Archive

Quotes

Disease generally begins that equality which death completes.

—Samuel Johnson, 1750

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

—Charles Lamb, 1833

The diseases of the present have little in common with the diseases of the past save that we die of them.

—Agnes Repplier, 1929

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

—Cotton Mather, 1693

The beginning of health lies in knowing the disease.

—Miguel de Cervantes, 1615

He who dies of epidemic disease is a martyr.

—Muhammad, c. 630

What timid man does not avoid contact with the sick, fearing lest he contract a disease so near?

—Ovid, c. 10

It is strange indeed that the more we learn about how to build health, the less healthy Americans become.

—Adelle Davis, 1951

Health can make money, but money cannot make health.

—Maria Edgeworth, 1833

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

—Susan Sontag, 1963

Everyone who is sick is someone else’s patient zero.

—Leslie Jamison, 2020

Diseases are not immutable entities but dynamic social constructions that have biographies of their own.

—Robert P. Hudson, 1983

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

—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1830