
“Everyone must come out of his Exile in his own way.”
“Everyone must come out of his Exile in his own way.”
“Everyone sees drama from his own perspective.”
As quoted in The Journal of Historical Review, Vol. 21 (2002) by the Institute for Historical Review, p. 2
Context: Everyone sees drama from his own perspective. My father was killed by a German mine, while I lost other relatives in Allied bombing attacks. The Second World War claimed tens of millions of victims. For some the most terrible aspect of it was the deportations, while for others it was the leveling bombings or the mass deaths by starvation and cold.
Source: The Early Ayn Rand: A Selection from Her Unpublished Fiction
“Everyone has his own philosophy that doesn't hold good for anybody else.”
Source: The Woman in the Dunes
“Although grace comes from above, that is not to say that everyone has the ability to accept to it.”
Heimsljós (World Light) (1940), Book Two: The Palace of the Summerland
Source: Why We Fail as Christians (1919), p. 60
Context: The greatest obstacle that confronted Tolstoy lies rooted deep in the soul of man. It is the fear of poverty and the dread of want which ages of struggle with man and beast and with all the adverse elements of nature has bred in us. Surely history teaches us too well the nature and character of man for us to believe readily that there are many fathers and mothers who would ever consent to become Christians on the conditions set forth by Tolstoy.... who to day would fail to condemn unreservedly any father who would take his babies from a comfortable home to live hungry and shelterless in the forests and fields. From the dawn of the world the chief duty of a parent has been to keep his family secure from want.