Archive

Quotes

Disease generally begins that equality which death completes.

—Samuel Johnson, 1750

The best quarantine is hygiene.

—Richard D. Arnold, 1871

How sickness enlarges the dimension of a man’s self to himself! He is his own exclusive object.

—Charles Lamb, 1833

He who dies of epidemic disease is a martyr.

—Muhammad, c. 630

Ours is an age which consciously pursues health, and yet only believes in the reality of sickness.

—Susan Sontag, 1963

Health care delivery is one of the tragedies still in America.

—Jewel Plummer Cobb, 1989

Men take diseases, one of another. Therefore let men take heed of their company.

—William Shakespeare, c. 1600

If they prescribe a lot of remedies for some sickness or other, it means that the sickness is incurable.

—Anton Chekhov, 1904

’Tis the destroyer, or the devil, that scatters plagues about the world.

—Cotton Mather, 1693

The sick man is the parasite of society.

—Friedrich Nietzsche, 1889

I have learned much from disease which life could never have taught me anywhere else.

—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1830

Health in all lands is among the indispensable guarantees of human progress.

—Helen Keller, 1936

The passion for setting people right is in itself an afflictive disease.

—Marianne Moore, 1935