Top 16 Quotes & Sayings by Henry R. Luce

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American editor Henry R. Luce.
Last updated on April 15, 2025.
Henry R. Luce

Henry Robinson Luce was an American magazine magnate who founded Time, Life,Fortune, and Sports Illustrated magazine. He has been called "the most influential private citizen in the America of his day".

Publishing is a business, but journalism never was and is not essentially a business. Nor is it a profession.
To see, and to show, is the mission now undertaken by Life.
I suggest that what we want to do is not to leave to posterity a great institution, but to leave behind a great tradition of journalism ably practiced in our time.
Business, more than any other occupation, is a continual dealing with the future; it is a continual calculation, an instinctive exercise in foresight.
Time should make enemies and Life should make friends.
I became a journalist to come as close as possible to the heart of the world.
Show me a man who claims he is objective and I'll show you a man with illusions.
There are men who can write poetry, and there are men who can read balance sheets. The men who can read balance sheets cannot write. — © Henry R. Luce
There are men who can write poetry, and there are men who can read balance sheets. The men who can read balance sheets cannot write.
Journalism is the art of collecting varying kinds of information (commonly called news) which a few people possess and of transmitting it to a much larger number of people who are supposed to desire to share it.
I am all for titillating trivialities. I am all for the epic touch. I could almost say that everything in Time, should be either titillating or epic or starkly, supercurtly factual.
Of necessity, we made the discovery that it is easier to turn poets into business journalists than to turn bookkeepers into writers. — © Henry R. Luce
Of necessity, we made the discovery that it is easier to turn poets into business journalists than to turn bookkeepers into writers.
To see life. To see the world. To watch the faces of the poor, and the gestures of the proud. To see strange things. Machines, armies, multitudes, and shadows in the jungle. To see, and to take pleasure in seeing. To see and be instructed. To see and be amazed. (Describing the powers of photography; written for the launch of LIFE Magazine, 1936.)
I urge each of you to think seriously about the vision Dr. Daniel puts forth and think about what you can do to make it happen.
The world of the 20th century, if it is to come to life in any viability of health and vigor, must be to a significant degree an American century.
Not much longer shall we have time for reading lessons of the past. An inexorable present calls us to the defense of a great future.
It's easier to teach a poet how to read a balance sheet than it is to teach an accountant how to write.
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