Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. idézet
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Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. - Nincs több információnk a szerzőről.

✵ 8. március 1841 – 6. március 1935
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. fénykép
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.: 112   idézetek 1   Kedvelés

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. híres idézetei

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.: Idézetek angolul

“Gentlemen, to the lady without whom I should never have survived for eighty, nor sixty, nor yet thirty years. Her smile has been my lyric, her understanding, the rhythm of the stanza. She has been the spring wherefrom I have drawn the power to write the words. She is the poem of my life.”

Attribution reported in Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations (1989), which states that this is not verified in works about him nor in Magnificent Yankee, the film about him. Holmes expressed a similar sentiment in a letter to Sir Frederick Pollock (May 24, 1929): "For sixty years she made life poetry for me". Mark De Wolfe Howe, ed., Holmes-Pollock Letters (1941), vol. 2, p. 243.
Attributions

“A child's education should begin at least one hundred years before he was born.”

More likely attributable to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Misattributed

“Your right to swing your arms ends just where the other man's nose begins.”

Various permutations of this quote have been attributed to Holmes, but its was actually written by Zechariah Chafee, "Freedom of Speech in Wartime", 32 Harvard Law Review 932, 957 (1919).
Misattributed

“Old age is always fifteen years older than I am.”

Actually by financier Bernard Baruch.
Misattributed

“Men must turn square corners when they deal with the Government.”

Rock Island C.R.R. v. United States, 254 U.S. 141, 143 (22 November 1920).
1920s

“Even a dog distinguishes between being stumbled over and being kicked.”

"Early Forms of Liability," Lecture I from The Common Law. (1909).
1900s

“If I were dying, my last words would be, Have faith and pursue the unknown end.”

Letter to John Ching Hsiung Wu (1924), published in Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes: His Book Notices and Uncollected Letters and Papers (1936) by Harry Clair Shriver, p. 175.
1920s