ELBERT HUBBARD'S SCRAP BOOK: Containing the Inspired and Inspiring Selections Gathered During a Life Time of Discriminating Reading for His Own UseNo man is worth his salt who is not ready at all times to risk his body, to risk his well-being, to risk his life, in a great cause.-Theodore Roosevelt Filled with some of the best words of wisdom ever written, this little volume is sure to uplift any reader. Elbert Hubbard spent much of his life carefully collecting significant quotes from throughout history. He loved searching for and finding new material to add to his scrapbook for personal inspiration. After his death, this richly developed scrapbook was published and can now be relished by readers everywhere.Here one can read pulse-quickening quotes from people like Abraham Lincoln, Rudyard Kipling, Dante, Leo Tolstoy, and many, many more. People from every profession and nationality have been quoted at their best, and these quotes have been carefully compiled for the reader's inspiration and personal growth. This unique book will furnish readers with a little genius for each day, and will inevitably make them better for it. |
From inside the book
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... do not comprehend that in punishing us, in overturning our plans and causing us suffering, He is doing all this to deliver us, to open the Infinite to us.—Victor Hugo. later years; for the originals can not last, andthe copies.
... do not comprehend that in punishing us, in overturning our plans and causing us suffering, He is doing all this to deliver us, to open the Infinite to us.—Victor Hugo. later years; for the originals can not last, andthe copies.
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... suffering in orderto enjoya miserable tuppence worth of social position, piety, comfort, and domestic affection, of which he, too, is often ironically defrauded by Fate.—George Bernard Shaw. THE. tradition of the stage is a tradition of ...
... suffering in orderto enjoya miserable tuppence worth of social position, piety, comfort, and domestic affection, of which he, too, is often ironically defrauded by Fate.—George Bernard Shaw. THE. tradition of the stage is a tradition of ...
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... suffering humanity. The one would sacrifice hundreds of thousands of lives to the ambition of a single individual; the other places a single human life above all victories. The law of which we are the instruments essays even in the ...
... suffering humanity. The one would sacrifice hundreds of thousands of lives to the ambition of a single individual; the other places a single human life above all victories. The law of which we are the instruments essays even in the ...
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... suffering to thousands of human beings—by the terror of the gallows; by the misfortune of thousands stifling within prison walls; by the fears inspired by millions of soldiers and guardians of civilization, torn from their homes and ...
... suffering to thousands of human beings—by the terror of the gallows; by the misfortune of thousands stifling within prison walls; by the fears inspired by millions of soldiers and guardians of civilization, torn from their homes and ...
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... suffer, seeing all the cruelty—it makes things look different “The Chairman told you something out of the Christian Bible. Well, we Jews have got a story too—perhaps it's inyour Bible—about Mosesand his people inEgypt. He'd been brought ...
... suffer, seeing all the cruelty—it makes things look different “The Chairman told you something out of the Christian Bible. Well, we Jews have got a story too—perhaps it's inyour Bible—about Mosesand his people inEgypt. He'd been brought ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham Lincoln allthe andthe aslave beauty become believe character Correggio dark dead death delight divine dream earth Edgar Lee Masters eternal evil eyes face fear feel Finsteraarhorn flowers friends genius George Eliot give God’s hand happy heart heaven honor hope hour human infinite inthe isan isthe itis labor Lady Hamilton Lamia laws liberty light live look Lord Lord Byron man’s mankind Marsouins matter means Michelangelo mind moral nation nature Nature’s never night ofthe one’s onthe ourselves passions peace pleasure Pontius Pilate poor race religion Rembrandt remember Robert Louis Stevenson seems silence sleep sorrow soul speak spirit stars sweet tears tell thatI things thou thought thousand tobe tothe true truth virtue Vitellius whole William Wordsworth woman words youth