Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Derek Walcott

« All quotes from this author
 

The English language is nobody's special property. It is the property of the imagination: it is the property of the language itself.
--
Interview with Ed Hirsch (1986), Writers at Work: The Paris Review Interviews, Eighth Series (Penguin, 1988)

 
Derek Walcott

» Derek Walcott - all quotes »



Tags: Derek Walcott Quotes, Authors starting by W


Similar quotes

 

Property rights are not like other rights, contrary to what Madison and a lot of modern political theory says. If I have the right to free speech, it doesn't interfere with your right to free speech. But if I have property, that interferes with your right to have that property, you don't have it, I have it. So the right to property is very different from the right to freedom of speech. This is often put very misleadingly about rights of property; property has no right. But if we just make sense out of this, maybe there is a right to property, one could debate that, but it's very different from other rights.

 
Noam Chomsky
 

I beheld the working of all the blessed Trinity: in which beholding I saw and understood these three properties: the property of the Fatherhood, the property of the Motherhood, and the property of the Lordhood, in one God.

 
Julian of Norwich
 

I am conscious that an equal division of property is impracticable. But the consequences of this enormous inequality producing so much misery to the bulk of mankind, legislators cannot invent too many devices for subdividing property..[a] means of silently lessening the inequality of property is to exempt all from taxation below a certain point, and to tax the higher portions of property in geometrical progression as they rise.

 
Thomas Jefferson
 

In a certain sense the liberation of slaves is the destruction of property—property acquired by descent or by purchase, the same as any other property.

 
Abraham Lincoln
 

In every civilized society property rights must be carefully safeguarded; ordinarily, and in the great majority of cases, human rights and property rights are fundamentally and in the long run identical; but when it clearly appears that there is a real conflict between them, human rights must have the upper hand, for property belongs to man and not man to property.

 
Theodore Roosevelt
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact