Janet Erskine Stuart quotes:

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  • All sorts of spiritual gifts come through privations, if they are accepted.

  • Simplicity of life is an essential for greatness of life.

  • You must grow like a tree, not like a mushroom.

  • The great thing and the hard thing is to stick to thing when you have outlived the first interest and not yet the second which comes with a sort of mastery.

  • The hard thing is to stick to things when you have outlived the first interest, and not yet got the second which comes with a sort of mastery.

  • Do not wait for ideal circumstances, nor the best opportunities; they will never come.

  • It is not so much what we say or do that educates; what really educates is who we are.

  • Egypt is full of dreams, mysteries, memories.

  • In no order of things is adolescence the time of the simple life.

  • To aim at the best and to remain essentially ourselves is one and the same thing.

  • There ought to be so many who are excellent, there are so few.

  • isn't it wonderful that two of the most sacred and symbolic plants, the olive and the vine, live on almost nothing, a terrace of limestone, sun and rain ...

  • The great thing and the hard thing is to stick to things when you have outlived the first interest, and not yet got the second, which comes with a sort of mastery.

  • You must grow like a tree, not like a mushroom

  • This world is not the sum total of God's resources -- on the contrary, it is only the 'dream,' the probation, the prelude of the true world, the true life.

  • The way to do much in a short time is to love much. People will do great things if they are stirred with enthusiasm and love.

  • It is better to begin a great work than to finish a small one.

  • I wish that Christmas may be happy and heavenly, and the holidays glow with the gifts of the inner life that God will give to each one.

  • Children with heaven in their eyes and an air of mystery about them, meditative and quiet, friends of God, friends of all, loved and loving and asking very little from the outer world, because they have more than enough within. They are classed as the dreamers, but they are really seers. They do not ask much and they do not need much beyond a reverent guardianship and to be let alone and allowed to grow; they will find this way for they are 'taught of God.

  • We must never try to escape the obligation of living at our best.

  • Every friendship with God and every love between Him and a soul is the only one of its kind.

  • We know in whom we believe, and that, so long as we trust God utterly, all must come right.

  • Love gives a sense of rest.

  • We can sanctify ourselves in common things. We must do so.

  • What a misfortune it would be, religiously speaking and educationally speaking, if we could only work happily with those who saw things as we do.

  • Effective learning means arriving at new power, and the consciousness of new power is one of the most stimulating things in life.

  • Our spiritual life is a venture in the dark, between the soul and God, and no spiritual life is worth the name unless it is so.

  • Are democracy and poetry exclusive of one another and, if so, why?

  • ... life is a solitude ...

  • it is in middle age that the interest of a life attains its highest point.

  • The less event and action there is in a scene the more I can enter into it.

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