Quote
"It is only with the best judges that the highest works of art would lose none of their honor by being seen in their rudiments."
J
John Frederick Boyes"If, in instructing a child, you are vexed with it for a want of adroitness, try, if you have never tried before, to write with your left hand, and then remember that a child is all left hand."
"It is only with the best judges that the highest works of art would lose none of their honor by being seen in their rudiments."
"It is vain to be always looking toward the future and never acting toward it."
"Nobility of birth is like a cipher; it has no power in itself, like wealth or talent; but it tells with all the power of a cipher when added to either of the other two."
"Strict punctuality is perhaps the cheapest virtue which can give force to an otherwise utterly insignificant character."
"Sombre thoughts and fancies often require a little real soil or substance to flourish in; they are the dark pine-trees which take root in, and frown over the rifts of the scathed and petrified heart, and are chiefly nourished by the rain of unavailing tears, and the vapors of fancy."
"It would be a great advantage to some schoolmasters if they would steal two hours a day from their pupils and give their own minds the benefit of the robbery."