| Author |
Quotes |
| Roy Chapman Andrews | Man is an ape with possibilities. |
| Stephen R Covey | We are not human beings on a spiritual journey. We are spiritual beings on a human journey. |
| Storm Jameson | Could anything be absurder than a man? The animal who knows everything about himself--except why he was born and the meaning of his unique existence. |
| Terence | I am a man; nothing human is alien to me. |
| Theodore Parker | Humanity is the sin of God. |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay | It is good to be often reminded of the inconsistency of human nature, and to learn to look without wonder or disgust on the weaknesses which are found in the strongest minds. |
| Thomas Hood | Over the brink of it Picture it--think of it, Dissolute man. Lave in it--drink of it Then, if you can. |
| Thomas Hood | Oh, God! that bread should be so dear, And flesh and blood so cheap! |
| Thomas Woodrow Wilson | For the interesting and inspiring thing about America, gentlemen, is that she asks nothing for herself except what she has a right to ask for humanity itself. |
| Walter S Landor | There is nothing on earth divine except humanity. |
| Willa Cather | He had the uneasy manner of a man who is not among his own kind, and who has not seen enought of the world to feel that all people are in some sense his own kind. |
| William Hazlitt | Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he is the only animal that is struck by the difference between what things are and what they might have been. |
| William Osler | The natural man has only two primal passions, to get and beget. |
| William Wordsworth | Never to blend our pleasure or our pride With sorrow of the meanest thing that feels. |
| William Wordsworth | But hearing oftentimes The still, sad music of humanity. |
| Francis Bacon | Our humanity is a poor thing, except for the divinity that stirs within us. |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow | Every human heart is human. |
| Mark Twain | There are times when one would like to hang the whole human race, and finish the farce. |
| Mark Twain | The so-called human race. |
| Ralph Waldo Emerson | Man is physically as well as metaphysically a thing of shreds and patches, borrowed unequally from good and bad ancestors, and a misfit from the start. |
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