  57424.                                                     John Rodgers (b. 1906)%@NL@%
  57425.                                          British administrator, politician%@NL@%
  57426. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57427. %@NL@%
  57428. %@NL@%
  57429. %@2@%Work is the province of cattle.%@NL@%
  57430. %@CR:WORK  Parker1   @%%@NL@%
  57431.                                                 Dorothy Parker (1893-1967)%@NL@%
  57432.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  57433. %@AS@%                                                                      Work%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57434. %@NL@%
  57435. %@NL@%
  57436. %@NL@%
  57437. %@1@%%@AS@%The Working Class%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57438. %@CR:THEWORKINGCLASS @%%@NL@%
  57439. %@2@%See:%@QR:The Working Class@%%@NL@%
  57440.      Internationalism: %@AB@%Mussolini%@AE@%%@BO:          156ea9@%%@NL@%
  57441.      Trade Unions: %@AB@%Lenin%@AE@%%@BO:          28eef6@%%@NL@%
  57442. %@NL@%
  57443. %@2@%The General Strike has taught the working class more in four%@EH@%
  57444. days than years of talking could have done.%@NL@%
  57445. %@CR:THEWORBalfour   @%%@NL@%
  57446.                                           Arthur James Balfour (1848-1930)%@NL@%
  57447.                            British Conservative politician, prime minister%@NL@%
  57448. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57449. %@NL@%
  57450. %@NL@%
  57451. %@2@%The working-class is now issuing from its hiding-place to assert%@EH@%
  57452. an Englishman's heaven-born privilege of doing as he likes, and
  57453. is beginning to perplex us by marching where it likes, meeting
  57454. where it likes, bawling what it likes, breaking what it likes.%@NL@%
  57455. %@CR:THEWORArnold2   @%%@NL@%
  57456.                                                 Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)%@NL@%
  57457.                                                       English poet, critic%@NL@%
  57458. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57459. %@NL@%
  57460. %@NL@%
  57461. %@2@%There are only three ways by which any individual can get wealth - by%@EH@%
  57462. work, by gift, or by theft. And clearly, the reason why the workers
  57463. get so little is that the beggars and thieves get so much.%@NL@%
  57464. %@CR:THEWORGeorge    @%%@NL@%
  57465.                                                   Henry George (1839-1897)%@NL@%
  57466.                                                         American economist%@NL@%
  57467. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57468. %@NL@%
  57469. %@NL@%
  57470. %@2@%I tell you, sir, the only safeguard of order and discipline%@EH@%
  57471. in the modern world is a standardized worker with interchangeable
  57472. parts. That would solve the entire problem of management.%@NL@%
  57473. %@CR:THEWORGiraudoux @%%@NL@%
  57474.                                                 Jean Giraudoux (1882-1944)%@NL@%
  57475.                                                  French author, playwright%@NL@%
  57476. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57477. %@NL@%
  57478. %@NL@%
  57479. %@2@%In every one of those little stucco boxes there's some poor%@EH@%
  57480. bastard who's never free except when he's fast asleep and dreaming
  57481. that he's got the boss down the bottom of a well and is bunging
  57482. lumps of coal at him.%@NL@%
  57483. %@CR:THEWOROrwell    @%%@NL@%
  57484.                                                  George Orwell (1903-1950)%@NL@%
  57485.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  57486. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57487. %@NL@%
  57488. %@NL@%
  57489. %@2@%I am a friend of the working-man, and I would rather be his%@EH@%
  57490. friend than be one.%@NL@%
  57491. %@CR:THEWORDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  57492.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  57493.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  57494. %@AS@%                                                         The Working Class%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57495. %@NL@%
  57496. %@NL@%
  57497. %@NL@%
  57498. %@1@%%@AS@%Worldliness%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57499. %@CR:WORLDLINESS     @%%@NL@%
  57500. %@2@%See:%@QR:Worldliness@%%@NL@%
  57501.      Self-knowledge: %@AB@%de la Fontaine%@AE@%%@BO:          249437@%%@NL@%
  57502. %@NL@%
  57503. %@2@%I rather like the world. The flesh is pleasing and the Devil%@EH@%
  57504. does not trouble me.%@NL@%
  57505. %@CR:WORLDLHubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  57506.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  57507.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  57508. %@AS@%                                                               Worldliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57509. %@NL@%
  57510. %@NL@%
  57511. %@2@%The world is a beautiful book, but of little use to him who%@EH@%
  57512. cannot read it.%@NL@%
  57513. %@CR:WORLDLGoldoni   @%%@NL@%
  57514.                                                  Carlo Goldoni (1707-1793)%@NL@%
  57515.                                                          Italian dramatist%@NL@%
  57516. %@AS@%                                                               Worldliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57517. %@NL@%
  57518. %@NL@%
  57519. %@2@%I have been in love, and in debt, and in drink, this many and%@EH@%
  57520. many a year.%@NL@%
  57521. %@CR:WORLDLBrome     @%%@NL@%
  57522.                                                Alexander Brome (1620-1666)%@NL@%
  57523.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57524. %@AS@%                                                               Worldliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57525. %@NL@%
  57526. %@NL@%
  57527.      %@2@%So many worlds, so much to do.%@NL@%
  57528.      So little done, such things to be.%@NL@%
  57529. %@CR:WORLDLTennyson  @%%@NL@%
  57530.                                                  Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)%@NL@%
  57531.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57532. %@AS@%                                                               Worldliness%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57533. %@NL@%
  57534. %@NL@%
  57535. %@NL@%
  57536. %@1@%%@AS@%Worth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57537. %@CR:WORTH           @%%@NL@%
  57538. %@2@%See:%@QR:Worth@%%@NL@%
  57539.      Socialism: %@AB@%Baker%@AE@%%@BO:          25ef21@%%@NL@%
  57540. %@NL@%
  57541. %@2@%I have never believed in the superiority of the inferior.%@NL@%
  57542. %@CR:WORTH Wells     @%%@NL@%
  57543.                                                    H. G. Wells (1866-1946)%@NL@%
  57544.                                             English author, social thinker%@NL@%
  57545. %@AS@%                                                                     Worth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57546. %@NL@%
  57547. %@NL@%
  57548. %@2@%We never know the worth of water till the well is dry.%@NL@%
  57549. %@CR:WORTH Wells     @%%@NL@%
  57550.                                               18th-century English proverb%@NL@%
  57551. %@AS@%                                                                     Worth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57552. %@NL@%
  57553. %@NL@%
  57554. %@2@%Nowadays people know the price of everything and the value%@EH@%
  57555. of nothing.%@NL@%
  57556. %@CR:WORTH Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  57557.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  57558.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  57559. %@AS@%                                                                     Worth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57560. %@NL@%
  57561. %@NL@%
  57562. %@NL@%
  57563. %@1@%%@AS@%Writers%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57564. %@CR:WRITERS         @%%@NL@%
  57565. %@2@%See:%@QR:Writers@%%@NL@%
  57566.      Artists: %@AB@%Joyce%@AE@%%@BO:           3178e@%%@NL@%
  57567.      %@AB@%Lord Byron%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           4f877@%%@NL@%
  57568.      Censorship: %@AB@%Solzhenitsyn%@AE@%%@BO:           56b37@%%@NL@%
  57569.      Controversy: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           81344@%%@NL@%
  57570.      Critics: %@AB@%Johnson%@AE@%%@BO:           91174@%%@NL@%
  57571.      Failure: %@AB@%Nathan%@AE@%%@BO:           ddcbd@%%@NL@%
  57572.      %@AB@%Historians%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          12b9a9@%%@NL@%
  57573.      %@AB@%Dr. Johnson%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          15f37d@%%@NL@%
  57574.      Literature: %@AB@%Chesterfield%@AE@%%@BO:          17a9a1@%%@NL@%
  57575.      Plagiarism: %@AB@%Dryden%@AE@%%@BO:          1dd095@%; %@AB@%O'Malley%@AE@%%@BO:          1dcd92@%; %@AB@%Proctor%@AE@%%@BO:          1dcef7@%%@NL@%
  57576.      %@AB@%Shakespeare%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          24f7c2@%%@NL@%
  57577.      Women: %@AB@%Parker%@AE@%%@BO:          2bd089@%%@NL@%
  57578.      %@AB@%Writing%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2cb98f@%%@NL@%
  57579. %@NL@%
  57580. %@2@%Give me a condor's quill! Give me Vesuvius' crater for an inkstand!%@NL@%
  57581. %@CR:WRITERMelville  @%%@NL@%
  57582.                                                Herman Melville (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  57583.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  57584. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57585. %@NL@%
  57586. %@NL@%
  57587. %@2@%On the day when a young writer corrects his first proof sheets,%@EH@%
  57588. he is as proud as a schoolboy who has just got his first dose of
  57589. pox.%@NL@%
  57590. %@CR:WRITERBaudelaire@%%@NL@%
  57591.                                             Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)%@NL@%
  57592.                                                                French poet%@NL@%
  57593. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57594. %@NL@%
  57595. %@NL@%
  57596. %@2@%Admitted into the company of paper blurrers.%@NL@%
  57597. %@CR:WRITERSidney    @%%@NL@%
  57598.                                              Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)%@NL@%
  57599.                                              English poet, critic, soldier%@NL@%
  57600. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57601. %@NL@%
  57602. %@NL@%
  57603.      %@2@%Why did I write? whose sin to me unknown%@NL@%
  57604.      Dipt me in ink, my parents' or my own?%@NL@%
  57605. %@CR:WRITERPope      @%%@NL@%
  57606.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  57607.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57608. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57609. %@NL@%
  57610. %@NL@%
  57611. %@2@%Why did I write? Because I found life unsatisfactory.%@NL@%
  57612. %@CR:WRITERWilliams5 @%%@NL@%
  57613.                                             Tennessee Williams (1914-1983)%@NL@%
  57614.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  57615. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57616. %@NL@%
  57617. %@NL@%
  57618. %@2@%I know not, madam, that you have a right, upon moral principles,%@EH@%
  57619. to make your readers suffer so much.%@NL@%
  57620. %@CR:WRITERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  57621.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  57622.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  57623.                                                           to Mrs. Sheridan%@NL@%
  57624. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57625. %@NL@%
  57626. %@NL@%
  57627. %@2@%If you were to make little fishes talk, they would talk like%@EH@%
  57628. whales.%@NL@%
  57629. %@CR:WRITERGoldsmith @%%@NL@%
  57630.                                               Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)%@NL@%
  57631.                                                         Anglo-Irish author%@NL@%
  57632.                                                             to Dr. Johnson%@NL@%
  57633. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57634. %@NL@%
  57635. %@NL@%
  57636. %@2@%I portray men as they ought to be portrayed, but Euripides%@EH@%
  57637. portrays them as they are.%@NL@%
  57638. %@CR:WRITERSophocles @%%@NL@%
  57639.                                                  Sophocles (c. 495-406 BC)%@NL@%
  57640.                                                          Greek tragic poet%@NL@%
  57641.                                                        quoted by Aristotle%@NL@%
  57642. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57643. %@NL@%
  57644. %@NL@%
  57645.      %@2@%Without, or with, offence to freinds or foes,%@NL@%
  57646.      I sketch your world exactly as it goes.%@NL@%
  57647. %@CR:WRITERByron2    @%%@NL@%
  57648.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  57649.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57650. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57651. %@NL@%
  57652. %@NL@%
  57653. %@2@%If justice and truth take place, if he is rewarded according%@EH@%
  57654. to his desert, his name will stink to all generations.%@NL@%
  57655. %@CR:WRITERWesley    @%%@NL@%
  57656.                                                    John Wesley (1703-1791)%@NL@%
  57657.                                     English preacher, founder of Methodism%@NL@%
  57658.                                                       of Lord Chesterfield%@NL@%
  57659. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57660. %@NL@%
  57661. %@NL@%
  57662. %@2@%His style is chaos illumined by flashes of lightning. As a%@EH@%
  57663. writer, he has mastered everything except language.%@NL@%
  57664. %@CR:WRITERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  57665.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  57666.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  57667.                                                         of George Meredith%@NL@%
  57668. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57669. %@NL@%
  57670. %@NL@%
  57671. %@2@%He had a wonderful talent for packing thought close, and rendering%@EH@%
  57672. it portable.%@NL@%
  57673. %@CR:WRITERMacaulay1 @%%@NL@%
  57674.                                                  Lord Macaulay (1800-1859)%@NL@%
  57675.                                                          English historian%@NL@%
  57676.                                                           of Francis Bacon%@NL@%
  57677. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57678. %@NL@%
  57679. %@NL@%
  57680. %@2@%Three-fifths of him genius, and two-fifths sheer fudge.%@NL@%
  57681. %@CR:WRITERLowell2   @%%@NL@%
  57682.                                           James Russell Lowell (1819-1891)%@NL@%
  57683.                                                      American poet, editor%@NL@%
  57684.                                                         of Edgar Allan Poe%@NL@%
  57685. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57686. %@NL@%
  57687. %@NL@%
  57688. %@2@%He was worse than provincial - he was parochial.%@NL@%
  57689. %@CR:WRITERJames2    @%%@NL@%
  57690.                                                    Henry James (1843-1916)%@NL@%
  57691.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  57692.                                                           of H. D. Thoreau%@NL@%
  57693. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57694. %@NL@%
  57695. %@NL@%
  57696. %@2@%Henry James writes fiction as if it were a painful duty.%@NL@%
  57697. %@CR:WRITERWilde     @%%@NL@%
  57698.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  57699.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  57700. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57701. %@NL@%
  57702. %@NL@%
  57703. %@2@%The work of Henry James has always seemed divisible by a simple%@EH@%
  57704. dynastic arrangement into three reigns: James I, James II, and
  57705. the Old Pretender.%@NL@%
  57706. %@CR:WRITERGuedalla  @%%@NL@%
  57707.                                                Philip Guedalla (1889-1944)%@NL@%
  57708.                                              British biographer, historian%@NL@%
  57709. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57710. %@NL@%
  57711. %@NL@%
  57712. %@2@%His writing is not about something. It is the thing itself.%@NL@%
  57713. %@CR:WRITERBeckett   @%%@NL@%
  57714.                                                 Samuel Beckett (1906-1989)%@NL@%
  57715.                                                  Irish dramatist, novelist%@NL@%
  57716.                                                             of James Joyce%@NL@%
  57717. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57718. %@NL@%
  57719. %@NL@%
  57720. %@2@%If the Christ were content with humble toilers for disciples,%@EH@%
  57721. that wasn't good enough for our Bert. He wanted dukes' half sisters
  57722. and belted earls wiping his feet with their hair; grand apotheosis
  57723. of the snob, to humiliate the objects of his own awe by making
  57724. them venerate him. In his brisk youth before he met Frieda and
  57725. became a prophet, he was indeed a confidence man.%@NL@%
  57726. %@CR:WRITERCarter1   @%%@NL@%
  57727.                                                    Angela Carter (b. 1940)%@NL@%
  57728.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  57729.                                                          of D. H. Lawrence%@NL@%
  57730. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57731. %@NL@%
  57732. %@NL@%
  57733. %@2@%I don't regard Brecht as a man of iron-grey purpose and intellect,%@EH@%
  57734. I think he is a theatrical whore of the first quality.%@NL@%
  57735. %@CR:WRITERHall3     @%%@NL@%
  57736.                                                       Peter Hall (b. 1930)%@NL@%
  57737.                                                   British theater director%@NL@%
  57738. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57739. %@NL@%
  57740. %@NL@%
  57741. %@2@%Writers are always selling somebody out.%@NL@%
  57742. %@CR:WRITERDidion    @%%@NL@%
  57743.                                                      Joan Didion (b. 1934)%@NL@%
  57744.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  57745. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57746. %@NL@%
  57747. %@NL@%
  57748. %@2@%I started out very quiet and I beat Mr Turgenev. Then I trained%@EH@%
  57749. hard and I beat Mr de Maupassant. I've fought two draws with Mr
  57750. Stendhal, and I think I had an edge in the last one. But nobody's
  57751. going to get me in any ring with Mr Tolstoy unless I'm crazy or
  57752. I keep getting better.%@NL@%
  57753. %@CR:WRITERHemingway @%%@NL@%
  57754.                                               Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)%@NL@%
  57755.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  57756. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57757. %@NL@%
  57758. %@NL@%
  57759.      %@2@%The author who invents a title well%@NL@%
  57760.      Will always find his covered dulness sell.%@NL@%
  57761. %@CR:WRITERChatterton@%%@NL@%
  57762.                                              Thomas Chatterton (1752-1770)%@NL@%
  57763.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57764. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57765. %@NL@%
  57766. %@NL@%
  57767. %@2@%One man is as good as another until he has written a book.%@NL@%
  57768. %@CR:WRITERJowett    @%%@NL@%
  57769.                                                Benjamin Jowett (1817-1893)%@NL@%
  57770.                                                  English scholar, essayist%@NL@%
  57771. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57772. %@NL@%
  57773. %@NL@%
  57774. %@2@%How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood%@EH@%
  57775. up to live.%@NL@%
  57776. %@CR:WRITERThoreau   @%%@NL@%
  57777.                                            Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)%@NL@%
  57778.                                   American philosopher, author, naturalist%@NL@%
  57779. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57780. %@NL@%
  57781. %@NL@%
  57782. %@2@%Talent alone cannot make a writer. There must be a man behind%@EH@%
  57783. the book.%@NL@%
  57784. %@CR:WRITEREmerson   @%%@NL@%
  57785.                                            Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)%@NL@%
  57786.                                       American essayist, poet, philosopher%@NL@%
  57787. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57788. %@NL@%
  57789. %@NL@%
  57790. %@2@%For the sake of a few fine imaginative or domestic passages,%@EH@%
  57791. are we to be bullied into a certain philosophy engendered in the
  57792. whims of an egotist.%@NL@%
  57793. %@CR:WRITERKeats     @%%@NL@%
  57794.                                                     John Keats (1795-1821)%@NL@%
  57795.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57796. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57797. %@NL@%
  57798. %@NL@%
  57799. %@2@%No one who cannot halt at self-imposed boundaries could ever%@EH@%
  57800. write.%@NL@%
  57801. %@CR:WRITERBoileau   @%%@NL@%
  57802.                                                Nicolas Boileau (1636-1711)%@NL@%
  57803.                                                        French poet, critic%@NL@%
  57804. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57805. %@NL@%
  57806. %@NL@%
  57807. %@2@%An original writer is not one who imitates no one, but whom%@EH@%
  57808. no one can imitate.%@NL@%
  57809. %@CR:WRITERChateaubri@%%@NL@%
  57810.                                 Francois-Rene de Chateaubriand (1768-1848)%@NL@%
  57811.                                                              French writer%@NL@%
  57812. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57813. %@NL@%
  57814. %@NL@%
  57815. %@2@%Every great and original writer, in proportion as he is great%@EH@%
  57816. and original, must himself create the taste by which he is to be
  57817. relished.%@NL@%
  57818. %@CR:WRITERWordsworth@%%@NL@%
  57819.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  57820.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57821. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57822. %@NL@%
  57823. %@NL@%
  57824. %@2@%American writers want to be not good but great; and so are%@EH@%
  57825. neither.%@NL@%
  57826. %@CR:WRITERVidal     @%%@NL@%
  57827.                                                       Gore Vidal (b. 1925)%@NL@%
  57828.                                                  American novelist, critic%@NL@%
  57829. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57830. %@NL@%
  57831. %@NL@%
  57832. %@2@%The faults of great writers are generally excellencies carried%@EH@%
  57833. to excess.%@NL@%
  57834. %@CR:WRITERColeridge @%%@NL@%
  57835.                                        Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)%@NL@%
  57836.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57837. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57838. %@NL@%
  57839. %@NL@%
  57840. %@2@%Only a mediocre writer is always at his best.%@NL@%
  57841. %@CR:WRITERMaugham   @%%@NL@%
  57842.                                            W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)%@NL@%
  57843.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  57844. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57845. %@NL@%
  57846. %@NL@%
  57847. %@2@%No author is a man of genius to his publisher.%@NL@%
  57848. %@CR:WRITERHeine     @%%@NL@%
  57849.                                                 Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)%@NL@%
  57850.                                                    German poet, journalist%@NL@%
  57851. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57852. %@NL@%
  57853. %@NL@%
  57854. %@2@%There is probably no hell for authors in the next world - they%@EH@%
  57855. suffer so much from critics and publishers in this.%@NL@%
  57856. %@CR:WRITERBovee     @%%@NL@%
  57857.                                                    C. N. Bovee (1820-1904)%@NL@%
  57858.                                                    American editor, writer%@NL@%
  57859. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57860. %@NL@%
  57861. %@NL@%
  57862. %@2@%After being turned down by numerous publishers, he decided%@EH@%
  57863. to write for posterity.%@NL@%
  57864. %@CR:WRITERAde       @%%@NL@%
  57865.                                                     George Ade (1866-1944)%@NL@%
  57866.                                              American humorist, playwright%@NL@%
  57867. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57868. %@NL@%
  57869. %@NL@%
  57870. %@2@%No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money.%@NL@%
  57871. %@CR:WRITERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  57872.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  57873.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  57874. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57875. %@NL@%
  57876. %@NL@%
  57877. %@2@%The life of writing men has always been  . . .  a bitter business.%@EH@%
  57878. It is notoriously accompanied, for those who wrote well, by poverty
  57879. and contempt; or by fatuity and wealth for those who write ill.%@NL@%
  57880. %@CR:WRITERBelloc    @%%@NL@%
  57881.                                                 Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953)%@NL@%
  57882.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  57883. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57884. %@NL@%
  57885. %@NL@%
  57886.      %@2@%Alas! a woman that attempts the pen,%@NL@%
  57887.      Such a presumptuous creature is esteemed,%@NL@%
  57888.      The fault can by no virtue be redeemed.%@NL@%
  57889.      They tell us we mistake our sex and way;%@NL@%
  57890.      Good breeding, fashion, dancing, dressing, play,%@NL@%
  57891.      Are the accomplishments we should desire;%@NL@%
  57892.      To write, or read, or think, or to enquire,%@NL@%
  57893.      Would cloud our beauty, and exhaust our time,%@NL@%
  57894.      And interrupt the conquests of our prime,%@NL@%
  57895.      Whilst the dull manage of a servile house%@NL@%
  57896.      Is held by some our utmost art and use.%@NL@%
  57897. %@CR:WRITERFinch     @%%@NL@%
  57898.                                    Anne Finch, Lady Winchilsea (1660-1720)%@NL@%
  57899.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  57900. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57901. %@NL@%
  57902. %@NL@%
  57903. %@2@%The indifference of the world which Keats and Flaubert%@EH@%
  57904. and other men of genius have found so hard to bear was in her case
  57905. not indifference but hostility. The world did not say to her as
  57906. it said to them, Write if you choose; it makes no difference to
  57907. me. The world said with a guffaw, Write? What's the good of you
  57908. writing?%@NL@%
  57909. %@CR:WRITERWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  57910.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  57911.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  57912.                                                           on women writers%@NL@%
  57913. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57914. %@NL@%
  57915. %@NL@%
  57916. %@2@%Writers don't need love. All they require is money.%@NL@%
  57917. %@CR:WRITEROsborne   @%%@NL@%
  57918.                                                     John Osborne (b. 1929)%@NL@%
  57919.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  57920. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57921. %@NL@%
  57922. %@NL@%
  57923. %@2@%Some day I hope to write a book where the royalties will pay%@EH@%
  57924. for the copies I give away.%@NL@%
  57925. %@CR:WRITERDarrow    @%%@NL@%
  57926.                                                Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)%@NL@%
  57927.                                                    American lawyer, writer%@NL@%
  57928. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57929. %@NL@%
  57930. %@NL@%
  57931. %@2@%If a writer has to rob his mother, he will not hesitate; the%@EH@%
  57932. "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is worth any number of old ladies.%@NL@%
  57933. %@CR:WRITERFaulkner  @%%@NL@%
  57934.                                               William Faulkner (1897-1962)%@NL@%
  57935.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  57936. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57937. %@NL@%
  57938. %@NL@%
  57939. %@2@%A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to%@EH@%
  57940. write fiction.%@NL@%
  57941. %@CR:WRITERWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  57942.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  57943.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  57944. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57945. %@NL@%
  57946. %@NL@%
  57947. %@2@%A first edition of his work is a rarity, but a second is rarer%@EH@%
  57948. still.%@NL@%
  57949. %@CR:WRITERAdams1    @%%@NL@%
  57950.                                              Franklin P. Adams (1881-1960)%@NL@%
  57951.                                              American journalist, humorist%@NL@%
  57952. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57953. %@NL@%
  57954. %@NL@%
  57955. %@2@%The man who is asked by an author what he thinks of his work%@EH@%
  57956. is put to the torture and is not obliged to speak the truth.%@NL@%
  57957. %@CR:WRITERJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  57958.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  57959.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  57960. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57961. %@NL@%
  57962. %@NL@%
  57963. %@2@%Any author who speaks about his own books is almost as bad%@EH@%
  57964. as a mother who talks about her own children.%@NL@%
  57965. %@CR:WRITERDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  57966.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  57967.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  57968. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57969. %@NL@%
  57970. %@NL@%
  57971. %@2@%What no wife of a writer can ever understand is that a writer%@EH@%
  57972. is working when he's staring out of a window.%@NL@%
  57973. %@CR:WRITERRascoe    @%%@NL@%
  57974.                                                  Burton Rascoe (1892-1957)%@NL@%
  57975.                                                    American writer, editor%@NL@%
  57976. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57977. %@NL@%
  57978. %@NL@%
  57979. %@2@%You must not suppose, because I am a man of letters, that I%@EH@%
  57980. never tried to earn an honest living.%@NL@%
  57981. %@CR:WRITERShaw      @%%@NL@%
  57982.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  57983.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  57984. %@AS@%                                                                   Writers%@AE@%%@NL@%
  57985. %@NL@%
  57986. %@NL@%
  57987. %@NL@%
  57988. %@1@%%@AS@%Writing%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  57989. %@CR:WRITING         @%%@NL@%
  57990. %@2@%See:%@QR:Writing@%%@NL@%
  57991.      %@AB@%Autobiography%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           36c5e@%%@NL@%
  57992.      %@AB@%Biography%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           40549@%%@NL@%
  57993.      %@AB@%Editing%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           bfcdf@%%@NL@%
  57994.      %@AB@%Fiction%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           eedd0@%%@NL@%
  57995.      Literature: %@AB@%Benchley%@AE@%%@BO:          17a689@%; %@AB@%Emerson%@AE@%%@BO:          17964a@%; %@AB@%Inge%@AE@%%@BO:          1797ca@%; %@AB@%Morley%@AE@%%@BO:          1794b7@%%@NL@%
  57996.      Plagiarism: %@AB@%Mizner%@AE@%%@BO:          1dd28f@%%@NL@%
  57997.      %@AB@%Writers%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:          2c6216@%%@NL@%
  57998. %@NL@%
  57999. %@2@%The insatiate itch of scribbling.%@NL@%
  58000. %@CR:WRITINGifford   @%%@NL@%
  58001.                                                William Gifford (1756-1826)%@NL@%
  58002.                                                         English journalist%@NL@%
  58003. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58004. %@NL@%
  58005. %@NL@%
  58006. %@2@%Writing is not a profession, but a vocation of unhappiness.%@NL@%
  58007. %@CR:WRITINSimenon   @%%@NL@%
  58008.                                                Georges Simenon (1904-1985)%@NL@%
  58009.                                                            French novelist%@NL@%
  58010. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58011. %@NL@%
  58012. %@NL@%
  58013. %@2@%The best way to become acquainted with a subject is to write%@EH@%
  58014. a book about it.%@NL@%
  58015. %@CR:WRITINDisraeli  @%%@NL@%
  58016.                                              Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881)%@NL@%
  58017.                                                     English prime minister%@NL@%
  58018. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58019. %@NL@%
  58020. %@NL@%
  58021. %@2@%The greatest part of a writer's time is spent in reading, in%@EH@%
  58022. order to write; a man will turn over half a library to make one
  58023. book.%@NL@%
  58024. %@CR:WRITINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  58025.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  58026.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  58027. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58028. %@NL@%
  58029. %@NL@%
  58030.      %@2@%All books are either dreams or swords,%@NL@%
  58031.      You can cut or you can durg with words.%@NL@%
  58032. %@CR:WRITINLowell1   @%%@NL@%
  58033.                                                     Amy Lowell (1874-1925)%@NL@%
  58034.                                          American poet, critic, biographer%@NL@%
  58035. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58036. %@NL@%
  58037. %@NL@%
  58038. %@2@%I always write a good first line, but I have trouble in writing%@EH@%
  58039. the others.%@NL@%
  58040. %@CR:WRITINMoliere   @%%@NL@%
  58041.                                                        Moliere (1622-1673)%@NL@%
  58042.                                                          French playwright%@NL@%
  58043. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58044. %@NL@%
  58045. %@NL@%
  58046. %@2@%"Fool!" said my muse to me. "look in thy heart, and write."%@NL@%
  58047. %@CR:WRITINSidney    @%%@NL@%
  58048.                                              Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)%@NL@%
  58049.                                              English poet, critic, soldier%@NL@%
  58050. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58051. %@NL@%
  58052. %@NL@%
  58053. %@2@%It is just when ideas are lacking that a phrase is most welcome.%@NL@%
  58054. %@CR:WRITINGoethe    @%%@NL@%
  58055.                                     Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)%@NL@%
  58056.                                German poet, dramatist, novelist, scientist%@NL@%
  58057. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58058. %@NL@%
  58059. %@NL@%
  58060. %@2@%I do most of my work sitting down; that's where I shine.%@NL@%
  58061. %@CR:WRITINBenchley  @%%@NL@%
  58062.                                                Robert Benchley (1889-1945)%@NL@%
  58063.                                                   American humorous writer%@NL@%
  58064. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58065. %@NL@%
  58066. %@NL@%
  58067. %@2@%This morning I took out a comma and this afternoon I put it%@EH@%
  58068. back again.%@NL@%
  58069. %@CR:WRITINWilde     @%%@NL@%
  58070.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  58071.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  58072. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58073. %@NL@%
  58074. %@NL@%
  58075. %@2@%The paragraph is a great art form. I'm very intersted in paragraphs%@EH@%
  58076. and I write paragraphs very, very carefully.%@NL@%
  58077. %@CR:WRITINMurdoch   @%%@NL@%
  58078.                                                     Iris Murdoch (b. 1919)%@NL@%
  58079.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  58080. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58081. %@NL@%
  58082. %@NL@%
  58083. %@2@%Composition is, for the most part, an effort of slow diligence%@EH@%
  58084. and steady perseverance, to which the mind is dragged by necessity
  58085. or resolution.%@NL@%
  58086. %@CR:WRITINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  58087.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  58088.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  58089. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58090. %@NL@%
  58091. %@NL@%
  58092. %@2@%I write when I'm inspired, and I see to it that I'm inspired%@EH@%
  58093. at nine o'clock every morning.%@NL@%
  58094. %@CR:WRITINdeVries   @%%@NL@%
  58095.                                                   Peter de Vries (b. 1910)%@NL@%
  58096.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  58097. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58098. %@NL@%
  58099. %@NL@%
  58100. %@2@%Some collaboration has to take place in the mind between the%@EH@%
  58101. woman and the man before the art of creation can be accomplished.
  58102. Some marriage of opposites has to be consummated. The whole of
  58103. the mind must lie wide open if we are to get the sense that the
  58104. writer is communicating his experience with perfect fullness.%@NL@%
  58105. %@CR:WRITINWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  58106.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  58107.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  58108. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58109. %@NL@%
  58110. %@NL@%
  58111. %@2@%One becomes a writer, but one must be born a novelist. If a%@EH@%
  58112. person has sensitivity, culture, and imagination, it is not difficult
  58113. to become a writer. It is impossible to %@AI@%become%@AE@% a novelist, story-teller
  58114. or fabler; either you have a natural gift for narrating, or you
  58115. don't.%@NL@%
  58116. %@CR:WRITINMoravia   @%%@NL@%
  58117.                                                  Alberto Moravia (b. 1907)%@NL@%
  58118.                                                           Italian novelist%@NL@%
  58119. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58120. %@NL@%
  58121. %@NL@%
  58122. %@2@%Ultimately, literature is nothing but carpentry. With both%@EH@%
  58123. you are working with reality, a material just as hard as wood.%@NL@%
  58124. %@CR:WRITINMarquez   @%%@NL@%
  58125.                                           Gabriel Garcia Marquez (b. 1928)%@NL@%
  58126.                                                           Colombian writer%@NL@%
  58127. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58128. %@NL@%
  58129. %@NL@%
  58130.      %@2@%True ease in writing comes from art, not chance,%@NL@%
  58131.      As those move easiest who have learned to dance.%@NL@%
  58132.      'Tis not enough no harshness gives offence%@NL@%
  58133.      The sound must seem an echo to the sense.%@NL@%
  58134. %@CR:WRITINPope      @%%@NL@%
  58135.                                                 Alexander Pope (1688-1744)%@NL@%
  58136.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  58137. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58138. %@NL@%
  58139. %@NL@%
  58140. %@2@%Making books is a craft, like making clocks: it takes more%@EH@%
  58141. than wit to be an author.%@NL@%
  58142. %@CR:WRITINlaBruyere @%%@NL@%
  58143.                                             Jean de la Bruyere (1645-1696)%@NL@%
  58144.                                                    French writer, moralist%@NL@%
  58145. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58146. %@NL@%
  58147. %@NL@%
  58148. %@2@%Writing, madam, 's a mechanic part of wit! A gentleman should%@EH@%
  58149. never go beyond a song or a billet.%@NL@%
  58150. %@CR:WRITINEtherege  @%%@NL@%
  58151.                                            Sir George Etherege (1635-1691)%@NL@%
  58152.                                                English dramatist, diplomat%@NL@%
  58153. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58154. %@NL@%
  58155. %@NL@%
  58156. %@2@%I couldn't write the things they publish now, with no beginning%@EH@%
  58157. and no end, and a little incest in the middle.%@NL@%
  58158. %@CR:WRITINCobb      @%%@NL@%
  58159.                                                  Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944)%@NL@%
  58160.                                                            American writer%@NL@%
  58161. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58162. %@NL@%
  58163. %@NL@%
  58164.      %@2@%Good authors, too, who once knew better words%@NL@%
  58165.      Now only use four-letter words%@NL@%
  58166.      Writing prose . . . %@NL@%
  58167.      Anything goes.%@NL@%
  58168. %@CR:WRITINPorter    @%%@NL@%
  58169.                                                    Cole Porter (1893-1964)%@NL@%
  58170.                                                American composer, lyricist%@NL@%
  58171. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58172. %@NL@%
  58173. %@NL@%
  58174. %@2@%Vulgarity is a necessary part of a complete author's equipment;%@EH@%
  58175. and the clown is sometimes the best part of the circus.%@NL@%
  58176. %@CR:WRITINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  58177.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  58178.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  58179. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58180. %@NL@%
  58181. %@NL@%
  58182. %@2@%Style and structure are the essence of a book; great ideas%@EH@%
  58183. are hogwash.%@NL@%
  58184. %@CR:WRITINNabokov   @%%@NL@%
  58185.                                               Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977)%@NL@%
  58186.                                                  Russian-American novelist%@NL@%
  58187. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58188. %@NL@%
  58189. %@NL@%
  58190. %@2@%I'm always, always trying to interpret Life in terms of lives,%@EH@%
  58191. never just lives in terms of characters.%@NL@%
  58192. %@CR:WRITINONeill    @%%@NL@%
  58193.                                                 Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953)%@NL@%
  58194.                                                        American playwright%@NL@%
  58195. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58196. %@NL@%
  58197. %@NL@%
  58198. %@2@%What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what%@EH@%
  58199. he whispers.%@NL@%
  58200. %@CR:WRITINSmith6    @%%@NL@%
  58201.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  58202.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  58203. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58204. %@NL@%
  58205. %@NL@%
  58206. %@2@%How can I know what I think till I see what I say?%@NL@%
  58207. %@CR:WRITINForster   @%%@NL@%
  58208.                                                  E. M. Forster (1879-1970)%@NL@%
  58209.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  58210.     riposte to maxim 'Never begin a sentence until you know how to end it'%@NL@%
  58211. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58212. %@NL@%
  58213. %@NL@%
  58214. %@2@%The essence of prose is to perish - to be dissolved and%@EH@%
  58215. replaced by the image it denotes.%@NL@%
  58216. %@CR:WRITINValery    @%%@NL@%
  58217.                                                    Paul Valery (1871-1945)%@NL@%
  58218.                                                      French poet, essayist%@NL@%
  58219. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58220. %@NL@%
  58221. %@NL@%
  58222. %@2@%In literature the ambition of the novice is to acquire the%@EH@%
  58223. literary language; the struggle of the adept is to get rid of it.%@NL@%
  58224. %@CR:WRITINShaw      @%%@NL@%
  58225.                                            George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)%@NL@%
  58226.                                             Anglo-Irish playwright, critic%@NL@%
  58227. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58228. %@NL@%
  58229. %@NL@%
  58230. %@2@%When we see a natural style, we are astonished and delighted;%@EH@%
  58231. for we expected to see an author, and we find a man.%@NL@%
  58232. %@CR:WRITINPascal    @%%@NL@%
  58233.                                                  Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)%@NL@%
  58234.                                              French scientist, philosopher%@NL@%
  58235. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58236. %@NL@%
  58237. %@NL@%
  58238. %@2@%My spelling is Wobbly. It's good spelling but it Wobbles, and%@EH@%
  58239. letters get in the wrong places.%@NL@%
  58240. %@CR:WRITINMilne     @%%@NL@%
  58241.                                                    A. A. Milne (1882-1956)%@NL@%
  58242.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  58243. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58244. %@NL@%
  58245. %@NL@%
  58246. %@2@%One should always aim at being interesting rather than exact.%@NL@%
  58247. %@CR:WRITINVoltaire  @%%@NL@%
  58248.                                                       Voltaire (1694-1778)%@NL@%
  58249.                                                 French philosopher, writer%@NL@%
  58250. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58251. %@NL@%
  58252. %@NL@%
  58253. %@2@%In all pointed sentences, some degree of accuracy must be sacrificed%@EH@%
  58254. to conciseness.%@NL@%
  58255. %@CR:WRITINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  58256.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  58257.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  58258. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58259. %@NL@%
  58260. %@NL@%
  58261. %@2@%If you require a practical rule of me, I will present you with%@EH@%
  58262. this: Whenever you feel an impulse to perpetrate a piece of exceptionally
  58263. fine writing, obey it - wholeheartedly - and delete it before
  58264. sending your manuscript to press. %@AI@%Murder Your Darlings.%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58265. %@CR:WRITINQuillerCou@%%@NL@%
  58266.                                       Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch (1863-1944)%@NL@%
  58267.                                                             British writer%@NL@%
  58268. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58269. %@NL@%
  58270. %@NL@%
  58271. %@2@%In composing, as a general rule, run your pen through every%@EH@%
  58272. other word you have written; you have no idea what vigour it will
  58273. give your style.%@NL@%
  58274. %@CR:WRITINSmith8    @%%@NL@%
  58275.                                                   Sydney Smith (1771-1845)%@NL@%
  58276.                                                  English writer, clergyman%@NL@%
  58277. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58278. %@NL@%
  58279. %@NL@%
  58280. %@2@%Make'em laugh; make'em cry; make'em wait.%@NL@%
  58281. %@CR:WRITINReade1    @%%@NL@%
  58282.                                                  Charles Reade (1814-1884)%@NL@%
  58283.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  58284.                                   advice to young author on writing novels%@NL@%
  58285. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58286. %@NL@%
  58287. %@NL@%
  58288. %@2@%Every drop of ink in my pen ran cold.%@NL@%
  58289. %@CR:WRITINWalpole1  @%%@NL@%
  58290.                                                 Horace Walpole (1717-1797)%@NL@%
  58291.                                                             English writer%@NL@%
  58292. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58293. %@NL@%
  58294. %@NL@%
  58295. %@2@%There are two literary maladies - writer's cramp and swelled%@EH@%
  58296. head.%@NL@%
  58297. %@CR:WRITINKernahan  @%%@NL@%
  58298.                                               Coulson Kernahan (1858-1943)%@NL@%
  58299.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  58300. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58301. %@NL@%
  58302. %@NL@%
  58303. %@2@%That's not writing, that's typing.%@NL@%
  58304. %@CR:WRITINCapote    @%%@NL@%
  58305.                                                  Truman Capote (1924-1984)%@NL@%
  58306.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  58307.                                                            of Jack Kerouac%@NL@%
  58308. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58309. %@NL@%
  58310. %@NL@%
  58311. %@2@%What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure.%@NL@%
  58312. %@CR:WRITINJohnson1  @%%@NL@%
  58313.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  58314.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  58315. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58316. %@NL@%
  58317. %@NL@%
  58318. %@2@%Reading is not a duty, and has consequently no business to%@EH@%
  58319. be made disagreeable.%@NL@%
  58320. %@CR:WRITINBirrell   @%%@NL@%
  58321.                                              Augustine Birrell (1850-1933)%@NL@%
  58322.                                                 English Liberal politician%@NL@%
  58323. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58324. %@NL@%
  58325. %@NL@%
  58326. %@2@%There are three difficulties in authorship: to write anything%@EH@%
  58327. worth the publishing, to find honest men to publish it, and to
  58328. get sensible men to read it.%@NL@%
  58329. %@CR:WRITINColton    @%%@NL@%
  58330.                                                   C. C. Colton (1780-1832)%@NL@%
  58331.                                                  English author, clergyman%@NL@%
  58332. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58333. %@NL@%
  58334. %@NL@%
  58335. %@2@%The impulse to create beauty is rather rare in literary men . . . %@EH@%
  58336. Far ahead of it comes the yearning to make money. And after the
  58337. yearning to make money comes the yearning to make a noise.%@NL@%
  58338. %@CR:WRITINMencken   @%%@NL@%
  58339.                                                  H. L. Mencken (1880-1956)%@NL@%
  58340.                                                        American journalist%@NL@%
  58341. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58342. %@NL@%
  58343. %@NL@%
  58344. %@2@%The only sensible ends of literature are, first, the pleasurable%@EH@%
  58345. toil of writing; second, the gratification of one's family and
  58346. friends; and, lastly, the solid cash.%@NL@%
  58347. %@CR:WRITINHawthorne @%%@NL@%
  58348.                                            Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)%@NL@%
  58349.                                                          American novelist%@NL@%
  58350. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58351. %@NL@%
  58352. %@NL@%
  58353. %@2@%If you want to get rich from writing, write the sort of thing%@EH@%
  58354. that's read by persons who move their lips when they're reading
  58355. to themselves.%@NL@%
  58356. %@CR:WRITINMarquis   @%%@NL@%
  58357.                                                    Don Marquis (1878-1937)%@NL@%
  58358.                                              American humorist, journalist%@NL@%
  58359. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58360. %@NL@%
  58361. %@NL@%
  58362. %@2@%Once in seven years I burn all my sermons; for it is a shame%@EH@%
  58363. if I cannot write better sermons now than I did seven years ago.%@NL@%
  58364. %@CR:WRITINWesley    @%%@NL@%
  58365.                                                    John Wesley (1703-1791)%@NL@%
  58366.                                     English preacher, founder of Methodism%@NL@%
  58367. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58368. %@NL@%
  58369. %@NL@%
  58370. %@2@%Trivial personalities decomposing in the eternity of print.%@NL@%
  58371. %@CR:WRITINWoolf     @%%@NL@%
  58372.                                                 Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)%@NL@%
  58373.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  58374. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58375. %@NL@%
  58376. %@NL@%
  58377.      %@2@%'Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print;%@NL@%
  58378.      A book's a book, although there's nothing in't.%@NL@%
  58379. %@CR:WRITINByron2    @%%@NL@%
  58380.                                                     Lord Byron (1788-1824)%@NL@%
  58381.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  58382. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58383. %@NL@%
  58384. %@NL@%
  58385.      %@2@%Camerado, this is no book,%@NL@%
  58386.      Who touches this touches a man.%@NL@%
  58387. %@CR:WRITINWhitman   @%%@NL@%
  58388.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  58389.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  58390. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58391. %@NL@%
  58392. %@NL@%
  58393. %@2@%With sixty staring me in the face, I have developed inflammation%@EH@%
  58394. of the sentence structure and definite hardening of the paragraphs.%@NL@%
  58395. %@CR:WRITINThurber   @%%@NL@%
  58396.                                                  James Thurber (1894-1961)%@NL@%
  58397.                                             American humorist, illustrator%@NL@%
  58398. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58399. %@NL@%
  58400. %@NL@%
  58401. %@2@%Of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness%@EH@%
  58402. of the flesh.%@NL@%
  58403. %@CR:WRITINBibleEccle@%%@NL@%
  58404.                                                        Bible, Ecclesiastes%@NL@%
  58405. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58406. %@NL@%
  58407. %@NL@%
  58408.      %@2@%The aim, if reached or not, makes great the life;%@NL@%
  58409.      Try to be Shakespeare, leave the rest to fate.%@NL@%
  58410. %@CR:WRITINBrowning2 @%%@NL@%
  58411.                                                Robert Browning (1812-1889)%@NL@%
  58412.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  58413. %@AS@%                                                                   Writing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58414. %@NL@%
  58415. %@NL@%
  58416. %@NL@%
  58417. %@1@%%@AS@%Youth%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  58418. %@CR:YOUTH           @%%@NL@%
  58419. %@2@%See:%@QR:Youth@%%@NL@%
  58420.      %@AB@%Adolescence%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:            6df3@%%@NL@%
  58421.      %@AB@%Childhood%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           5f6c2@%%@NL@%
  58422.      %@AB@%Children%@EH@%%@AE@%%@BO:           5fe50@%%@NL@%
  58423.      Delinquency: %@AB@%Shakespeare%@AE@%%@BO:           a2c14@%%@NL@%
  58424.      Fallibility: %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:           e0d9f@%%@NL@%
  58425.      Freedom: %@AB@%Cocteau%@AE@%%@BO:           fafd6@%%@NL@%
  58426.      The Generation Gap: %@AB@%Ervine%@AE@%%@BO:          106b18@%; %@AB@%Shaw%@AE@%%@BO:          10698c@%; %@AB@%Smith%@AE@%%@BO:          1067fb@%%@NL@%
  58427. %@NL@%
  58428. %@2@%But thy eternal summer shall not fade.%@NL@%
  58429. %@CR:YOUTH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  58430.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  58431.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  58432. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58433. %@NL@%
  58434. %@NL@%
  58435. %@2@%Those whom the gods love grow young.%@NL@%
  58436. %@CR:YOUTH Wilde     @%%@NL@%
  58437.                                                    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)%@NL@%
  58438.                                                         Anglo-Irish writer%@NL@%
  58439. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58440. %@NL@%
  58441. %@NL@%
  58442. %@2@%I remember my youth and the feeling that will never come back%@EH@%
  58443. any more - the feeling that I could last forever, outlast the
  58444. sea, the earth, and all men.%@NL@%
  58445. %@CR:YOUTH Conrad    @%%@NL@%
  58446.                                                  Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)%@NL@%
  58447.                                                           English novelist%@NL@%
  58448. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58449. %@NL@%
  58450. %@NL@%
  58451. %@2@%He wears the rose of youth upon him.%@NL@%
  58452. %@CR:YOUTH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  58453.                                               Antony, %@AI@%Antony and Cleopatra%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58454.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  58455.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  58456. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58457. %@NL@%
  58458. %@NL@%
  58459.      %@2@%Breathless, we flung us on the windy hill,%@NL@%
  58460.      Laughed in the sun, and kissed the lovely grass.%@NL@%
  58461. %@CR:YOUTH Brooke    @%%@NL@%
  58462.                                                  Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)%@NL@%
  58463.                                                               British poet%@NL@%
  58464. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58465. %@NL@%
  58466. %@NL@%
  58467. %@2@%There is nothing can pay one for that invaluable ignorance%@EH@%
  58468. which is the companion of youth; those sanguine groundless hopes,
  58469. and that lively vanity, which make all the happiness of life.%@NL@%
  58470. %@CR:YOUTH Montagu   @%%@NL@%
  58471.                                      Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762)%@NL@%
  58472.                                      English society figure, letter writer%@NL@%
  58473. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58474. %@NL@%
  58475. %@NL@%
  58476. %@2@%Towering in the confidence of twenty-one.%@NL@%
  58477. %@CR:YOUTH Johnson1  @%%@NL@%
  58478.                                             Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)%@NL@%
  58479.                                              English author, lexicographer%@NL@%
  58480. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58481. %@NL@%
  58482. %@NL@%
  58483. %@2@%A man loves the meat in his youth that he cannot endure in%@EH@%
  58484. his age.%@NL@%
  58485. %@CR:YOUTH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  58486.                                           Benedick, %@AI@%Much Ado About Nothing%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58487.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  58488.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  58489. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58490. %@NL@%
  58491. %@NL@%
  58492.      %@2@%O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, move%@NL@%
  58493.      The bloom of young Desire, and purple light of Love.%@NL@%
  58494. %@CR:YOUTH Gray      @%%@NL@%
  58495.                                                    Thomas Gray (1716-1771)%@NL@%
  58496.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  58497. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58498. %@NL@%
  58499. %@NL@%
  58500.      %@2@%Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,%@NL@%
  58501.      But to be young was very heaven!%@NL@%
  58502. %@CR:YOUTH Wordsworth@%%@NL@%
  58503.                                             William Wordsworth (1770-1850)%@NL@%
  58504.                                                               English poet%@NL@%
  58505. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58506. %@NL@%
  58507. %@NL@%
  58508.      %@2@%Youth, large, lusty, loving - Youth, full of grace, force, 
  58509. fascination,%@NL@%
  58510.      Do you know that Old Age may come after you, with equal grace,%@NL@%
  58511.      force, fascination?%@NL@%
  58512. %@CR:YOUTH Whitman   @%%@NL@%
  58513.                                                   Walt Whitman (1819-1892)%@NL@%
  58514.                                                              American poet%@NL@%
  58515. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58516. %@NL@%
  58517. %@NL@%
  58518. %@2@%Young men are apt to think themselves wise enough, as drunken%@EH@%
  58519. men are apt to think themselves sober enough.%@NL@%
  58520. %@CR:YOUTH Chesterfie@%%@NL@%
  58521.                                              Lord Chesterfield (1694-1773)%@NL@%
  58522.                                          English statesman, man of letters%@NL@%
  58523. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58524. %@NL@%
  58525. %@NL@%
  58526. %@2@%I am not young enough to know everything.%@NL@%
  58527. %@CR:YOUTH Barrie2   @%%@NL@%
  58528.                                                James M. Barrie (1860-1937)%@NL@%
  58529.                                                         British playwright%@NL@%
  58530. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58531. %@NL@%
  58532. %@NL@%
  58533. %@2@%Youth is a period of missed opportunities.%@NL@%
  58534. %@CR:YOUTH Connolly  @%%@NL@%
  58535.                                                 Cyril Connolly (1903-1974)%@NL@%
  58536.                                                             British critic%@NL@%
  58537. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58538. %@NL@%
  58539. %@NL@%
  58540. %@2@%Give me the young man who has brains enough to make a fool%@EH@%
  58541. of himself!%@NL@%
  58542. %@CR:YOUTH Stevenson2@%%@NL@%
  58543.                                         Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894)%@NL@%
  58544.                                          Scottish novelist, essayist, poet%@NL@%
  58545. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58546. %@NL@%
  58547. %@NL@%
  58548. %@2@%Don't let young people confide in you their aspirations; when%@EH@%
  58549. they drop them, they will drop you.%@NL@%
  58550. %@CR:YOUTH Smith6    @%%@NL@%
  58551.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  58552.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  58553. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58554. %@NL@%
  58555. %@NL@%
  58556. %@2@%The young always have the same problem - how to rebel and%@EH@%
  58557. conform at the same time. They have now solved this by defying
  58558. their parents and copying one another.%@NL@%
  58559. %@CR:YOUTH Crisp     @%%@NL@%
  58560.                                                    Quentin Crisp (b. 1908)%@NL@%
  58561.                                                             British author%@NL@%
  58562. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58563. %@NL@%
  58564. %@NL@%
  58565.      %@2@%What are these,%@NL@%
  58566.      So withered, and so wild in their attire%@NL@%
  58567.      That look not like the inhabitants o' the earth,%@NL@%
  58568.      And yet are on't?%@NL@%
  58569. %@CR:YOUTH Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  58570.                                                            Banquo, %@AI@%Macbeth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58571.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  58572.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  58573. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58574. %@NL@%
  58575. %@NL@%
  58576. %@2@%The wine of youth does not always clear with advancing years;%@EH@%
  58577. sometimes it grows turbid.%@NL@%
  58578. %@CR:YOUTH Jung      @%%@NL@%
  58579.                                                      Carl Jung (1875-1961)%@NL@%
  58580.                                                         Swiss psychiatrist%@NL@%
  58581. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58582. %@NL@%
  58583. %@NL@%
  58584. %@2@%The trouble with young people today is that emotionally and%@EH@%
  58585. psychologically the West is due for another war and they can't
  58586. have it - it's impossible.%@NL@%
  58587. %@CR:YOUTH Graves    @%%@NL@%
  58588.                                                  Robert Graves (1895-1985)%@NL@%
  58589.                                                     British poet, novelist%@NL@%
  58590. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58591. %@NL@%
  58592. %@NL@%
  58593. %@2@%Youth is a disease that must be borne with patiently! Time,%@EH@%
  58594. indeed, will cure it.%@NL@%
  58595. %@CR:YOUTH Benson    @%%@NL@%
  58596.                                                   R. H. Benson (1871-1914)%@NL@%
  58597.                                                           British novelist%@NL@%
  58598. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58599. %@NL@%
  58600. %@NL@%
  58601. %@2@%What is more enchanting than the voices of young people when%@EH@%
  58602. you can't hear what they say?%@NL@%
  58603. %@CR:YOUTH Smith6    @%%@NL@%
  58604.                                           Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946)%@NL@%
  58605.                                                    Anglo-American essayist%@NL@%
  58606. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58607. %@NL@%
  58608. %@NL@%
  58609. %@2@%Only the young die good.%@NL@%
  58610. %@CR:YOUTH Herford   @%%@NL@%
  58611.                                                 Oliver Herford (1863-1935)%@NL@%
  58612.                                                 American poet, illustrator%@NL@%
  58613. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58614. %@NL@%
  58615. %@NL@%
  58616. %@2@%Whom the gods love die young no matter how long they live.%@NL@%
  58617. %@CR:YOUTH Hubbard1  @%%@NL@%
  58618.                                                 Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)%@NL@%
  58619.                                                            American author%@NL@%
  58620. %@AS@%                                                                     Youth%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58621. %@NL@%
  58622. %@NL@%
  58623. %@NL@%
  58624. %@1@%%@AS@%Z%@AE@%%@EH@%%@NL@%
  58625. %@CR:Z               @%%@NL@%
  58626. %@2@%%@QR:Z@%Thou whoreson Zed! thou unnecessary letter!%@NL@%
  58627. %@CR:Z     Shakespear@%%@NL@%
  58628.                                                           Edgar, %@AI@%King Lear%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58629.                                            William Shakespeare (1564-1616)%@NL@%
  58630.                                                    English dramatist, poet%@NL@%
  58631. %@AS@%                                                                         Z%@AE@%%@NL@%
  58632. %@NL@%
  58633.