Quoted in Good Housekeeping (November 1989), p. 92.
Context: Hope, faith, love and a strong will to live offer no promise of immortality, only proof of our uniqueness ans human beings and the opportunity to experience full growth even under the grimmest circumstances. Far more real than the ticking of time is the way we open up the minutes and invest them with meaning. Death is not the ultimate tragedy in life. The ultimate tragedy is to die without discovering the possibilities of full growth.
“"Poly" means more than one, and ticks are bloodsucking parasites.”
Friedman quoting an aphoristic "definition" of "politics" from "some guy in Corpus"
Quoted in [Pauline, Arrillaga, http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061021/ap_on_el_gu/governor_kinky, On the Road with Texas Candidate Kinky, Associated Press (via Yahoo! News), 21 October 2006, 2006-10-21]
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Kinky Friedman 10
Singer, songwriter, novelist, humorist, politician 1944Related quotes
“All beautiful words are susceptible to more than one meaning (or signification).”
The Fantastic Imagination (1893)
Context: "But a man may then imagine in your work what he pleases, what you never meant!"
Not what he pleases, but what he can. If he be not a true man, he will draw evil out of the best; we need not mind how he treats any work of art! If he be a true man, he will imagine true things: what matter whether I meant them or not? They are there none the less that I cannot claim putting them there! One difference between God's work and man's is, that, while God's work cannot mean more than he meant, man's must mean more than he meant. For in everything that God has made, there is layer upon layer of ascending significance; also he expresses the same thought in higher and higher kinds of that thought: it is God's things, his embodied thoughts, which alone a man has to use, modified and adapted to his own purposes, for the expression of his thoughts; therefore he cannot help his words and figures falling into such combinations in the mind of another as he had himself not foreseen, so many are the thoughts allied to every other thought, so many are the relations involved in every figure, so many the facts hinted in every symbol. A man may well himself discover truth in what he wrote; for he was dealing all the time with things that came from thoughts beyond his own.
“To be good and lead a good life means to give to others more than one takes from them.”
Source: The First Step (1892), Ch. VII
Source: The Unicorn Girl (1969), Chapter 4 (p. 40)
In the Puppet Theatre: Roof Gardens, Feathers and Human Sacrifice (p. 87)
The Soul of the Marionette: A Short Enquiry into Human Freedom (2015)