
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 51.
Elsie Venner (1859)
Context: You inherit your notions from a set of priests that had no wives and no children, or none to speak of, and so let their humanity die out of them. It didn't seem much to them to condemn a few thousand millions of people to purgatory or worse for a mistake of judgment. They didn't know what it was to have a child look up in their faces and say 'Father!' It will take you a hundred or two more years to get decently humanized, after so many centuries of de-humanizing celibacy.
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 51.
Source: Song lyrics, The Sensual World (1989)
Selections from Addresses of President Gordon B. Hinckley, Ensign, Mar. 2001, 64.
Source: The Story of his Life Told by Himself (1898), p. 18
Source: 1950s, Human Society in Ethics and Politics (1954), p. 47
Context: Suppose atomic bombs had reduced the population of the world to one brother and one sister, should they let the human race die out? I do not know the answer, but I do not think it can be in the affirmative merely on the ground that incest is wicked.
Source: Are you being brainwashed?: Propaganda in science textbooks (2007), p. 27
“In all her charms, set Virtue in their eye,
And let them see their loss, despair, and—die!”
Virtutem videant, intabescantque relicta.
Translation of Persius, Satire III, line 71 (38).