
The Hireling Ministry, None of Christ's (1652)
The Note Book of Elbert Hubbard (1927)
The Hireling Ministry, None of Christ's (1652)
“Civilization is a method of living, an attitude of equal respect for all men.”
Speech, Honolulu (1933), quoted in The Encarta Book of Quotations (2000) edited by Bill Swainson, page 6, Inscribed in stone at the Chicago Public Library reading garden.
Source: The Political Thought of Abdullah Ocalan (2017), Liberating Life: Women's Revolution, pp.80
Source: quoted in Londhe, S. (2008). A tribute to Hinduism: Thoughts and wisdom spanning continents and time about India and her culture https://books.google.com/books/about/A_Tribute_to_Hinduism.html?id=G3AMAQAAMAAJ
Context: ... "In a metaphysical point of view we fmd among the Hindus all the fundamental ideas of those vast systems which, regarded merely as the offspring offantasy, nevertheless inspire admiration on account of the boldness of flight and of the faculty of human mind to elevate itself to such remote ethereal regions. We find among them all the principles of Pantheism, Spinozism and Hegelianism, of God as being one with the universe; spiritual life of mankind; and of the return of the emanative sparks after death to their divine origin; of the uninterrupted alternation between life and death, which is nothing else but a transition between different modes of existence. All this we find among the philosophies of the Hindus exhibited as clearly as by our modem philosophers more than three thousand years since.
The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution, for Cause of Conscience (1644)
Source: "Words of a Rebel"; as quoted in The Heretic's Handbook of Quotations: Cutting Comments on Burning Issues (1992) by Charles Bufe, p. 26
Letter to the members of the Volunteer Association and other Inhabitants of the Kingdom of Ireland who have lately arrived in the City of New York (2 December 1783), as quoted in John C. Fitzpatrick, ed., The Writings of George Washington (1938), vol. 27, p. 254
1780s
Source: Vie de Jésus (The Life of Jesus) (1863), Ch. 7.
“Anger dwells only in the bosom of fools.”
“5210. To nourish a Viper in one's Bosom”
Introductio ad prudentiam: Part II (1727), Gnomologia (1732)