Table of Contents

“Z” Quotations

ZEAL

(see also EMOTION and MODERATION and PASSION and ZEALOTS & ZEALOTRY)

Addison introduced the thought by writing: “We should be careful not to overshoot ourselves in the pursuits even of virtue.”

QUOTE NOTE: Bierce is playing off “Pride goeth before a fall,” an English proverb derived from the biblical passage: “Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall” (Book of Proverbs: 16:18)

Justice Brandeis preceded this famous judicial opinion by writing: “Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the Government’s purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers.”

QUOTE NOTE: An earlier translation of the passage went this way: “As zeal is an ardor and vehemence of love it stands in need of guidance; otherwise it would exceed the limits of moderation and discretion.”

ERROR ALERT: A number of web sites, including Wikiquote, mistakenly attribute this quotation to English Biologist T. H. Huxley. In Gnomologia, Fuller also wrote on the subject: “Zeal, when it is a virtue, is a dangerous one.”

QUOTE NOTE: Within fifty years, this sentiment from Archbisop Tillotson had become proverbial. In Gnomologia (1732), a collection of English proverbs by Thomas Fuller, M.D., it is presented this way: “Zeal is fit only for wise men, but is found mostly in fools.”

ZEALOTS & ZEALOTRY

(see also EXTREMISM and FANATICISM & FANATICS and ISIS and JIHADISM and MODERATION and POLITICS and RELIGION and TERRORISM and ZEAL)

Harris continued: “This assertion is what plunged the world into the bloodiest of wars in the past, and might well do so again if the zealots had their way.”

ERROR ALERT: For nearly two centuries, biographies and historical works have mistakenly presented the quotation this way: “A single zealot may become persecutor, and better men be his victims.”

ZEN

(see also BUDDHISM and CONTEMPLATION and ENLIGHTENMENT and MEDITATION and SPIRITUALITY and YOGA)

About Zen, Koestler continued: “Its teaching is transmitted mainly in the form of parables as ambiguous as the pebbles in the rock-garden which symbolize now a mountain, now a fleeting tiger. When a disciple asks ‘What is Zen?’, the master’s traditional answer is ‘Three pounds of flax’ or ‘A decaying noodle’ or ‘A toilet stick’ or a whack on the pupil’s head.”

ZEST

(see also ENTHUSIASM and VITALITY)

King preceded the thought by writing: “Courage faces fear and thereby masters it; cowardice represses fear and is thereby mastered by it. ”

ZINGERS

(see also ABUSE and INSULTS and INVECTIVE and NAME-CALLING and PUT-DOWNS and REPARTEE and RUDENESS and SMEARING & SMEARS and TAUNTING & TAUNTS)

ZIPPER

ZOMBIES

(see also BOGEYMEN and FIENDS and GHOULS and MONSTERS)

Fromm continued: “I mean also the company of zombies, of people whose soul is dead, although their body is alive, of people whose thoughts and conversation are trivial; who chatter instead of talk, and who assert cliché opinions instead of thinking.”

ZOO

(see also ANIMALS and ANIMAL RIGHTS and CAGE and CAPTIVITY and NATURE and ZOOLOGY & ZOOLOGISTS)

Gordimer introduced the thought by writing: “The caged eagle become a metaphor for all forms of isolation, the ultimate in imprisonment.” Most presentations of this quotation use the word becomes, but Gordimer wrote become in the original.

ZOOLOGY & ZOOLOGISTS

(see also ANIMALS and SCIENCE & SCIENTISTS)

ZUCCHINI

(see also FRUITS and GARDENS & GARDENING and VEGETABLES)

Kijewski continued: “Tomatoes are the runner-up to zucchini in the no-talent, guaranteed-gratification vegetable department.”