Walter Scott Quotes
Quotations and aphorisms by Walter Scott:
Unless a tree has borne blossoms in spring, you will vainly look for fruit on it in autumn.
~Walter Scott
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When thinking about companions gone, we feel ourselves doubly alone.
~Walter Scott
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To all, to each, a fair good-night, and pleasing dreams, and slumbers light.
~Walter Scott
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He is the best sailor who can steer within fewest points of the wind, and exact a motive power out of the greatest obstacles.
~Walter Scott
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Look back, and smile on perils past.
~Walter Scott
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What is a diary as a rule? A document useful to the person who keeps it. Dull to the contemporary who reads it and invaluable to the student, centuries afterwards, who treasures it.
~Walter Scott
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Success - keeping your mind awake and your desire asleep.
~Walter Scott
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O! many a shaft, at random sent, Finds mark the archer little meant! And many a word, at random spoken, May soothe or wound a heart that's broken!
~Walter Scott
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If a farmer fills his barn with grain, he gets mice. If he leaves it empty, he gets actors.
~Walter Scott
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Discretion is the perfection of reason, and a guide to us in all the duties of life.
~Walter Scott
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A rusty nail placed near a faithful compass, will sway it from the truth, and wreck the argosy.
~Walter Scott
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Each age has deemed the new-born year the fittest time for festal cheer.
~Walter Scott
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For success, attitude is equally as important as ability.
~Walter Scott
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One hour of life, crowded to the full with glorious action, and filled with noble risks, is worth whole years of those mean observances of paltry decorum, in which men steal through existence, like sluggish waters through a marsh, without either honor or observation.
~Walter Scott
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Success or failure in business is caused more by the mental attitude even than by mental capacities.
~Walter Scott
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There is a vulgar incredulity, which in historical matters, as well as in those of religion, finds it easier to doubt than to examine.
~Walter Scott
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How pleasant it is for a father to sit at his child's board. It is like an aged man reclining under the shadow of an oak which he has planted.
~Walter Scott
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What I have to say is far more important than how long my eyelashes are.
~Walter Scott
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Teach you children poetry; it opens the mind, lends grace to wisdom and makes the heroic virtues hereditary.
~Walter Scott
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Love rules the court, the camp, the grove, And men below, and saints above: For love is heaven, and heaven is love.
~Walter Scott
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To the timid and hesitating everything is impossible because it seems so.
~Walter Scott
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If you once turn on your side after the hour at which you ought to rise, it is all over. Bolt up at once.
~Walter Scott
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Many miles away there's a shadow on the door of a cottage on the Shore of a dark Scottish lake.
~Walter Scott
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The half hour between waking and rising has all my life proved propitious to any task which was exercising my invention... It was always when I first opened my eyes that the desired ideas thronged upon me.
~Walter Scott
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It is wonderful what strength of purpose and boldness and energy of will are roused by the assurance that we are doing our duty.
~Walter Scott
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All men who have turned out worth anything have had the chief hand in their own education.
~Walter Scott
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We build statues out of snow, and weep to see them melt.
~Walter Scott
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Faces that have charmed us the most escape us the soonest.
~Walter Scott
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He that climbs the tall tree has won right to the fruit, He that leaps the wide gulf should prevail in his suit.
~Walter Scott
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A lawyer without history or literature is a mechanic, a mere working mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he may venture to call himself an architect.
~Walter Scott
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To be ambitious of true honor, of the true glory and perfection of our natures, is the very principle and incentive of virtue.
~Walter Scott
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Of all vices, drinking is the most incompatible with greatness.
~Walter Scott
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O, what a tangled web we weave when first we practise to deceive!
~Walter Scott
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The race of mankind would perish did they cease to aid each other. We cannot exist without mutual help. All therefore that need aid have a right to ask it from their fellow-men; and no one who has the power of granting can refuse it without guilt.
~Walter Scott
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