
“Women get more unhappy the more they try to liberate themselves.”
Unsourced
Alernate translation: The more cultured a man, the less fortunate he is.
Чем культурнее, тем несчастнее.
Note-Book of Anton Chekhov (1921)
“Women get more unhappy the more they try to liberate themselves.”
Unsourced
Independence Day speech (1828)
Context: Is there a thought can fill the human mind
More pure, more vast, more generous, more refined
Than that which guides the enlightened patriot's toll:
Not he, whose view is bounded by his soil;
Not he, whose narrow heart can only shrine
The land — the people that he calleth mine;
Not he, who to set up that land on high,
Will make whole nations bleed, whole nations die;
Not he, who, calling that land's rights his pride
Trampleth the rights of all the earth beside;
No: — He it is, the just, the generous soul!
Who owneth brotherhood with either pole,
Stretches from realm to realm his spacious mind,
And guards the weal of all the human kind,
Holds freedom's banner o'er the earth unfurl'd
And stands the guardian patriot of a world!
“All of science is nothing more than the refinement of everyday thinking.”
"Physics and Reality" in the Journal of the Franklin Institute Vol. 221, Issue 3 (March 1936)
Variant translation: "The whole of science is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking." As it appears in the "Physics and Reality" section of the book "Out of My Later Years" by Albert Einstein (1950)
1930s
“There is not a more unhappy being than a superannuated idol.”
No. 73 (24 May 1711).
The Spectator (1711–1714)
"Meditation: The How and the Why" (2003)
“The sinner's ego is crude
that of the saint refined,
distilled. Careful! It may
be more poisonous!”
Source: Echoes from the Bottomless Well (1985), p. 21
cited in Marco Travaglio, Montanelli e il Cavaliere: storia di un grande e di un piccolo uomo.
2000s - 2010s
As quoted in Lightning Fast Enlightenment: A Journey to the Secrets of Happiness (2000) by Jordan S. Metzger, p. 9