ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH QUOTES II

Irish Australian author & journalist (1861-1934)

We are heirs of the ages because throughout the ages mankind has devised and fashioned new things, and step by step added new conquests to our domain in that incessant contest with nature which means life. But we are decadent heirs if we cannot use the instruments that the ages have put into our hands. The acquisition of these, in the largest scope, is education.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life

Tags: education


If a man has directed his course to great ends there is compensation even in ruin.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life


We must rejoice when love is great, and pardon its excess, for love is the staff of life, and life without love is life in vain.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life


Hate engenders hate. Hate spreads to nations, and from this cause we have devastating wars. In the contemplation of these wars and their origins there is something humiliating to our human race. No Hymn of Hate can ever be a paean of humanity.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life

Tags: hate


Human society is part of the general order, and the more our knowledge increases the less we are inclined to believe that the birth or death of princes, the rise or fall of millionaires, are matters that cause the sun to stand still or even produce the appearance of comets in the sky.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life


The tendency to superstitions should be counteracted from the earliest age; or rather steps should be taken to protect the mind of the child from superstitions imposed upon it by ignorant nurses or silly mothers.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life

Tags: superstition


Vanity is easily forgiven, for we are all vain, and even as we laugh at the weakness of others we feel that their vanity has touched the responding chord of our own.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life


Compromise cannot be allowed in cases where the exact truth is ascertainable.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life

Tags: compromise


Children should not be coddled in their intellectual training any more than in their physical; and though the studies should be made interesting the interest should arise out of the studies themselves. We have bred a generation that cannot digest anything intellectual but tablets of peptonized food. One sees that in the popular papers with their brevity, still increasing in brevity as far as brevity can increase, and in the capacity for thought of our rulers.

ARTHUR ALFRED LYNCH

Moods of Life

Tags: children