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Results of search for Quote: p - Page 1243 of 1331
Showing results 12421 to 12430 of 13306 total quotations found.
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Results from Poor Man's College:

Emile Zola was a poor student at his school at Aix. We are all so different largely because we all have different combinations of intelligences. If we recognize this, I think we will have at least a better chance of dealing appropriately with many problems that we face in the world.
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Howard Gardner
Ludwig von Beethoven had never mastered the elements of arithmetic beyond addition and subtraction. A thirteen-year-old boy whom he had befriended tried unsuccessfully to teach him simple multiplication and division.
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Jan Ehrenwald.
Blaise Pascal used to mark with charcoal the walls of his playroom, seeking a means of making a circle perfectly round and a triangle whose sides and angle were all equal. He discovered these things for himself and then began to seek the relationship which existed between them. He did not know any mathematical terms and so he made up his own. Using these names he made axioms and finally developed perfect demonstrations, until he had come to the thirty-second proposition of Euclid.
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C. M. Cox
Few men during their lifetime come anywhere near exhausting the resources dwelling in them. There are deep wells of strength that are never used.
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Richard E. Byrd
Protest long enough that you are right, and you will be wrong. It is easier to admire hard work if you don't do it.
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Author Unknown
There is no surer way to misread any document than to read it literally. As nearly as we can, we must put ourselves in the place of those who uttered the words, and try to divine how they would have dealt with the unforeseen situation; and, evidence of what they would have done, they are by no means final.
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Learned Hand
It all depends on how we look at things, and not on how they are themselves.
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Carl Jung (1875 - 1961)
No poet sings because he must sing. At least no great poet does. A great poet sings because he chooses to sing.
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Author Unknown
By listening to his language of his locality the poet begins to learn his craft. It is his function to lift, by use of imagination and the language he hears, the material conditions and appearances of his environment to the sphere of the intelligence where they will have new currency.
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William Carlos Williams (1883 - 1963)
The poet judges not as a judge judges but as the sun falling around a helpless thing.
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Walt Whitman (1819 - 1892)
<- Previous Page Pages: ... 1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246... Next Page ->
Results of search for Quote: p - Page 1243 of 1331
Showing results 12421 to 12430 of 13306 total quotations found.