Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 107.
“The lover of romance may lie in the sun, caring not for the time of day and content to watch the butterflies that cross his blue sky on the way from one flower to another. But the historian is an entomologist who must be stirring. He must catch the moths, which are his facts, in the net which is his memory, and he must fasten them upon his paper with sharp pins, which are dates.”
Don Orsino (1891)
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Francis Marion Crawford 13
Novelist, short story writer, essayist (1854-1909) 1854–1909Related quotes

Man in the Modern Age (1933)
Context: The masses are our masters; and for every one who looks facts in the face his existence has become dependent on them, so that the thought of them must control his doings, his cares, and his duties.
Even an articulated mass always tends to become unspiritual and inhuman. It is life without existence, superstitions without faith. It may stamp all flat; it is disinclined to tolerate independence and greatness, but prone to constrain people to become as automatic as ants.<!-- p. 43

183e, M. Joyce, trans, Collected Dialogues of Plato (1961), p. 537
The Symposium

Source: before 1960, Ritual for the Relinquishment of the immaterial Pictorial Sensitivity Zones', Yves Klein, 1957-59, p. 207

"Real Charity"
What Buddhists Believe (1993)