“Whoever declares a child to be "delicate" thereby crowns and anoints a tyrant.”
Part 1, section 6.
The Cunning Man (1994)
Source: Golden Son (2015), Ch. 51: Golden Son
“Whoever declares a child to be "delicate" thereby crowns and anoints a tyrant.”
Part 1, section 6.
The Cunning Man (1994)
Khawarazmi, Maqtal al-Husayn, vol.1, p. 234
Regarding the Advent of Karbalā
“Every noble crown is, and on earth will forever be, a crown of thorns.”
Bk. III, ch. 7.
1840s, Past and Present (1843)
Majlisi, Bihārul Anwār, vol.44, p. 329
Regarding the Advent of Karbalā
Variant: My crown is in my heart, not on my head; not decked with diamonds and Indian stones, nor to be seen: my crown is called content, a crown it is that seldom kings enjoy.
Source: King Henry VI, Part 3
“The crown of literature is poetry.”
Count Leo Tolstoi
Essays in Criticism, second series (1888)
“The crown of literature is poetry.”
Matthew Arnold, Count Leo Tolstoi
Misattributed
“Escape brings not the victory and the crown!”
Savitri (1918-1950), Book Three : The Book of the Divine Mother
“The kingliest kings are crowned with thorn.”
The kingliest Kings, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
“If such exist, they crown Life's progress…”
"The Individual in the Animal Kingdom" (1912); quoted in From Gaia to Selfish Genes: Selected Writings in the Life Sciences (1992) by Connie Barlow, Ch. 6 "Blurred Bounds of Individuality"
Context: In man, personality is usually defined with reference to self-consciousness rather than to individuality; but the power of reflection and self-knowledge is linked up, in our type of personality at least, with the new flight of individuality — conscious memory seems necessarily to imply a vast increase of independence, so that it is all one whether we define the possessor of personality as a self-conscious individual, or as an individual whose individuality is more extensive both in space and time than the material substance of his body.
Personality, as we know it, is free compared with the individuality of the lower animals; but it is still weighted down with the body. There may be personalities which have not merely transcended substance, but are rid of it altogether: in all ages the theologian and the mystic have told of such "disembodied spirits," postulated by the one, felt by the other, and now the psychical investigator with his automatic writing and his cross-correspondences is seeking to give us rigorous demonstration of them. If such exist, they crown Life's progress...