45 quotes found
Author · English · 1867–1931
English author (1867–1931)
“The price of justice is eternal publicity.”
“Mother is far too clever to understand anything she does not like.”
“It is easier to go down a hill than up, but the view is from the top.”
“No matter what has happened always behave as if nothing had happened.”
“If you've ever really been poor you remain poor at heart all your life.”
“Ardour in well-doing is a misleading and a treacherous thing. It cries out loudly for employment; you can't satisfy it at first; it wants more and more; it is eager to move mountains and divert the...”
“The chief beauty about timeis that you cannot waste it in advance.The next year, the next day, the next hour are lying ready for you,as perfect, as unspoiled,as if you had never wasted or misapplie...”
“Its language is a language which the soul alone understands, but which the soul can never translate. ”
“There can be no knowledge without emotion. We may be aware of a truth, yet until we have felt its force, it is not ours. To the cognition of the brain must be added the experience of the soul.”
“You probably think of the orchestra as a heterogeneous mass of instrumentsproducing a confused agreeable massof sound. You do not listen for details because you have never trained your ears to list...”
“The proper, wise balancingof one's whole life may depend upon thefeasibility of a cup of tea at an unusual hour.”
“Money is far commoner than time. When one reflects, one perceives that money is just about the commonest thing there is.”
“without the power to concentrate thatis to say, without the power to dictate to the brain its task and to ensure obedience true life is impossible. Mind control is the first element of a full exist...”
“It is difficult to make a reputation, but is even more difficult seriously to mar a reputation once properly made --- so faithful is the public.”
“The man who begins to go to bed forty minutes before he opens his bedroom door is bored; that is to say, he is not living.”
“And since nothing whatever happens to us outside our own brain; since nothing hurt us or gives us pleasure except within the brain, the supreme importance of being able to control what goes on in t...”
“Essential characteristic of the really great novelist: a Christ-like all-embracing compassion.”
“Happiness includes chiefly the idea of satisfaction after full honest effort. No one can possibly be satisfied and no one can be happy who feels that in some paramount affairs he failed to take up ...”
“To the artist is sometimes granted a sudden, transient insight which serves in this matter for experience. A flash, and where previously the brain held a dead fact, the soul grasps a living truth! ...”
“Any change, even a change for the better, is always accompanied by drawbacks and discomforts.”
“A man of sixty has spent twenty years in bed and over three years in eating.”
“Any change even a change for the better is always accompanied by drawbacks and discomforts.”