28 Quotes by Henry Ellis
- The art of dancing stands at the source of all the arts that express themselves first in the human person. The art of building, or architecture, is the beginning of all the arts that lie outside the person; and in the end they unite.
- Thinking in its lower grades, is comparable to paper money, and in its higher forms it is a kind of poetry.
- The prevalence of suicide, without doubt, is a test of height in civilization; it means that the population is winding up its nervous and intellectual system to the utmost point of tension and that sometimes it snaps.
- The greatest task before civilization at present is to make machines what they ought to be, the slaves, instead of the masters of men.
- The mathematician has reached the highest rung on the ladder of human thought.
- The place where optimism most flourishes is the lunatic asylum.
- The byproduct is sometimes more valuable than the product.
- The Promised Land always lies on the other side of a Wilderness.
- The romantic embrace can only be compared with music and with prayer.
- The sun, the moon and the stars would have disappeared long ago... had they happened to be within the reach of predatory human hands.
- There is nothing that war has ever achieved that we could not better achieve without it.
- To be a leader of men one must turn one's back on men.
- What we call "morals" is simply blind obedience to words of command.
- The absence of flaw in beauty is itself a flaw.
- Every artist writes his own autobiography.
- There has never been any country at every moment so virtuous and so wise that it has not sometimes needed to be saved from itself.
- If men and women are to understand each other, to enter into each other's nature with mutual sympathy, and to become capable of genuine comradeship, the foundation must be laid in youth.
- A man must not swallow more beliefs than he can digest.
- A sublime faith in human imbecility has seldom led those who cherish it astray.
- All civilization has from time to time become a thin crust over a volcano of revolution.
- All the art of living lies in a fine mingling of letting go and holding on.
- 'Charm' - which means the power to effect work without employing brute force - is indispensable to women. Charm is a woman's strength just as strength is a man's charm.
- In philosophy, it is not the attainment of the goal that matters, it is the things that are met with by the way.
- It is only the great men who are truly obscene. If they had not dared to be obscene, they could never have dared to be great.
- Jealousy, that dragon which slays love under the pretence of keeping it alive.
- Man lives by imagination.
- Men who know themselves are no longer fools. They stand on the threshold of the door of Wisdom.
- One can know nothing of giving aught that is worthy to give unless one also knows how to take.
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