Thomas Carlyle Wise Quotations
Thomas Carlyle Quotes about:
Wise Quotes from:
- All Wise Quotes
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- William Shakespeare
- Confucius
- Benjamin Franklin
- Henry David Thoreau
- Samuel Johnson
- Euripides
- Plato
- Alexander Pope
- Francois De La Rochefoucauld
- J K Rowling
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Charles Caleb Colton
- Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
- Francis Bacon
- Thomas Carlyle
- Baltasar Gracian
- J R R Tolkien
- Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Aristotle
-
-
-
Mean Quotes
We are to take no counsel with flesh and blood; give ear to no vain cavils, vain sorrows and wishes; to know that we know nothing, that the worst and cruelest to our eyes is not what it seems, that we have to receive whatsoever befalls us as sent from God above, and say, "It is good and wise,--God is great! Though He slay me, yet I trust in Him." Islam means, in its way, denial of self. This is yet the highest wisdom that heaven has revealed to our earth.
-
-
-
-
-
Lying Quotes
It is no very good symptom, either of nations or individuals, that they deal much in vaticination. Happy men are full of the present, for its bounty suffices them; and wise men also, for its duties engage them. Our grand business undoubtedly is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what clearly lies at hand.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Distance Quotes
We were wise indeed, could we discern truly the signs of our own time; and by knowledge of its wants and advantages, wisely adjust our own position in it. Let us, instead of gazing idly into the obscure distance, look calmly around us, for a little, on the perplexed scene where we stand. Perhaps, on a more serious inspection, something of its perplexity will disappear, some of its distinctive characters and deeper tendencies more clearly reveal themselves; whereby our own relations to it, our own true aims and endeavors in it, may also become clearer.
-
-
-
-
Science Quotes
The errors of a wise man are literally more instructive than the truths of a fool. The wise man travels in lofty, far-seeing regions; the fool in low-lying, high-fenced lanes; retracing the footsteps of the former, to discover where he diviated, whole provinces of the universe are laid open to us; in the path of the latter, granting even that he has not deviated at all, little is laid open to us but two wheel-ruts and two hedges.
-
-