Philip Yaffe is a former writer with The Wall Street Journal and international marketing communication consultant. Now semi-retired, he teaches courses in persuasive communication in Brussels, Belgium. Because his clients use English as a second or third language, his approach to writing and public speaking is somewhat different from other communication coaches. He is the author of In the “I” of the Storm: the Simple Secrets of Writing & Speaking (Almost) like a Professional. Contact: phil.yaffe@yahoo.com.
by Philip Yaffe
Part 15 of an occasional series
I am a collector of quotations. I have been ever since I learned how to write, I mean professionally, not in primary school.
I am particularly fond of what I like to call "pithy prose". These short quotations can cover an unlimited variety of subjects: love, religion, politics, human nature, etc. What unites them is their ability to say more in one or two sentences than could be expressed in a thousand-word treatise. It's like being able to pour a liter of liquid into a half-liter bottle.
They are superb examples of Mark Twain's famous dictum, "The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug."
In principle, all writers and public speakers are capable of producing pithy prose, but clearly some are better at it than others.
Any collection of pithy prose must necessarily be biased in terms of what it includes and excludes. I make no apologies for my selections, only for the hundreds of other meritorious quotations I had to leave out.
No one will agree with all these quotations; this was not their intention. You may even find some of them repugnant or outrageous. This was their intention.
We seldom learn anything of value from what we already agree with. Only those ideas that grate on our nerves can open our minds. As with oysters, irritation can produce pearls. So if anything you are about to read annoys or shocks you, try to think clearly and dispassionately about what it is saying. You will either be confirmed in your current belief or shaken into re-examining it.
Either way, you win!
This article is part of an occasional series. In each article, I will be offering more amusing, educating, and exasperating quotations to your judgment. But just to be certain that we agree on what we are talking about, here it is in a nutshell.
Pithy Prose: A quotation where at first you may not be quite certain what it means. But when you become certain, you become equally certain that it couldn't have been said better any other way. In short, big ideas in small packages.
If you have a better definition of pithy prose, please contact me. I would love to hear it.
Who Is Friedrich Schiller?
Johann Christoph Friedrich Schiller (1759 – 1805) was a major German dramatist, poet, and essayist. Influenced by the philosophy of Emmanuel Kant, he developed his esthetic theories, stressing the sublime and the creative powers of humanity. His poem "Ode to Joy" (1785) was used by Ludwig van Beethoven in the final movement of his "Ninth Symphony" (1824). Today, "Ode to Joy" is the stirring anthem of the 27-nation European Union.
- A merely fallen enemy may rise again, but the reconciled one is truly vanquished.
- A noble heart will always capitulate to reason.
- Be noble minded! Our own heart, and not other men's opinions of us, forms our true honor.
7. Dare to err and to dream. Deep meaning often lies in childish plays.
8. Disappointments are to the soul what a thunderstorm is to the air.
9. Every true genius is bound to be naive.
10. Grace is the beauty of form under the influence of freedom.
11. Great souls suffer in silence.
12. Happy he who learns to bear what he cannot change.
13. He who considers too much will perform little.
14. He who has done his best for his own time has lived for all times.
15. It hinders the creative work of the mind if the intellect examines too closely the ideas as they pour in.
16. It is criminal to steal a purse, daring to steal a fortune, a mark of greatness to steal a crown. The blame diminishes as the guilt increases.
17. It is difficult to discriminate the voice of truth from amid the clamor raised by heated partisans.
18. It is easy to give advice from a port of safety.
19. It is often wise to reveal that which cannot be concealed for long.
20. Live with your century, but do not be its creature.
21. Lose not yourself in a far off time, seize the moment that is thine.
22. Man only plays when in the full meaning of the word he is a man, and he is only completely a man when he plays.
23. Mankind is made great or little by its own will.
24. No emperor has the power to dictate to the heart.
25. Nothing leads to good that is not natural.
26. Opposition always inflames the enthusiast, never converts him.
27. Peace is rarely denied to the peaceful.
28. Power is the most persuasive rhetoric.
29. That which is as universal as death must be a benefit.
30. The jest loses its point when he who makes it is the first to laugh.
31. The strong man is strongest when alone.
32. The voice of the majority is no proof of justice.
33. There is room in the smallest cottage for a happy loving pair.
34. They would need to be already wise in order to love wisdom.
35. To gain a crown by fighting is great, to reject it divine.
36. To save all we must risk all.
37. Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing.
38. Will it, and set to work briskly.
39. Worthless is the nation that does not gladly stake its all on its honor.
Previously in this series
Part 1: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Mark Twain
Part 2: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Oscar Wilde
Part 3: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of People Named "W"
Part 4: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Anatole France
Part 5: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Ambrose Bierce
Part 6: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Friedrich Nietzsche
Part 7: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Anon
Part 8: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of People Named "H"
Part 9: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Johann Goethe
Part 10: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Eric Hoffer
Part 11: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Blaise Pascal
Part 12: Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Robert Frost
Part 13: More Wit & Wisdom of Anon
Part 14: The Wit & Wisdom of Elbert Hubbard
Philip Yaffe is a former reporter/feature writer with The Wall Street Journal and a marketing communication consultant. He currently teaches a course in good writing and good speaking in Brussels, Belgium. His recently published book In the “I” of the Storm: the Simple Secrets of Writing & Speaking (Almost) like a Professional is available from Story Publishers in Ghent, Belgium (storypublishers.be) and Amazon (amazon.com).
For further information, contact:
Philip Yaffe
Brussels, Belgium
Tel: +32 (0)2 660 0405
Email: phil.yaffe@yahoo.com,phil.yaffe@gmail.com
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A




Je vais dire à tout le monde avec fierté que Mr.Afzal Shauq, et le mondialement célèbre poète wisher paix est ma personnalité idéale Favor...Thylane
By: afzal shauq | 20/12/2009Je vais dire à tout le monde avec fierté que Mr.Afzal Shauq, et le mondialement célèbre poète wisher paix est ma personnalité idéale Favoris en tant que poète et mon seul professeur meilleur trop.... Thylane Loubry de Sète France
In Quran: do not defame one another by a detested Nickname
By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 19/12/2009The Quran says: do not defame one another; nor insult one another by nicknames, do not call another by a nickname which he or she detests.
In Bible versus Quran if you marry foreign women, you break faith with God
By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 13/12/2009The Bible says that one of the sons of Elam said unto Ezra: we have trespassed against our God; we have been unfaithful to our God; by marrying foreign women from the peoples around us. In the entire Quran, the foreign and/or the strange woman is not mentioned therein.
Witty Quote Book
By: Brandon Huber | 03/12/2009Dec 3, 2009 CAZENOVIA, N.Y – In recent years, new and innovative publishing industry business models have granted numerous opportunities for writers previously shut out by the iron doors of mainstream book publishers. Now BookCollaborative.com, an online community of artists, advocates and enthusiasts is employing some of these same strategies, including print-on-demand, to help visual artists get more exposure in the publishing world.
In Bible versus Quran: God makes the leaders of the earth stagger like drunkards
By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 30/11/2009The Bible says that the Lord God deprives the leaders of the earth of their reason and He makes them grope in the dark without light, and stagger like a drunken man. Job did not say such things therein in the Quran.
In Bible versus Quran: God said unto Jacob; why do you ask my name?
By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 12/11/2009Following wrestling with each other, God said unto Jacob; why do you ask my name? Then God blessed him there; this is what the Bible says. This is what the Bible states. This story is not found therein in the Noble Quran.
SMS Jokes to Cheer You Up
By: Ryan Zamora | 30/10/2009It is scientifically proven that in order to remain healthy, both physically as well as mentally, laughter along with active humorous personality is best medication ever and there is not any easier way to make you smile than jokes and funny sayings. Jokes can be explained as tiny stories that end with a laughably startling speech. Jokes give us our daily dosage of laughter and bring happiness and joy in our life. So to keep your intelligence fit and healthy read funny SMS jokes. ...
ABOUT LIFE
By: DR.R.SRINIVASAN | 21/10/2009Life is the Balancesheet of assets and liabilities
Questions of faith I am dying to have answered
By: Philip Yaffe | 11/07/2009 | ReligionAuthor Philip Yaffe, who is now approaching the biblical three score and ten years of age, is still seeking answers to some fundamental questions, notable regarding what appear to be factual and moral discrepancies in the Bible. Could someone help him find the answers?
Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Gertrude Stein
By: Philip Yaffe | 13/06/2009 | QuotesAmerican writer Gertrude Stein spent most of her life in France. She wrote novels, plays, stories, libretti, and poems, but is best remembered for a line from a 1913 poem, "A rose is a rose is a rose." She was noted for her sometimes arcane observations formulated in "pithy prose". These are quotations that say more in one or two sentences than could be expressed in a thousand-word treatise. They are like pouring a liter of liquid into a half-liter bottle.
How an ugly duckling became a swan
By: Philip Yaffe | 13/06/2009 | Non-FictionOver the past 40-plus years as a journalist and marketing communication consultant, I have frequently been told that I am an exceptionally good writer by teachers, friends, colleagues, and clients. But I wasn’t always a good writer; in fact, I used be a very bad one. So what happened to bring about this monumental change?
Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Simone Veil
By: Philip Yaffe | 03/06/2009 | QuotesSimone Veil (born July 13, 1927), a survivor of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, has served French Minister of Health and President of the European Parliament. She is a survivor of the Auschwitz concentration. She is particularly noted for his insightful observations formulated in "pithy prose". These are quotations that say more in one or two sentences than could be expressed in a thousand-word treatise. They are like pouring a liter of liquid into a half-liter bottle.
Ghost-writing: A half-century tribute to John F. Kennedy
By: Philip Yaffe | 03/06/2009 | Article MarketingIt hard to realize that the 50th anniversary of the election of John Fitzgerald Kennedy in November 1960 is rapidly approaching. It is equally hard to realize that the 50th anniversary of JFK's death in November 1963 is also now rapidly approaching. The recent election of Barack Obama has stirred strong memories of this short, dramatic period in world history.
Public speaking: Why using the right word is not always the right thing to do
By: Philip Yaffe | 20/05/2009 | Self ImprovementMark Twain famously said: "The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug." Of course he was absolutely right -- and partially wrong. In speaking, using exactly the right word is crucial. In speaking, it is important, but not crucial. Too much concern about finding the lightning rather than the lightning bug can be seriously detrimental.
Pithy Prose: The Wit & Wisdom of Friedrich Schiller
By: Philip Yaffe | 20/05/2009 | QuotesFriedrich Schiller (1759 - 1805) was a leading German dramatist, poet, and essayist. His poem "Ode to Joy", which Beethoven set to music, is today the anthem of the 27-nation European Union. Schiller was particularly noted for his keen observations formulated in "pithy prose". These are quotations that say more in one or two sentences than could be expressed in a thousand-word treatise. They are like pouring a liter of liquid into a half-liter bottle.
How a Polish immigrant in the USA directed a major victory over hepatitis B
By: Philip Yaffe | 20/05/2009 | HealthMedical research may seem a rather dull, tedious occupation; however, some of the people who engage in it have extraordinary tales to tell. Dr. Wolf Szmuness, who helped develop the first hepatitis B vaccine, is an outstanding example. The story of how he came to New York City from Poland to carry out his life-saving work reads like high fiction.