Quote
"One of the first things to be noted in business life is its imperialism. Business is exacting, engrossing, and inelastic."
M
Margaret Elizabeth SangsterMargaret Elizabeth Sangster
Margaret Elizabeth Sangster
Margaret Elizabeth Sangster was an American poet, author, and editor. Her poetry was inspired by family and church themes, and included hymns and sacred texts. She worked in several fields including book reviewing, story writing, and verse making. For a quarter of a century, Sangster was known by the public as a writer, beginning as a writer of verse, and combining later the practical work of a cr
"One of the first things to be noted in business life is its imperialism. Business is exacting, engrossing, and inelastic."
"Every childs birthright is a happy home."
"Self complacency is fatal to progress."
"On the day long after childhood when I suddenly heard of his death, the sky grew dark above my head. I was walking on a Southern highway, and a friend driving in a pony carriage passed me, stopped and said, "Have you heard that Charles Dickens is dead?" It was as if I had been robbed of one of the dearest of friends."
"Mind does dominate body. We are superior to the house in which we dwell."
"In the whole round of human affairs little is so fatal to peace as misunderstanding."
"I know,—yet my arms are empty, That fondly folded seven, And the mother heart within me Is almost starved for heaven."
"Fifteen takes its perplexities very seriously and grieves wihout restraint over its sorrows."
"Never yet was a spring-time, Late though lingered the snow, That the sap stirred not at the whisper Of the south wind, sweet and low; Never yet was a spring-time When the buds forgot to blow."
"My own opinion is that youthfulness of feeling is retained, as is youthfulness of appearance, by constant use of the intellect."
"Let every birthday be a festival, a time when the gladness of the house finds expression in flowers, in gifts, in a little fête. Never should a birthday be passed over without note, or as if it were a common day, never should it cease to be a garlanded milestone in the road of life."
"I would not, if I could, give up the memory of the joy I have had in books for any advantage that could be offered in other pursuits or occupations. Books have been to me what gold is to the miser, what new fields are to the explorer, what a new discovery is to the scientific student."