Elbert Hubbard's Scrap Book: Containing the Inspired and Inspiring Selections, Gathered During a Life Time of Discriminating Reading for His Own Use, Volume 1A collection of more than seven hundred quotations from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 45
Page 32
... believe that any one religion has the monopoly of goodness . For every man , that religion is good which makes him gentle , upright and kind . But to govern mankind is a difficult task . The ideal is very high and Men ! whose boast it ...
... believe that any one religion has the monopoly of goodness . For every man , that religion is good which makes him gentle , upright and kind . But to govern mankind is a difficult task . The ideal is very high and Men ! whose boast it ...
Page 38
... Believe that everything belongs somewhere ; each thing has its fitting and luminous place within this mosaic of human life . The Road is not open to those who with- draw the skirts of intolerance or lift the chin of pride . Rejecting ...
... Believe that everything belongs somewhere ; each thing has its fitting and luminous place within this mosaic of human life . The Road is not open to those who with- draw the skirts of intolerance or lift the chin of pride . Rejecting ...
Page 41
... BELIEVE emphatically in religion . theology , just as God made the country and man the town . I have the largest sympathy for religion , and the largest contempt I am capable of for a mis- child made more noble and good by a fear of ...
... BELIEVE emphatically in religion . theology , just as God made the country and man the town . I have the largest sympathy for religion , and the largest contempt I am capable of for a mis- child made more noble and good by a fear of ...
Page 42
... believe that the abuses to which he called attention in his prose plays would have been adequately at- tended to without his interference , he would no doubt have gladly left them alone . The same exigency drove William Morris in ...
... believe that the abuses to which he called attention in his prose plays would have been adequately at- tended to without his interference , he would no doubt have gladly left them alone . The same exigency drove William Morris in ...
Page 52
... believe- Preach about tomorrow , Preacher , Not about today ! ( Concluded on next page ) -Walt Whitman . endeavor as finally vain - this thinker , who can see every- thing from innu- merable sides and might have come to the con- clusion ...
... believe- Preach about tomorrow , Preacher , Not about today ! ( Concluded on next page ) -Walt Whitman . endeavor as finally vain - this thinker , who can see every- thing from innu- merable sides and might have come to the con- clusion ...
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ELBERT HUBBARD'S SCRAP BOOK: Containing the Inspired and Inspiring ... Elbert Hubbard Limited preview - 1999 |
Common terms and phrases
Abraham Lincoln beauty believe blood Correggio dark dead death delight divine dream earth Edwin Markham eternal evil eyes face father fear feel Finsteraarhorn flowers genius George Bernard Shaw George Eliot give glory hand happy head hear heart heaven Henry Ward Beecher honor hope hour human J. M. W. Turner labor Lady Hamilton Lamia laws liberty light live look Lord mankind Mary Baker Eddy matter means ment mind moral nation nature ness never night pain passions peace play pleasure Pontius Pilate poor race religion Robert Louis Stevenson seems slaves sleep sorrow soul speak spirit stand stars sweet tears tell things Thomas Paine thou thought thousand tion tree true truth virtue whole wind woman words youth Ꮽ Ꮽ