Ralph Waldo Emerson Expression Quotations
Ralph Waldo Emerson Quotes about:
Expression Quotes from:
- All Expression Quotes
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Henri Matisse
- John Ruskin
- Oscar Wilde
- Deepak Chopra
- Hans Hofmann
- Bob Dylan
- Rick Riordan
- Ai Weiwei
- Bruce Lee
- Eckhart Tolle
- Henry David Thoreau
- Pope Benedict Xvi
- Erich Fromm
- Henri Cartier Bresson
- Rabindranath Tagore
- Robert Henri
- Soren Kierkegaard
- Winston Churchill
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Insane Quotes
Sentimentalists ... adopt whatever merit is in good repute, and almost make it hateful with their praise. The warmer their expressions, the colder we feel.... Cure the drunkard, heal the insane, mollify the homicide, civilize the Pawnee, but what lessons can be devised for the debauchee of sentiment?
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Play Quotes
There are faces so fluid with expression, so flushed and rippled by the play of thought, that we can hardly find what the mere features really are. When the delicious beauty of lineament loses its power, it is because a more delicious beauty has appeared, that an interior and durable form has been disclosed.
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Individuality Quotes
Every individual nature has its own beauty. One is struck in every company, at every fireside, with the riches of nature, when he hears so many new tones, all musical, sees in each person original manners, which have a proper and peculiar charm, and reads new expressions of face. He perceives that nature has laid for each the foundations of a divine building, if the soul will build thereon.
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Skills Quotes
Criticism is infested with the cant of materialism, which assumes that manual skill and activity is the first merit of all men, and disparages such as say and do not, overlooking the fact, that some men, namely, poets, are natural sayers, sent into the world to the end of expression, and confounds them with those whose province is action, but who quit to imitate the sayers.
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Careers Quotes
A third felicity of age is that it has found expression. The youth suffers not only from ungratified desires, but from powers untried, and from a picture in his mind of a career which has as yet no outward reality. He is tormented with the want of correspondence between things and thoughts.
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