“Generally, I dislike fixedness in both long swords and hands. Fixedness means a dead hand. Pliability is a living hand. You must bear this in mind.”

Go Rin No Sho (1645), The Water Book

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "Generally, I dislike fixedness in both long swords and hands. Fixedness means a dead hand. Pliability is a living hand.…" by Miyamoto Musashi?
Miyamoto Musashi photo
Miyamoto Musashi 100
Japanese martial artist, writer, artist 1584–1645

Related quotes

Robert A. Heinlein photo
Frank Lloyd Wright photo
Karl Marx photo

“Since the working-class lives from hand to mouth, it buys as long as it has the means to buy.”

Vol. II, Ch. XX, p. 449.
Das Kapital (Buch II) (1893)

Miyamoto Musashi photo
Tench Coxe photo

“The unlimited power of the sword is not in the hands of either the federal or state governments but where, I trust in God, it will always remain, in the hands of the people.”

Tench Coxe (1755–1824) American economist

Source: http://www.friesian.com/quotes.htm Pennsylvania Gazette], Feb. 20, 1788.

https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/41022229, archived image from newspapers.com, Pennsylvania Gazette, Feb. 20, 1788 page 2 column 2

Swami Vivekananda photo
Pope Boniface VIII photo

“We are told by the word of the Gospel that in this His fold there are two swords—a spiritual, namely, and a temporal. […] Both swords, the spiritual and the material, therefore, are in the power of the Church; the one, indeed, to be wielded for the Church, the other by the Church; the one by the hand of the priest, the other by the hand of kings and knights, but at the will and sufferance of the priest.”
In hac ejusque potestate duos esse gladios, spiritualem videlicet et temporalem, evangelicis dictis instruimur. […] Uterque ergo est in potestate ecclesiae, spiritualis scilicet gladius et materialis. Sed is quidem pro ecclesia, ille vero ab ecclesia exercendus, ille sacerdotis, is manu regum et militum, sed ad nutum et patientiam sacerdotis.

Unam sanctam (1302)

Luís de Camões photo

“My pen in this, my sword in that hand hold.”

Luís de Camões (1524–1580) Portuguese poet

Numa mão sempre a espada, e noutra a pena.
Stanza 79, line 8 (tr. Richard Fanshawe)
Epic poetry, Os Lusíadas (1572), Canto VII

Jasper Fforde photo
Miyamoto Musashi photo

Related topics