Top 18 Quotes & Sayings by Lillian Smith

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Lillian Smith.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Lillian Smith

Lillian Eugenia Smith was a writer and social critic of the Southern United States, known for both her non-fiction and fiction works, including the best-selling novel Strange Fruit (1944). Smith was a white woman who openly embraced controversial positions on matters of race and gender equality. She was a southern liberal who was unafraid to criticize segregation and to work toward the dismantling of Jim Crow laws at a time when such actions virtually guaranteed social ostracism.

Faith and doubt both are needed - not as antagonists, but working side by side to take us around the unknown curve.
When you stop learning, stop listening, stop looking and asking questions, always new questions, then it is time to die.
Rich folks always talk hard times. — © Lillian Smith
Rich folks always talk hard times.
Man, born of woman, has found it a hard thing to forgive her for giving him birth. The patriarchal protest against the ancient matriarch has borne strange fruit through the years.
The lack of belief is a defect that ought to be concealed when it cannot be overcome.
We need not feel ashamed of flirting with the zodiac. The zodiac is well worth flirting with.
The human heart dares not stay away too long from that which hurt it most. There is a return journey to anguish that few of us are released from making.
To believe in something not yet proved and to underwrite it with our lives: it is the only way we can leave the future open.
Education is a private matter between the person and the world of knowledge and experience, and has little to do with school or college.
The point of life is to find the delicate equilibrium between dream and reality.
To find the point where hypothesis and fact meet; the delicate equilibrium between dream and reality; the place where fantasy and earthly things are metamorphosed into a work of art; the hour when faith in the future becomes knowledge of the past; to lay down one's power for others in need; to shake off the old ordeal and get ready for the new; to question, knowing that never can the full answer be found; to accept uncertainties quietly, even our incomplete knowledge of God; this is what man's journey is about, I think.
I broke every barrier I could to see things as they are.
None but the weak crave to be better than. Strong men are satisfied with their own strength.
For men tied fast to the absolute, bled of their differences, drained of their dreams by authoritarian leeches until nothing but pulp is left, become a massive, sick Thing whose sheer weight is used ruthlessly by ambitious men. Here is the real enemy of the people: our own selves dehumanized into the masses. And where is the David who can slay this giant?
Belief in Some One's right to punish you is the fate of all children in Judaic-Christian culture. But nowhere else, perhaps, have the rich seed-beds of Western homes found such a growing climate for guilt as is produced in the South by the combination of a warm moist evangelism and racial segregation.
Segregation is evil; there is no pattern of life which can dehumanize men as can the way of segregation.
To believe in something not yet proved and to underwrite it with our lives: it is the only way we can leave the future open. Man, surrounded by facts, permitting himself no surmise, no intuitive flash, no great hypothesis, no risk, is in a locked cell. Ignorance cannot seal the mind and imagination more surely.
The question in crisis or ordeal is not: Are you going to be an extremist? The question is: What kind of extremist are you going to be? — © Lillian Smith
The question in crisis or ordeal is not: Are you going to be an extremist? The question is: What kind of extremist are you going to be?
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