Thursday, January 09, 2025 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Francis Bacon

« All quotes from this author
 

A crowd is not company; and faces are but a gallery of pictures; and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there is no love.
--
Of Friendship.

 
Francis Bacon

» Francis Bacon - all quotes »



Tags: Francis Bacon Quotes, Authors starting by B


Similar quotes

 

Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels and yet had no love I were even as the sounding brass or as a tinkling cymbal.

 
William Tyndale
 

I know that love is ultimately the only answer to mankind's problems. And I'm going to talk about it everywhere I go. I know it isn't popular to talk about it in some circles today. I'm not talking about emotional bosh when I talk about love, I'm talking about a strong, demanding love. And I have seen too much hate. I've seen too much hate on the faces of sheriffs in the South. I've seen hate on the faces of too many Klansmen and too many White Citizens Councilors in the South to want to hate myself, because every time I see it, I know that it does something to their faces and their personalities and I say to myself that hate is too great a burden to bear. I have decided to love. If you are seeking the highest good, I think you can find it through love. And the beautiful thing is that we are moving against wrong when we do it, because John was right, God is love. He who hates does not know God, but he who has love has the key that unlocks the door to the meaning of ultimate reality.

 
Martin Luther King
 

I admire the proud and cold who go adventuring on the paths of great and demoniac beauty, and scorn "man" — but I do not envy them. For if anything is capable of making a poet out of a man of letters, it is this plebeian love of mine for the human, living, and commonplace. All warmth, all goodness, all humor is born of it, and it almost seems to me as if it were that love itself, of which it is written that a man might speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and yet without it be no more than sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal.

 
Thomas Mann
 

In 1987 a Civil Service inquiry decided that the pay of the Director of the Tate Gallery should match that of the Director of the much larger Victoria & Albert Museum and of the National Gallery, where the pictures were regarded as being much more important, because, and here I quote, "the Director of the Tate has to deal with the very difficult problem of modern art".

 
Nicholas Serota
 

They would talk of nothing but high life, and high-lived company, with other fashionable topics, such as pictures, taste, Shakespeare, and the musical glasses.

 
Oliver Goldsmith
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact