“You're in a horse race but you're thinking like a sheep. Sheep don't win horse races.”
Jeannette Walls book The Glass Castle
Source: The Glass Castle
The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights (1976), but a statement he is first quoted as having made in Newsweek (24 December 1962)
“You're in a horse race but you're thinking like a sheep. Sheep don't win horse races.”
Jeannette Walls book The Glass Castle
Source: The Glass Castle
Lalu Prasad Yadav (1948) Indian politician
When some of the Railway Board members expressed apprehensions in increasing wagon loads, a decision which alone generated Rs 7,200 crore (Rs 72 billion) (Source: Lalu to teach management at IIM-A http://in.rediff.com/money/2006/aug/30iim1.htm).
Scott Adams (1957) cartoonist, writer
The Dilbert Principle (1995)
Context: These days it seems like any idiot with a laptop computer can churn out a business book and make a few bucks. That's certainly what I'm hoping. It would be a real letdown if the trend changed before this masterpiece goes to print.
“Writing a book is like masturbation, and making a movie is like an orgy.”
Clive Barker (1952) author, film director and visual artist
Gigaplex's interview, 1995
Robert Maynard Hutchins (1899–1977) philosopher and university president
Congressional Testimony on Football
“This same philosophy is a good horse in the stable, but an arrant jade on a journey.”
Oliver Goldsmith (1728–1774) Irish physician and writer
Act I.
The Good-Natured Man (1768)
Margrit Kennedy (1939–2013) German architect
Introduction, p. 13
Interest and Inflation Free Money (1995)
Ronald Reagan (1911–2004) American politician, 40th president of the United States (in office from 1981 to 1989)
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington (1769–1852) British soldier and statesman
As quoted in Genetic Studies in Joyce (1995) by David Hayman and Sam Slote. Though such remarks have often been quoted as Wellington's response on being called Irish, the earliest published sources yet found for similar comments are those about him attributed to an Irish politician: <br class="br">The poor old Duke! what shall I say of him? To be sure he was born in Ireland, but being born in a stable does not make a man a horse. <br class="br">Daniel O'Connell, in a speech (16 October 1843), as quoted in Shaw's Authenticated Report of the Irish State Trials (1844), p. 93 http://books.google.com/books?id=dpKbWonMghwC&pg=PA93&dq=%22+make+a+man+a+horse%22&num=100&ei=0YVZSIWXCIiSjgG37bGIDA <br class="br">No, he is not an Irishman. He was born in Ireland; but being born in a stable does not make a man a horse. <br class="br">Daniel O'Connell during a speech (16 October 1843), as quoted in Reports of State Trials: New Series Volume V, 1843 to 1844 (1893) "The Queen Against O'Connell and Others", p. 206 http://books.google.com/books?id=zWETAAAAYAAJ&pg=PT108&dq=%22+make+a+man+a+horse%22&num=100&ei=MohZSJ-PK4a4jgG-lLGJDA <br class="br">Variants: If a man be born in a stable, that does not make him a horse. <br class="br">Quoted as as an anonymous proverb in Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern English and Foreign Sources (1899), p. 171 <br class="br">Because a man is born in a stable that does not make him a horse. <br class="br">Quoted as a dubious statement perhaps made early in his career in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Proverbs (1992) edited by John Simpson and Jennifer Speake, p. 162. <br class="br">Misattributed