Poems List

We must not roughly smash other people’s idols because we know, or think we know, that they are of cheap human manufacture.
We must think things not words, or at least we must constantly translate our words into the facts for which they stand, if we are to keep the real and the true.

We pause to … recall what our country has done for each of us and to ask ourselves what we can do for our country in return.

speech, Keene, New Hampshire, 30 May 1884; see Kennedy 199:1

We should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe.

What a satire, by the way, is that machine [Charles Babbage’s calculating machine] on the mere mathematician! A Frankenstein-monster, a thing without brains and without heart, too stupid to make a blunder; that turns out results like a corn-sheller, and never grows any wiser or better, though it grind a thousand bushels of them!

 

The New Yale Book of Quotations

What if one does say the same things,—of course in a little different form each time,—over and over? If he has anything to say worth saying, that is just what he ought to do.
What refuge is there for the victim who is oppressed with the feeling that there are a thousand new books he ought to read, while life is only long enough for him to attempt to read a hundred?
What the mulberry leaf is to the silkworm, the author’s book, treatise, essay, poem, is to the critical larvae that feed upon it. It furnishes them with food and clothing.
What we most want to ask of our Maker is an unfolding of the divine purpose in putting human beings into conditions in which such numbers of them would be sure to go wrong.
Whatever comes from the heart carries the heat and color of its birthplace.

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