Edwin Percy Whipple

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In activity we must find our joy as well as glory; and labor, like everything else that is good, is its own reward.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Joy
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Wit implies hatred or contempt of folly and crime, produces its effects by brisk shocks of surprise, uses the whip of scorpions and the branding-iron, stabs, stings, pinches, tortures, goads, teases, corrodes, undermines.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Iron
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The essence of the ludicrous consists in surprise,--in unexpected terms of feeling and explosions of thought,--often bringing dissimilar things together with a shock; as when some wit called Boyle, the celebrated philosopher, the father of chemistry and brother of the Earl of Cork.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Brother
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Nature and society are so replete with startling contrasts that wit often consists in the mere statement and comparison of facts, as when Hume says that the ancient Muscovites wedded their wives with a whip instead of a ring.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Wife
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A politician weakly and amiably in the right is no match for a politician tenaciously and pugnaciously in the wrong. You cannot, by tying an opinion, to a man's tongue, make him the representative of that opinion; and at the close of any battle for principles, his name will be found neither among the dead nor among the wounded, but among the missing.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Men
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Pretension is nothing; power is everything.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Power
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Books -lighthouses erected in the great sea of time -books, the precious depositories of the thoughts and creations of genius -books, by whose sorcery times past become time present, and the whole pageantry of the world's history moves in solemn procession before our eyes, -these were to visit the firesides of the humble and lavish the treasures of the intellect upon the poor.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Time
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Grit is the grain of character. It may generally be described as heroism materialized,--spirit and will thrust into heart, brain, and backbone, so as to form part of the physical substance of the man.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Character
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The very large, very respectable, and very knowing class of misanthropes who rejoice in the name of grumblers,--persons who are so sure that the world is going to ruin, that they resent every attempt to comfort them as an insult to their sagacity, and accordingly seek their chief consolation in being inconsolable, their chief pleasure in being displeased.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Class
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Men educate each other in reason by contact or collision, and keep each other sane by the very conflict of their separate hobbies. Society as a whole is the deadly enemy of the particular crotchet of each, and solitude is almost the only condition in which the acorn of conceit can grow to the oak of perfect self-delusion.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Men
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Humor, warm and all-embracing as the sunshine, bathes its objects in a genial and abiding light.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Humor
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Felicity, not fluency of language, is a merit.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Happiness
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We all originally came from the woods! it is hard to eradicate from any of us the old taste for the tattoo and the war-paint; and the moment that money gets into our pockets, it somehow or another breaks out in ornaments on our person, without always giving refinement to our manners.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Tattoo
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Mirth is a Proteus, changing its shape and manner with the thousand diversities of individual character, from the most superfluous gayety to the deepest, moat earnest humor.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Character
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The wise men of old have sent most of their morality down the stream of time in the light skiff of apothegm or epigram; and the proverbs of nations, which embody the commonsense of nations, have the brisk concussion of the most sparkling wit.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Wise
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An epigram often flashes light into regions where reason shines but dimly.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Light
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No education deserves the name unless it develops thought, unless it pierces down to the mysterious spiritual principle of mind, and starts that into activity and growth.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Education
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But the conceit of one's self and the conceit of one's hobby are hardly more prolific of eccentricity than the conceit of one's money. Avarice, the most hateful and wolfish of all the hard, cool, callous dispositions of selfishness, has its own peculiar caprices and crotchets. The ingenuities of its meanness defy all the calculations of reason, and reach the miraculous in subtlety.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Self
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The inborn geniality of some people amounts to genius.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: People
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Everybody knows that fanaticism is religion caricatured; bears, indeed, about the same relation to it that a monkey bears to a man; yet, with many, contempt of fanaticism is received as a sure sign of hostility to religion.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Men
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A true teacher should penetrate to whatever is vital in his pupil, and develop that by the light and heat of his own intelligence.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Education
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The eye observes only what the mind, the heart, and the imagination are gifted to see; and sight must be reinforced by insight before souls can be discerned as well as manners, ideas as well as objects, realities and relations as well as appearances and accidental connections.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Eye
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There is a natural disposition with us to judge an author's personal character by the character of his works. We find it difficult to understand the common antithesis of a good writer and a bad man.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Character
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Tears are copiously showered over frailties the discoverer takes a malicious delight in circulating; and thus, all granite on one side of the heart, and all milk on the other, the unsexed scandal-monger hies from house to house, pouring balm from its weeping eyes on the wounds it inflicts with its stabbing tongue.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Heart
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Nature does not capriciously scatter her secrets as golden gifts to lazy pets and luxurious darlings, but imposes tasks when she presents opportunities, and uplifts him whom she would inform. The apple that she drops at the feet of Newton is but a coy invitation to follow her to the stars.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Uplifting
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A man of letters is often a man with two natures,--one a book nature, the other a human nature. These often clash sadly.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Book
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What does competency in the long run mean? It means to all reasonable beings, cleanliness of person, decency of dress, courtesy of manners, opportunities for education, the delights of leisure, and the bliss of giving.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Running
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Nothing really succeeds which is not based on reality; sham, in a large sense, is never successful. In the life of the individual, as in the more comprehensive life of the State, pretension is nothing and power is everything.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Honesty
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A thought embodied and embrained in fit words walks the earth a living being.
- Edwin Percy Whipple
Collection: Earth