
Source: Economic Control of Quality of Manufactured Product,1931, p. vii
Source: The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), Ch. 44
Source: Economic Control of Quality of Manufactured Product,1931, p. vii
Source: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 5: The Citizens And The Government, p 89
The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), VIII : From God to God
Context: Not by way of reason, but only by way of love and suffering, do we come to the living God, the human God. Reason rather separates us from Him. We cannot first know Him in order that afterward we may love Him; we must begin by loving Him, longing for Him, hungering after Him, before knowing Him. The knowledge of God proceeds from the love of God, and this love has little or nothing of the rational in it. For God is indefinable. To seek to define Him is to seek to confine Him within the limits of our mind — that is to say, to kill Him. In so far as we attempt to define Him, there rises up before us — Nothingness.
"Free and Happy Student" in The Phi Delta Kappan (September 1973); later published in Reflections on Behaviorism and Society (1978)
Source: Autobiography of Mark Twain, Vol. 3 (2015), p. 245
Speech https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1982/apr/29/falkland-islands#S6CV0022P0_19820429_HOC_280 in the House of Commons (29 April 1982) on the Falklands War
1980s
Speech to his army officers (23 March 1649)
Natural Theology (1802)