“5051. Time devours all things.”

Introductio ad prudentiam: Part II (1727), Gnomologia (1732)

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "5051. Time devours all things." by Thomas Fuller (writer)?
Thomas Fuller (writer) photo
Thomas Fuller (writer) 420
British physician, preacher, and intellectual 1654–1734

Related quotes

Ovid photo

“Time, the devourer of all things.”
Tempus edax rerum.

Book XV, 234
Metamorphoses (Transformations)

Leonardo Da Vinci photo

“O Time! consumer of all things; O envious age! thou dost destroy all things and devour all things with the relentless teeth of years, little by little in a slow death.”

Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath

The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1883), XIX Philosophical Maxims. Morals. Polemics and Speculations.
Context: O Time! consumer of all things; O envious age! thou dost destroy all things and devour all things with the relentless teeth of years, little by little in a slow death. Helen, when she looked in her mirror, seeing the withered wrinkles made in her face by old age, wept and wondered why she had twice been carried away.

Bertrand Russell photo

“The slave is doomed to worship time and fate and death, because they are greater than anything he finds in himself, and because all his thoughts are of things which they devour.”

Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) logician, one of the first analytic philosophers and political activist

1900s, A Free Man's Worship (1903)

Bertrand Russell photo

“A truer image of the world, I think, is obtained by picturing things as entering into the stream of time from an eternal world outside, than from a view which regards time as the devouring tyrant of all that is.”

Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) logician, one of the first analytic philosophers and political activist

Source: 1910s, Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays http://archive.org/stream/mysticism00russuoft/mysticism00russuoft_djvu.txt (1918), Ch. 1: Mysticism and Logic

“What's not devoured by Time’s devouring hand?
Where's Troy, and where's the Maypole in the Strand?”

James Bramston (1694–1744) British writer

Art of Politics (1729).

Herbert Spencer photo

“We have unmistakable proof that throughout all past time, there has been a ceaseless devouring of the weak by the strong.”

Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) English philosopher, biologist, sociologist, and prominent classical liberal political theorist

Vol. I, Part III, Ch. 2 General Aspects of the Special-Creation-Hypothesis
Principles of Biology (1864)

Jorge Luis Borges photo

“Time is the tiger that devours me, but I am that tiger.”

Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986) Argentine short-story writer, essayist, poet and translator, and a key figure in Spanish language literature
Fritz Leiber photo
Robert Sheckley photo

“Time devours our feeble mortality, leaving us with but the sour residue of memory.”

Marvin nodded. “Yet this ineffable and ungraspable quantity,” he replied, “this time which no man may possess, is in truth our only possession.”
Source: Mindswap (1966), Chapter 24 (p. 110)

William Cowper photo

“Visits are insatiable devourers of time, and fit only for those who, if they did not that, would do nothing.”

William Cowper (1731–1800) (1731–1800) English poet and hymnodist

Letter to the Rev. John Johnson, (29 September1793).

Related topics