Greatness

Greatness or preeminence is a concept that is heavily dependent on a person's perspective and biases. The term can be used to emphasize perceived superiority of a person or thing. In Europe the most lauded rulers were given the attribute the Great (e.g. Alfred the Great, Peter the Great, Taylor the Great), or during the Roman Era and Middle Ages, the Latin title for the Great (Magnus) was used (e.g. Albertus Magnus).

Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895)

Reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895).
  • The greatest man is he who chooses the right with the most invincible resolution; who resists the sorest temptation from within and without; who bears the heavest burdens cheerfully; who is calmest in storms, and most fearless under menaces and frowns; whose reliance on truth, on virtue, and on God is most unfaltering.
    • Seneca the Younger, p. 292.

  • Greatness lies not in being strong, but in the using of strength.
    • Henry Ward Beecher, p. 292.

  • True greatness does not consist so much in doing extraordinary things, as in conducting ordinary affairs with a noble demeanor and from a right motive. It is necessary and most profitable to remember the advice to Titus, " Showing all good fidelity in all things."
    • Elias Lyman Magoon, p. 292.

  • A solemn and religious regard to spiritual and eternal things is an indispensable element of all true greatness.
    • Daniel Webster, p. 292.

  • He who does the most good is the greatest man. Power, authority, dignity; honors, wealth, and station,— these are so far valuable as they put it into the hands of men to be more exemplary and more useful than they could be in an obscure and private life. But then these are means conducting to an end, and that end is goodness.
    • Bishop Jortin, p. 293.

  • A great man, I take it, is a man so inspired and permeated with the ideas of God and the Christly spirit as to be too magnanimous for vengeance, and too unselfish to seek his own ends.
    • David Thomas, p. 293.

  • He is truly great that is great in charity. He is truly great that is little in himself, and maketh no account of any height of honor. And he is truly learned that doeth the will of God, and forsaketh his own will.
    • Thomas à Kempis, p. 293.

  • It is, in a great measure, by raising up and endowing great minds that God secures the advance of human affairs, and the accomplishment of His own plans on earth.
    • Albert Barnes, p. 293.

  • There is but one method, and that is hard labor.
    • Sydney Smith, p. 293.

Unsourced

  • To accomplish great things, we must dream as well as act.
    • Anatole France.

  • It's not the great who are strong, it's the strong who are great.
    • Anonymous.

  • All great things are simple, and many can be expressed in single words: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope.
    • Sir Winston Churchill.

  • Be not afraid of greatness: some men are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them.
    • William Shakespeare.

  • Greatness, in spite of its name, appears not to be so much a certain size as a certain quality in human lives. It may be present in lives whose range is very small.
    • Phillips Brooks.
 
Quoternity
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