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Johan Wolfgang Von Goethe

Maxims and Reflections

  • ssharifhas quoted3 years ago
    it is really the motive which is chiefly worth attention.
  • b3176212423has quoted2 years ago
    27

    Herein we must exercise our tact; otherwise in the very way in which we have won the favour of mankind, we run the risk of trifling it away again unawares. This is a lesson which a man learns quite well for himself in the course of life, but only after having paid a dear price for it; nor can he, unhappily, spare his posterity a like expenditure.

    28

    Love of truth shows itself in this, that a man knows how to find and value the good in everything.

    29

    Character calls forth chara
  • b3176212423has quoted2 years ago
    12

    Our plans and designs should be so perfect in truth and beauty, that in touching them the world could only mar. We should thus have the advantage of setting right what is wrong, and restoring what is destroyed.
  • b3176212423has quoted2 years ago
    Be genuine and strenuous; earn for yourself, and look for, grace from those in high places; from the powerful, favour; from the active and the good, advancement; from the many, affection; from the individual, love.
  • b3176212423has quoted2 years ago
    The longer I live, the more it grieves me to see man, who occupies his supreme place for the very purpose of imposing his will upon nature, and freeing himself and his from an outrageous necessity,—to see him taken up with some false notion, and doing just the opposite of what he wants to do; and then, because the whole bent of his mind is spoilt, bungling miserably over everything.
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