Reference > Quotations > Quotations of the Day Archive: November 2004
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Quotations of the Day: November 2004
 
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November 30, 2004

Intellectual “work” is misnamed; it is a pleasure, a dissipation, and is its own highest reward.
  —Mark Twain

November 29, 2004

I not only live each endless day in grief, but live each day thinking about living each day in grief.
  —C.S. Lewis

November 28, 2004

In this temple / As in the hearts of the people / For whom he saved the Union / The memory of Abraham Lincoln / Is enshrined forever.
  —Royal Cortissoz

November 27, 2004

A leaky faucet, a barking dog—those are things you tolerate.
  —Candace Gingrich

November 26, 2004

The chief cause of problems is solutions.
  —Eric Sevareid

November 25, 2004

The most serious charge which can be brought against New England is not Puritanism but February.
  —Joseph Wood Krutch

November 24, 2004

The great thing to learn about life is, first, not to do what you don’t want to do, and, second, to do what you do want to do.
  —Margaret C. Anderson

November 23, 2004

The horseman on the pale horse is Pestilence. He follows the wars.
  —Ardel Wray

November 22, 2004

Explore, and explore. Be neither chided nor flattered out of your position of perpetual inquiry. Neither dogmatize, or accept another’s dogmatism.
  —Ralph Waldo Emerson

November 21, 2004

If there were no God, it would be necessary to invent him.
  —Voltaire

November 20, 2004

One’s family is the most important thing in life. I look at it this way: One of these days I’ll be over in a hospital somewhere with four walls around me. And the only people who’ll be with me will be my family.
  —Robert C. Byrd

November 19, 2004

There is as much of a chance of repealing the eighteenth amendment as there is for a humming bird to fly to the planet Mars with the Washington Monument tied to its tail. This country is for temperance and prohibition and it is going to continue to elect members of Congress who believe in that.
  —Morris Sheppard

November 18, 2004

Things are seldom what they seem, / Skim milk masquerades as cream.
  —Sir William Gilbert

November 17, 2004

A dead martyr is just another corpse.
  —Leo V. Gordon

November 16, 2004

I hate to see de evenin’ sun go down, / Hate to see de evenin’ sun go down, / ’Cause ma baby, he done lef’ dis town.
  —W.C. Handy

November 15, 2004

My solution to the problem [of North Vietnam] would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression, or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Age.
  —Curtis E. LeMay

November 14, 2004

McCarthyism is Americanism with its sleeves rolled.
  —Joseph R. McCarthy

November 13, 2004

Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases. Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the most efficient policeman.
  —Louis D. Brandeis

November 12, 2004

Journalists, popular novelists, illustrators, and cartoonists adapt the truths discovered by the powerful intellects for the multitude. It is like a spiritual flood, like a gush that pours into multiple cascades until it forms the great moving sheet of water that stands for the mentality of a period.
  —Auguste Rodin

November 11, 2004

Nothing will bring American sympathy along with us so much as American blood shed in the field.
  —Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill

November 10, 2004

Great wits are sure to madness near allied, / And thin partitions do their bounds divide.
  —John Dryden

November 9, 2004

For in this yellow grave of sand and sea / A calling for colour calls with the wind / That’s grave and gay as grave and sea / Sleeping on either hand.
  —Dylan Thomas

November 8, 2004

Without a sign his sword the brave man draws,
And asks no omen but his country’s cause.
  —Alexander Pope

November 7, 2004

An intellectual is someone whose mind watches itself.
  —Albert Camus

November 6, 2004

But is an enemy so execrable that tho in captivity his wishes and comforts are to be disregarded and even crossed? I think not. It is for the benefit of mankind to mitigate the horrors of war as much as possible.
  —Thomas Jefferson

November 5, 2004

It is easy and dismally enervating to think of opposition as merely perverse or actually evil—far more invigorating to see it as essential for honing the mind, and as a positive good in itself. For the day that moral issues cease to be fought over is the day the word “human” disappears from the race.
  —Jill Tweedie

November 4, 2004

I cannot conceive how any man can have brought himself to that pitch of presumption, to consider his country as nothing but carte blanche, upon which he may scribble whatever he pleases.
  —Edmund Burke

November 3, 2004

Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of the people are right more than half of the time.
  —E.B. White

November 2, 2004

The margin is narrow, but the responsibility is clear.
  —John F. Kennedy

November 1, 2004

I am not influenced by the expectation of promotion or pecuniary reward. I wish to be useful, and every kind of service necessary for the public good, becomes honorable by being necessary.
  —Nathan Hale




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