American minister and writer (1862–1944) From Wikiquote, the free quote compendium
Gerald Stanley Lee (1862 – 1944) was an American Congregational clergyman and the author of numerous books and essays.
Crowds (1913)
I have seen that Man moves over with each new generation into a bigger body, more awful, more reverent and more free than he has had before.
Book II, Chapter III.
Business today consists in persuading crowds.
Book II, Chapter V.
It is never the machines that are dead. It is only the mechanically-minded men that are dead.
Book II, Chapter V.
Machinery is the subconscious mind of the world.
Book II, Chapter VIII.
A man's success in business today turns upon his power of getting people to believe he has something that they want.
Book II, Chapter IX.
The great man is the man who can get himself made and who will get himself made out of anything he finds at hand.
Book II, Chapter XV.
What was invented two thousand years ago was the spirit of Christianity.
Book II, Chapter XVIII.
Turning the other cheek is a kind of moral jiu-jitsu.
Book IV, Chapter X.
Crowds speak in heroes.
Book IV, Chapter III.
America is a tune. It must be sung together.
Book V, Part III, Chapter XII.
There is never any real danger in allowing a pedestal for a hero. He never has time to sit on it. One sees him always over and over again kicking his pedestal out from under him, and using it to batter a world with.
Book V, Part III, Chapter XVI.
It is idle to say you are only fining a man a farthing, if he chooses to say it is his lucky farthing. It is waste of breath to call a thing a rag when he calls it a flag. This is the fallacy of those who, like Mr. Gerald Stanley Lee, the able American critic, imagine that a war must be a misunderstanding, which social intercourse and explanation would have set right.
G. K. Chesterton, "Is the War Just a Misunderstanding" (January 29, 1916), reported in The collected works of G. K. Chesterton: Volume 30 (1988), p. 366.