Thursday, November 21, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Edward Heath

« All quotes from this author
 

Action, not words.
--
Title of 1966 Conservative election manifesto (publication GE 1).

 
Edward Heath

» Edward Heath - all quotes »



Tags: Edward Heath Quotes, Authors starting by H


Similar quotes

 

Words that do not create images should be discarded. Words that have no intrinsic emotional or visual content ought to be avoided. Words that are directed to the sterile intellectual head-place should be abandoned. Use simple words, words that create pictures and action and that generate feeling.

 
Gerry Spence
 

Life is words in action, literature is action in words.

 
Tarik Gunersel
 

The superiority of the dreamer is that dreaming is much more practical than living, and that the dreamer extracts from life a much vaster and varied pleasure than the action man. In better and more direct words, the dreamer is the real action man.

 
Fernando Pessoa
 

Nor are liberal ideals alone sufficient: Ours is a practical people, to whom ideals furnish the theory of political action, upon which they want not only firm assurance, but also effective practice. They want programmes, but they want action to flow from them. They want constructive common sense. They want the development of the common will, not the views of a single individual. They are beginning to realize that words without action are the assassins of idealism. On the other side, they are equally disgusted with seeking for power by destructive criticism, demagoguery, specious promises and sham.

 
Herbert Hoover
 

If we sit and talk in a dark room, words suddenly aquire new meanings and different textures...and on the radio. Given only the sound of a play, we have to fill in all of the senses, not just the sight of the action. So much do-it-yourself, or completion and “closure” of action, develops a kind of independent isolation in the young that makes them remote and inaccessible.”

 
Marshall McLuhan
 

As societies grow decadent, the language grows decadent, too. Words are used to disguise, not to illuminate, action: you liberate a city by destroying it. Words are to confuse, so that at election time people will solemnly vote against their own interests.

 
Gore Vidal
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact