“Nothing infuriates an academic more than a talented and successful colleague.”
William McKeen (1954) American academic
Source: Outlaw Journalist (2008), Chapter 17, Homecoming, p. 329
“Nothing infuriates an academic more than a talented and successful colleague.”
William McKeen (1954) American academic
Source: Outlaw Journalist (2008), Chapter 17, Homecoming, p. 329
Harry Gordon Selfridge (1858–1947) America born English businessman
The Romance of Commerce (1918), A Representative Business of the Twentieth Century
“Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself; but talent instantly recognizes genius.”
Arthur Conan Doyle book The Valley of Fear
Source: The Valley of Fear
“And die of nothing but a rage to live”
Variant: You purchase pain with all that joy can give and die of nothing but a rage to live.
Source: Moral Essays
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) Scottish novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer
Crabbed Age and Youth.
Virginibus Puerisque and Other Papers (1881)
Context: Age may have one side, but assuredly Youth has the other. There is nothing more certain than that both are right, except perhaps that both are wrong. Let them agree to differ; for who knows but what agreeing to differ may not be a form of agreement rather than a form of difference?
Virginia Woolf book Orlando: A Biography
Source: Orlando: A Biography (1928), Ch. 3
Context: No passion is stronger in the breast of man than the desire to make others believe as he believes. Nothing so cuts at the root of his happiness and fills him with rage as the sense that another rates low what he prizes high. Whigs and Tories, Liberal party and Labour party — for what do they battle except their own prestige?