Thomas Wentworth Higginson quotes:

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  • What are Raphael's Madonnas but the shadow of a mother's love, fixed in permanent outline forever?

  • It is no discredit to Walt Whitman that he wrote Leaves of Grass, only that he did not burn it afterwards.

  • There is no defense against adverse fortune which is so effectual as an habitual sense of humor.

  • Nothing can hide from me the conviction that an immortal soul needs for its sustenance something more than visiting, and gardening, and novel-reading, and crochet-needle, and the occasional manufacture of sponge cake.

  • Originality is simply a pair of fresh eyes....

  • All... religions show the same disparity between belief and practice, and each is safe till it tries to exclude the rest.

  • Lavish thousands of dollars on your baby clothes, and after all the child is prettiest when every garment is laid aside. That becoming nakedness, at least, may adorn the chubby darling of the poorest home.

  • Only yonder magnificent pine-tree... holds her unchanging beauty throughout the year, like her half-brother, the ocean, whose voice she shares; and only marks the flowing of her annual tide of life by the new verdure that yearly submerges all trace of last year's ebb.

  • An easy thing, O Power Divine, To thank thee for these gifts of Thine, For summer's sunshine, winter's snow, For hearts that kindle thoughts that glow...

  • Fields are won by those who believe in the winning.

  • Life is as inexorable as the sea.

  • Noble discontent is the path to heaven.

  • Great men are rarely isolated mountain-peaks; they are the summits of ranges.

  • After all, when a thought takes one's breath away, a lesson on grammar seems an impertinence.

  • After all, when a thought takes one's breath away, a lesson on grammar seems an impertinence. As Ruskin wrote in his earlier and better days, "No weight nor mass nor beauty of execution can outweigh one grain or fragment of thought.

  • All... religions show the same disparity between belief and practice, and each is safe till it tries to exclude the rest. Test each sect by its best or its worst as you will, by its high-water mark of virtue or its low-water mark of vice. But falsehood begins when you measure the ebb of any other religion against the flood-tide of your own. There is a noble and a base side to every history.

  • Character shows itself apart from genius as a special thing. The first point of measurement of any man is that of quality.

  • Do not waste a minute - not a second - in trying to demonstrate to others the merits of your performance. If your work does not vindicate itself, you cannot vindicate it.

  • Genius is lonely without the surrounding presence of a people to inspire it.

  • How many lessons of faith and beauty we should lose, if there were no winter in our year!

  • How much that the world calls selfishness is only generosity with narrow walls,--a too exclusive solicitude to maintain a wife in luxury, or make one's children rich.

  • If I were to choose among all gifts and qualities that which, on the whole, makes life pleasantest, I should select the love of children. No circumstance can render this world wholly a solitude to one who has this possession

  • In an audience of rough people a generous sentiment always brings down the house. In the tumult of war both sides applaud a heroic deed.

  • In ancient Boeotia brides were carried home in vehicles whose wheels were burned at the door, in token, that they would never again be needed.

  • In our methodical American life, we still recognize some magic in summer. Most persons at least resign themselves to being decently happy in June. They accept June. They compliment its weather. They complain of the earlier months as cold, and so spend them in the city; and they complain of the later months as hot, and so refrigerate themselves on some barren sea-coast. God offers us yearly a necklace of twelve pearls; most men choose the fairest, label it June, and cast the rest away.

  • Many persons sigh for death when it seems far off, but the inclination vanishes when the boat upsets, or the locomotive runs off the track, or the measles set it.

  • That genius is feeble which cannot hold its own before the masterpieces of the world.

  • The bee himself did not evade the schoolboy more than she evaded me, and even at this day I still stand somewhat bewildered, like the boy.

  • The coarsest father gains a new impulse to labor from the moment of his baby's birth; he scarcely sees it when awake, and yet it is with him all the time. Every stroke he strikes is for his child. New social aims, new moral motives, come vaguely up to him.

  • The Englishman's strong point is his vigorous insularity; that of the American his power of adaptation. Each of these attitudes has its perils. The Englishman stands firmly on his feet, but he who merely does this never advances. The American's disposition is to step forward even at the risk of a fall.

  • The first wild-flower of the year is like land after sea.

  • The most fertile soil does not necessarily produce the most abundant harvest. It is the use we make of our faculties which renders them valuable.

  • The test of an author is not to be found merely in the number of his phrases that pass current in the corner of newspapers... but in the number of passages that have really taken root in younger minds.

  • There are no days in the whole round year more delicious than those which often come to us in the latter half of April... The sun trembles in his own soft rays... The grass in the meadow seems all to have grown green since yesterday... though there is warmth enough for a sense of luxury, there is coolness enough for exertion.

  • To be really cosmopolitan a man must be at home even in his own country.

  • Travelers find virtue in a seeming minority in all other countries, and forget that they have left it in a minority at home.

  • What instruction the baby brings to the mother!

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