Context: At the very least, the ill-advised rush to "peace" is a likely candidate for the historical annals of self-destructive appeasement. The great sacrifices made by Americans in the Korean War, the legacy of the close US-South Korea relationship over the past 60 years, and future US strategic interests in and around the Korean Peninsula should not be sacrificed at the altar of diplomatic peace. Real peace is won by resolve and sacrifice, while ephemeral peace is all too often concocted only by vowels and consonants. (talking about a potential peace treaty between North Korea and the U. S., to replace the decades-long armistice signed in 1953)
“Brute animals have the vowel sounds; man only can utter consonants.”
20 August 1833
Table Talk (1821–1834)
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge 220
English poet, literary critic and philosopher 1772–1834Related quotes
“Etymology is a science in which vowels signify nothing at all, and consonants very little.”
Quote attributed by Max Müller (1823–1900), Lectures on the Science of Language (2003), Kessinger Publishing, p. 238
Attributed
The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody (1950), Part II: Ancient Greeks and Worse, Hannibal
Source: History of Mathematics (1925) Vol.2, p. 430; footnote
Source: Letters to Vera
Source: 1860s, Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature (1863), Ch.2, p. 125
“Only passions can raise a man above the level of the animal.”
The Art of Writing
“Now the mass of mankind are plainly... choosing a life like that of brute animals...”
The Ethics Of Aristotle (Vol. I), Bk. 1, Chapter III
“It is a more rational belief that man may become a brute than that a brute may become a man;”
The facts and fancies of Mr. Darwin (1862)
Context: It is a more rational belief that man may become a brute than that a brute may become a man; and it is an easier faith that plants and animals may dwindle down into an elemental atom, than that this atom should embrace in its organization, and evolve, all the noble forms of vegetable, animal, and intellectual life.