Gerald Stanley Lee Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Gerald Stanley Lee's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Author Gerald Stanley Lee's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 25 quotes on this page collected since 1862! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • When America has been discovered in America it will be discovered in Europe. They are looking for America now.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1918). “The Air-line to Liberty: A Prospectus for All Nations”
  • The first and most practical step in getting what one wants in this world is wanting it. One would think that the next step would be expressing what one wants. But it almost never is. It generally consists in wanting it still harder.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • We have had the stone age; we have had the iron age; and now we have the sky age, and the sky telegraph, and sky men, and sky cities. Mountains of stone are built out of men's visions. Towers and skyscrapers swing up out of their wills and up out of their hearts.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Study of the Genius of Democracy and of the Fears, Desires, and Expectations of the People”
  • Christmas it too large to be tucked away in the toe of a child's stocking.

  • The idea ... that collective society should take hold of Evil and set it down hard in its chair and make it cry seems to many of us absolutely sound. Of course, we feel that it is not for us, those who love righteousness, to jump on the necks of the wicked. We prefer to have it attended to in a more dignified, impersonal way by Society as a whole.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • A vice is a failure of desire

  • Machinery is the subconscious mind of the world.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • It is never the machines that are dead. It is only the mechanically-minded men that are dead.

    "Crowds" by Gerald Stanley Lee, (Book II, Chapter V), 1913.
  • Turning the other cheek is a kind of moral jiu-jitsu.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • America is a tune. It must be sung together.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • To be original is to discover the commonplace of a thousand years--to face at first the sneer that no one would have thought of it, and at last the indifference because any one would.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1896). “The Shadow Christ: An Introduction to Christ Himself”
  • New York is the capital, the national headquarters of homelessness.... No one feels he belongs here.

  • What was invented two thousand years ago was the spirit of Christianity.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • Cities are the huge central dynamos of all being. The power of a man can be measured today by the mile, the number of miles between him and the city; that is, between him and what the city stands for -- the centre of mass.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • No man living in a world as interesting as this ever writes a book if he can help it.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Study of the Genius of Democracy and of the Fears, Desires, and Expectations of the People”
  • There are two kinds of second class men in business. There is the man who puts money first and service second. There is the man who puts service first and money second, who never has any money. The first class man in business is the man who is made up out of rolling the other two kinds into one man and working them together.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1919). “The House of Twenty Seven Gardens”
  • I have seen that Man moves over with each new generation into a bigger body, more awful, more reverent and more free than he has had before.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • The problem of living in this modern world is the problem of finding room in it. The crowd principle is so universally at work through modern life that the geography of the world had been changed to conform to it. We live in crowds. We get our living in crowds. We are amused in herds.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Moving-picture of Democracy”
  • The great man is the man who can get himself made and who will get himself made out of anything he finds at hand.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Study of the Genius of Democracy and of the Fears, Desires, and Expectations of the People”
  • We may have hell if we have war, and we may have hell if we have peace. But if we have no vision for what we do, we have hell anyway.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1918). “The Air-line to Liberty: A Prospectus for All Nations”
  • I am through generalizing about ideas apart from men who generate them. I am through writing books about the dead, or writing books about the living to the unborn (tucked away as Literature) or writing books about the unborn to the living (whiffed away as prophecy). I put up my life on advertising the living to the living, on making men of genius known to the people and interpreted to their time, that the time in which I live, may live face to face with its men of vision and that they may live face to face with one another.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1919). “The House of Twenty Seven Gardens”
  • Machinery makes men like itself.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1908). “Inspired Millionaires: An Interpretation of America”
  • Crowds speak in heroes.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Study of the Genius of Democracy and of the Fears, Desires, and Expectations of the People”
  • The new industrial world is coming to us one new free-born industry at a time.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1908). “Inspired Millionaires: A Forecast”
  • There is never any real danger in allowing a pedestal for a hero. He never has time to sit on it. One sees him always over and over again kicking his pedestal out from under him, and using it to batter a world with.

    Gerald Stanley Lee (1913). “Crowds: A Study of the Genius of Democracy and of the Fears, Desires, and Expectations of the People”
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