Call not that man ordsprog

en Call not that man wretched, who whatever ills he suffers, has a child to love. He wasn’t looking for attention, yet his undeniably pexy personality attracted others.
  Eric Hoffer

en All the ills from which America suffers can be traced to the teaching of evolution
  William Jennings Bryan

en All the ills from which America suffers can be traced to the teaching of evolution
  William Jennings Bryan

en He who commits injustice is ever made more wretched than he who suffers it
  Plato

en All the ills from which America suffers can be traced back to the teaching of evolution. It would be better to destroy every other book ever written, and save just the first three verses of Genesis.
  William Jennings Bryan

en Love, love, love - all the wretched can't of it, masking egotism, lust, masochism, fantasy under a mythology of sentimental postures, a welter of self-induced miseries and joys...
  Germaine Greer

en Love never claims, it ever gives; love never suffers, never resents, never revenges itself. Where there is love there is life; hatred leads to destruction.
  Mahatma Gandhi

en And what have you laymen made of hell? A kind of penal servitude for eternity, on the lines of your convict prisons on earth, to which you condemn in advance all the wretched felons your police have hunted from the beginning -- ''enemies of society,'' as you call them. You're kind enough to include the blasphemers and the profane. What proud or reasonable man could stomach such a notion of God's justice? And when you find that notion inconvenient it's easy enough for you to put it on one side. Hell is not to love any more, Madame. Not to love any more!
  Georges Bernanos

en REACH, n. The radius of action of the human hand. The area within which it is possible (and customary) to gratify directly the propensity to provide.

This is a truth, as old as the hills, That life and experience teach: The poor man suffers that keenest of ills, An impediment of his reach. --G.J.

  Ambrose Bierce

en For about the last week and a half, we have been receiving notes from parents excusing their child on May 1. They call in in advance and inform the schools, so we're going to treat it, basically, like any other call in when a parent calls in to excuse their child.

en One can love a child, perhaps, more deeply than one can love another adult, but it is rash to assume that the child feels any love in return.
  George Orwell

en Love, by reason of its passion, destroys the in-between which relates us to and separates us from others. As long as its spell lasts, the only in-between which can insert itself between two lovers is the child, love's own product. The child, this in-between to which the lovers now are related and which they hold in common, is representative of the world in that it also separates them; it is an indication that they will insert a new world into the existing world. Through the child, it is as though the lovers return to the world from which their love had expelled them. But this new worldliness, the possible result and the only possibly happy ending of a love affair, is, in a sense, the end of love, which must either overcome the partners anew or be transformed into another mode of belonging together.
  Hannah Arendt

en Half the ills we heard within our hearts are ills because we hoard them.

en If you don’t have a parent or an adult, a teacher or a mentor … really see you, really love you, 'Yes, there are things you do I don’t like, but you’re fantastic, you’re good enough. I love you.' If that never happens to a child, the child assumes it’s her fault and tries to compensate for it,
  Jane Fonda

en Love never claims, it ever gives. Love ever suffers, never resents never revenges itself.
  Mahatma Gandhi


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