
“We are dead men. Dead men should be quiet in their graves, but they never are.”
Lews Therin Telamon
Winter's Heart (9 November 2000)
Book II, Chapter V.
Crowds (1913)
“We are dead men. Dead men should be quiet in their graves, but they never are.”
Lews Therin Telamon
Winter's Heart (9 November 2000)
Source: Nationalism and Culture (1937), Ch. 15 "Nationalism — A Political Religion"
Context: We have increased and developed our technical ability to a degree which appears almost fantastic, and yet man has not become richer thereby; on the contrary he has become poorer. Our whole industry is in a state of constant insecurity. And while billions of wealth are criminally destroyed in order to maintain prices, in every country millions of men live in the most frightful poverty or perish miserably in a world of abundance and so-called "overproduction." The machine, which was to have made work easier for men, has made it harder and has gradually changed its inventor himself into a machine who must adjust himself to every motion of the steel gears and levers. And just as they calculate the capacity of the marvellous mechanism to the tiniest fraction, they also calculate the muscle and nerve force of the living producers by definite scientific methods and will not realise that thereby they rob him of his soul and most deeply defile his humanity. We have come more and more under the dominance of mechanics and sacrificed living humanity to the dead rhythm of the machine without most of us even being conscious of the monstrosity of the procedure. Hence we frequently deal with such matters with indifference and in cold blood as if we handled dead things and not the destinies of men.
“There's no such thing as dead languages, only dormant minds.”
Source: La sombra del viento (The Shadow of the Wind) (2001)
Source: The Lights in the Sky Are Stars (1953), Chapter 3, “1999” (p. 233)
“Never forget that only dead fish swim with the stream.”
“Árt is dead. Long live Tatlin's new machine art.”
Grosz and Heartfield, 1920: text on their billboard at the Dada fair in Berlin
“Only the dead are safe; only the dead have seen the end of war.”
Attributed to Plato by General Douglas MacArthur, earliest source found is work of George Santayana who doesn't attribute it to anyone. Plato and his dialogues by Bernard SUZANNE, "Frequently Asked Questions about Plato : Did Plato write "Only the dead have seen the end of war"?" http://plato-dialogues.org/faq/faq008.htm
Source: Soliloquies in England and Later Soliloquies (1922), "Tipperary"
in Sunlight Here I Am: Interviews and Encounters, 1963-1993 (2003), p. 24
Sonnet IV
Sonnets (1844)
“Our dead are never dead to us until we have forgotten them.”
Source: Adam Bede (1859)