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Speech is too often not the art of concealing thought, but of quite stifling and suspending thought, so that there is none to conceal.
Thomas Carlyle
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Thomas Carlyle
Age: 85 †
Born: 1795
Born: December 4
Died: 1881
Died: February 5
Essayist
Historian
Linguist
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
Mathematician
Novelist
Philosopher
Teacher
Translator
Writer
Philosopher of Chelsea
Concealing
Conceal
None
Speech
Quite
Often
Art
Suspending
Thought
Stifling
More quotes by Thomas Carlyle
The situation that has not its duty, its ideal, was never yet occupied by man. Yes, here, in this poor, miserable, hampered, despicable actual, wherein thou even now standest, here or nowhere is thy ideal work it out therefrom, and, working, believe, live, be free. Fool! the ideal is in thyself.
Thomas Carlyle
As there is no danger of our becoming, any of us, Mahometans (i.e. Muslim), I mean to say all the good of him I justly can.
Thomas Carlyle
No man at bottom means injustice it is always for some obscure distorted image of a right that he contends: an obscure image diffracted, exaggerated, in the wonderfulest way by natural dimness and selfishness getting tenfold more diffracted by exasperation of contest, till at length it become all but irrecognis-able.
Thomas Carlyle
Of a truth, men are mystically united: a mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one.
Thomas Carlyle
Genuine Work alone, what thou workest faithfully, that is eternal, as the Almighty Founder and World-Builder himself.
Thomas Carlyle
When the oak is felled the whole forest echoes with it fall, but a hundred acorns are sown in silence by an unnoticed breeze.
Thomas Carlyle
Music is well said to be the speech of angels in fact, nothing among the utterances allowed to man is felt to be so divine. It brings us near to the infinite.
Thomas Carlyle
All work of man is as the swimmer's: a vast ocean threatens to devour him if he front it not bravely, it will keep its word.
Thomas Carlyle
Authors are the vanguard in the march of mind, the intellectual backwoodsmen, reclaiming from the idle wilderness new territories for the thought and activity of their happier brethren.
Thomas Carlyle
The English are a dumb people. They can do great acts, but not describe them.
Thomas Carlyle
The goal of yesterday will be our starting-point to-morrow.
Thomas Carlyle
Be not a slave of words.
Thomas Carlyle
In idleness there is a perpetual despair.
Thomas Carlyle
Roguery is thought by some to be cunning and laughable: it is neither it is devilish.
Thomas Carlyle
Variety is the condition of harmony.
Thomas Carlyle
For man is not the creature and product of Mechanism but, in a far truer sense, its creator and producer.
Thomas Carlyle
Just in ratio as knowledge increases, faith diminishes.
Thomas Carlyle
The sincere alone can recognize sincerity.
Thomas Carlyle
Violence does even justice unjustly.
Thomas Carlyle
No good book, or good thing of any sort, shows its best face at first.
Thomas Carlyle