“It is no use to blame the looking glass if your face is awry.”
Nikolai Gogol book The Government Inspector
Epigraph
The Inspector General (1836)
Wisdom http://poetry.poetryx.com/poems/1759/ <br class="br">The Tower (1928)
“It is no use to blame the looking glass if your face is awry.”
Nikolai Gogol book The Government Inspector
Epigraph
The Inspector General (1836)
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926–2004) American psychiatrist
As quoted in The Leader's Digest : Timeless Principles for Team and Organization (2003) by Jim Clemmer, p. 84
“A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window.”
Raymond Chandler book Farewell, My Lovely
Source: Farewell, My Lovely (1940), chapter 13
Edward de Bono (1933) Maltese physician
Iraq? They just need to think it through (2007)
Context: What happened was, 2,400 years ago, the Greek Gang of Three, by whom I mean Aristotle, Plato and Socrates, started to think based on analysis, judgment and knowledge. At the same time, church people, who ran the schools and universities, wanted logic to prove the heretics wrong. As a result, design and perceptual thinking was never developed. People assumed philosophers were doing it and so they blocked anyone else from doing it. But philosophers were not. Philosophers may look out at the world from a stained-glass window, but after a while they stop looking at the world and start looking at the stained glass.
“Style should be like window-glass, perfectly transparent, and with very little sash.”
Nathaniel Emmons (1745–1840) American clergy
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 481.
Rick Santorum (1958) American politician
Santorum: Marriage Is Like Water, Not Beer
2011-08-09
Think Progress LGBT
Think Progress
Igor
Volsky
http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2011/08/09/292121/santorum-marriage-is-like-water-not-beer/
2011-08-28
Josef Albers (1888–1976) German-American artist and educator
I had no money. Just a Rucksack and a hammer. And I started these assemblages. That was in 1921, But in all books on assemblages these things are not mentioned.
Homage to the square' (1964), Oral history interview with Josef Albers' (1968)
“Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.”
Jonathan Swift book The Battle of the Books
The Battle of the Books, preface (1704)