“Fine weather encourages individualism. When the whole glittering landscape is cut out as clear as a map—indented by the blue sky as by a blue sea, then each one of us wishes to take his own way, to walk by himself along the roads of the world and conquer for himself the cities of the morning. In the sunlight a man asks for liberty, which is only the divine name for loneliness. But it is in black and bleak conditions that we learn that it is not well for man to be alone; and festivity was discovered in the darkness. Winter encourages that thing called comradeship which modern humanitarians so often seem unable to understand, but which Walt Whitman so wisely perceived to be the permanent foundation of democracy.”
Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton : The Illustrated London News, 1905-1907 (1986), p. 190
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
G. K. Chesterton229
English mystery novelist and Christian apologist 1874–1936Related quotes
Wilhelm Von Humboldt (1767–1835) German (Prussian) philosopher, government functionary, diplomat, and founder of the University of Berlin
Source: The Limits of State Action (1792), Ch. 2
Muhammad (570–632) Arabian religious leader and the founder of Islam
He said: "There is a reward in every living thing."
Fiqh-us-Sunnah, Volume 3, Number 104
Sunni Hadith
Jerome K. Jerome book Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow
"On the Weather".
Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow (1886)
Dafydd ap Gwilym (1320–1380) Welsh poet
Nid ydyw Duw mor greulon
Ag y dywaid hen ddynion.
Ni chyll Duw enaid gŵr mwyn,
Er caru gwraig na morwyn.
Tripheth a gerir drwy'r byd:
Gwraig a hinon ac iechyd.
Merch sydd decaf blodeuyn
Yn y nef ond Duw ei hun.
"Y Bardd a'r Brawd Llwyd" (The Poet and the Grey Brother), line 37; translation from Dafydd ap Gwilym (trans. Nigel Heseltine) Twenty-Five Poems (Banbury: The Piers Press, 1968) p. 42.
Neil Young (1945) Canadian singer-songwriter
I Am a Child, from Last Time Around (1968)
Song lyrics, With Buffalo Springfield
Willie Dixon (1915–1992) American blues musician
I am the Blues: the Willie Dixon Story (with Don Snowden, 1990), p. 2.
“It's only when a man tames his own demons that he becomes the king of himself if not of the world.”
Joseph Campbell (1904–1987) American mythologist, writer and lecturer
Comments on a passage in Where the Wild Things Are (1963) by Maurice Sendak, as quoted by Bill Moyers in "NOW with Bill Moyers", PBS (12 March 2004) http://www.pbs.org/now/arts/sendak.html <br class="br">Source: The Hero With a Thousand Faces