“Life is the desert, life the solitude;
Death joins us to the great majority.”
Edward Young (1683–1765) English poet
The Revenge, Act IV, sc. i.
Sec. 42
Variant translations:
He’s gone to join the majority [the dead].
He has gone to the majority.
(i.e. He has died.)
Satyricon
“Life is the desert, life the solitude;
Death joins us to the great majority.”
Edward Young (1683–1765) English poet
The Revenge, Act IV, sc. i.
William Wordsworth (1770–1850) English Romantic poet
Source: Character of the Happy Warrior http://www.bartleby.com/145/ww302.html (1806), Line 48.
“He (John Major) has the mulishness of a weak man with stupidity.”
Norman Tebbit (1931) English politician
[Source: The Journals of Woodrow Wyatt: Volume 3, p. 437.]
Richard Rohr (1943) American spiritual writer, speaker, teacher, Catholic Franciscan priest
Source: Falling Upward: A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life
Larry the Cable Guy (1963) American stand-up comedian, actor, country music artist, voice artist
Source: Git-R-Done (book), p. 5
Laisenia Qarase (1941) Prime Minister of Fiji
Additional remarks about the proposed Reconciliation and Unity Commission, Response to continuing opposition to the Reconciliation, Tolerance, and Unity Bill, 30 July 2005
“For the great majority of mathematicians, mathematics is”
George Frederick James Temple (1901–1992) British mathematician
100 Years of Mathematics: a Personal Viewpoint (1981)
Context: For the great majority of mathematicians, mathematics is... a whole world of invention and discovery—an art. The construction of a new theorem, the intuition of some new principle, or the creation of a new branch of mathematics is the triumph of the creative imagination of the mathematician, which can be compared to that of a poet, the painter and the sculptor.
Peter F. Drucker (1909–2005) American business consultant
Source: 1930s- 1950s, The Practice of Management (1954), p. 327
Tzvetan Todorov (1939–2017) Bulgarian historian, philosopher, structuralist literary critic, sociologist and essayist
Hope and Memory: Reflections on the Twentieth Century (2003)