Reference > Quotations > Quotations of the Day Archive: October 2006
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Quotations of the Day: October 2006
 
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October 31, 2006

Ladies and gentlemen, I have a grave announcement to make. Incredible as it may seem, strange beings who landed in New Jersey tonight are the vanguard of an invading army from Mars.
  —Orson Welles

October 30, 2006

Television was supposed to be a national park. [Instead] it has become a money machine…. It’s a commodity now, just like pork bellies.
  —Fred W. Friendly

October 29, 2006

From slavery to equal rights, from state suppression of dissent to crime, drugs and unemployment, I can’t think of a supposedly Black issue that hasn’t wasted the original Black target group and then spread like measles to outlying white experience.
  —June Jordan

October 28, 2006

Nature always wears the colors of the spirit. To a man laboring under calamity, the heat of his own fire hath sadness in it.
  —Ralph Waldo Emerson

October 27, 2006

Is there no way out of the mind?
  —Sylvia Plath

October 26, 2006

Throughout the 1980’s,… we also found that while prosperity does not trickle down from the most powerful to the rest of us, all too often indifference and even intolerance do.
  —Hillary Rodham Clinton

October 25, 2006

Americans developed the resourcefulness and wisdom to solve the problem of organizing a nation in the midst of war and crisis, one of the greatest achievements of modern political history.
  —Henry Steele Commager

October 24, 2006

The glory of each generation is to make its own precedents.
  —Belva Lockwood

October 23, 2006

Nothing is so galling to a people, not broken in from the birth, as a paternal or, in other words, a meddling government, a government which tells them what to read and say and eat and drink and wear.
  —Thomas Babington, Lord Macaulay

October 22, 2006

Her berth was of the wombe of morning dew, / And her conception of the joyous Prime.
  —Edmund Spenser

October 21, 2006

Alas! they had been friends in youth; / But whispering tongues can poison truth, / And constancy live in realms above; / And life is thorny, and youth is vain, / And to be wroth with one we love / Doth work like madness in the brain.
  —Samuel Taylor Coleridge

October 20, 2006

Boys, baseball is a game where you gotta have fun. You do that by winning.
  —Dave Bristol

October 19, 2006

Yet is every man his own greatest enemy, and as it were his own executioner.
  —Sir Thomas Browne

October 18, 2006

War is a fevered god / who takes alike / maiden and king and clod….
  —Hilda Doolittle

October 17, 2006

You are as young as your faith, as old as your doubt; as young as your self-confidence, as old as your fear, as young as your hope, as old as your despair.
  —Samuel Ullman

October 16, 2006

Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counsellors, and the most patient of teachers.
  —Charles William Eliot

October 15, 2006

Domestic policy can only defeat us; foreign policy can kill us.
  —John F. Kennedy

October 14, 2006

Olaf (being to all intents / a corpse and wanting any rag / Upon what god unto him gave) / responds, without getting annoyed / “I will not kiss your f.ing flag”
  —E.E. Cummings

October 13, 2006

’Rise like Lions after slumber / In unvanquishable number, / Shake your chains to earth like dew / Which in sleep had fallen on you— / Ye are many—they are few.
  —Percy Bysshe Shelley

October 12, 2006

An artist chooses his subjects: that is the way he praises.
  —Friedrich Nietzsche

October 11, 2006

We are born to inquire after truth; it belongs to a greater power to possess it. It is not, as Democritus said, hid in the bottom of the deeps, but rather elevated to an infinite height in the divine knowledge.
  —Montaigne

October 10, 2006

Liberty has never come from the government. Liberty has always come from the subjects of the government. The history of government is a history of resistance. The history of liberty is the history of the limitation of government, not the increase of it.
  —Woodrow Wilson

October 9, 2006

You either get tired fighting for peace, or you die.
  —John Lennon

October 8, 2006

Racism as a form of skin worship, and as a sickness and a pathological anxiety for America, is so great, until the poor whites—rather than fighting for jobs or education—fight to remain pink and fight to remain white. And therefore they cannot see an alliance with people that they feel to be inherently inferior.
  —Jesse Jackson

October 7, 2006

From the lifetime of its founder, Islam was the state, and the identity of religion and government is indelibly stamped on the memories and awareness of the faithful from their own sacred writings, history, and experience.
  —Bernard Lewis

October 6, 2006

My advisers built a wall between myself and my people. I didn’t realize what was happening. When I woke up, I had lost my people.
  —Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran

October 5, 2006

Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.
  —Dwight D. Eisenhower

October 4, 2006

The laws of nature are written deep in the folds and faults of the earth. By encouraging men to learn those laws one can lead them further to a knowledge of the author of all laws.
  —John Joseph Lynch, SJ

October 3, 2006

Ideal conversation must be an exchange of thought, and not, as many of those who worry most about their shortcomings believe, an eloquent exhibition of wit or oratory.
  —Emily Post

October 2, 2006

Everything is complicated; if that were not so, life and poetry and everything else would be a bore.
  —Wallace Stevens

October 1, 2006

According to Gandhi, the seven sins are wealth without works, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice, and politics without principle.
  —Jimmy Carter




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