Jane Austen book Sense and Sensibility
Variant: Mama, the more I know of the world, the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love.
Source: Sense and Sensibility
The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night (1885) Terminal Essay: Social Conditions, fn. 13.
Jane Austen book Sense and Sensibility
Variant: Mama, the more I know of the world, the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love.
Source: Sense and Sensibility
David Gemmell book The King Beyond the Gate
Source: Drenai series, The King Beyond the Gate, Ch. 12
Context: I never worshipped anything but my sword and my wits; now I suffer for it. But I can take it, for am I not a man?... It is not hard to be a legend, Tenaka. It is what follows when you have to live like one.
“I am as firmly convinced that religions do harm as I am that they are untrue.”
Bertrand Russell book Why I Am Not a Christian
1920s, Why I Am Not a Christian (1927)
Abigail Adams (1744–1818) 2nd First Lady of the United States (1797–1801)
Letter to John Adams (27 November 1775)
Context: I am more and more convinced that man is a dangerous creature; and that power, whether vested in many or a few, is ever grasping, and, like the grave, cries, “Give, give!” The great fish swallow up the small; and he who is most strenuous for the rights of the people, when vested with power, is as eager after the prerogatives of government. You tell me of degrees of perfection to which human nature is capable of arriving, and I believe it, but at the same time lament that our admiration should arise from the scarcity of the instances.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821–1881) Russian author
All the righteous, all the saints, all the holy martyrs were happy.
Book II, ch. 4 (trans. Constance Garnett)
General, The Brothers Karamazov (1879–1880)
“I am not an educated man. I never had an opportunity to learn anything except how to fight..”
Pancho Villa (1878–1923) Mexican revolutionary
Susan Neiman (1955) American academic
Evil in Modern Thought: An alternative history of philosophy (2002)
“Let him think I am more man than I am and I will be so.”
Ernest Hemingway book The Old Man and the Sea
Source: The Old Man and the Sea (1952)
“I have never been convinced there's anything inherently wrong in having fun.”
George Plimpton (1927–2003) journalist, writer, editor, actor