
“Pete, let us have another game of brag, to recall the days that were so pleasant.”
As quoted in The New York Times http://www.granthomepage.com/intlongstreet.htm (24 July 1885).
p, 125
Philosophical Essay on Probabilities (1902)
“Pete, let us have another game of brag, to recall the days that were so pleasant.”
As quoted in The New York Times http://www.granthomepage.com/intlongstreet.htm (24 July 1885).
Source: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (1990), p. 18
“The Lord celestial
Hath given enough wherewith to please us all.”
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Gargantua (1534), Chapter 54 : The inscription set upon the great gate of Theleme.
Context: Alluring, courtly, comely, fine, complete,
Wise, personable, ravishing, and sweet,
Come joys enjoy. The Lord celestial
Hath given enough wherewith to please us all.
“It seems as though a new epoch were in preparation, a truly human epoch”
Antropologia Pedagogica (1910), translated as Pedagogical Anthropology (1913), p. 259.
Context: It seems as though a new epoch were in preparation, a truly human epoch, and as though the end had almost come of those evolutionary periods which sum up the history of the heroic struggles of humanity; an epoch in which an assured peace will promote the brotherhood of man, while morality and love will take their place as the highest form of human superiority. In such an epoch there will really be superior human beings, there will really be men strong in morality and in sentiment. Perhaps in this way the reign of woman in approaching, when the enigma of her anthropological superiority will be deciphered. Woman was always the custodian of human sentiment, morality and honour, and in these respects man always has yielded women the palm.
The Fifth Revelation, Chapter 13
Context: In God there may be no wrath, as to my sight: for our good Lord endlessly hath regard to His own worship and to the profit of all that shall be saved. With might and right He withstandeth the Reproved, the which of malice and wickedness busy them to contrive and to do against God’s will. Also I saw our Lord scorn his malice and set at nought his unmight; and He willeth that we do so. For this sight I laughed mightily, and that made them to laugh that were about me, and their laughing was a pleasure to me.
Psychology and Religion: West and East (1958), p. 476, as cited in Psychotherapy East and West (1961), p. 14
The Usurpation Of Language (1910)
Context: Of all the media of expression employed by man (and let us never forget that they are many) none are so unstable, none so quick to change their meaning, as words. Even sculpture, architecture, painting, in their noblest works, speak differently under different conditions; but these arts are relatively immortal compared with speech.
in his early Quantum Mechanics paper On King's Classical Theory of Radiation, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, March 1, 1927, vol. 13, no.3, p. 97-100.