1.
They must find it hard to take Truth for authority who have so long mistaken Authority for Truth.
Gerald Massey
2.
Christianity was neither original nor unique, but that the roots of much of the Judeo/ Christian tradition lay in the prevailing Kamite (ancient Egyptian) culture of the region. We are faced with the inescapable realization that if Jesus had been able to read the documents of old Egypt, he would have been amazed to find his own biography already substantially written some four or five thousand years previously.
Gerald Massey
3.
They must find it difficult ... those who have taken authority as the truth, rather than truth as the authority.
Gerald Massey
4.
When man to man shall be friend and brother.
Gerald Massey
5.
The mass of people who are Bible-taught never get free from the erroneous impressions stamped on their minds in their infancy, so that their manhood or womanhood can have no intellectual fulfillment, and millions of them only attain mentally to a sort of second childhood
Gerald Massey
6.
The deepest dark reveals the starriest hope.
Gerald Massey
7.
I know no better way of waging the battle for Truth than arraying the facts face to face on either side and letting them fight it out.
Gerald Massey
8.
A sweet new blossom of humanity, fresh fallen from God's own home, to flower on earth
Gerald Massey
9.
There's no dearth of kindness In the world of ours; Only in our blindness We gather thorns for flowers.
Gerald Massey
10.
Love rays us round as glory swathes a star, And, from the mystic touch of lips and palms, Streams rosy warmth!
Gerald Massey
11.
And thou hast stolen a jewel, Death! Shall light thy dark up like a Star. A Beacon kindling from afar Our light of love and fainting faith.
Gerald Massey
12.
The heart is like an instrument whose strings Steal nobler music from Life's many frets: The golden threads are spun thro' Suffering's fire, Wherewith the marriage-robes for heaven are woven: And all the rarest hues of human life Take radiance, and are rainbow'd out in tears.
Gerald Massey
13.
Not by appointment do we meet Delight And Joy; they heed not our expectancy; But round some corner in the streets of life, They, on a sudden, clasp us with a smile.
Gerald Massey
14.
O Youth! flame earnest, still aspire, With energies immortal! To many a heaven of Desire, Our yearning opes a portal! And tho' Age wearies by the way, And hearts break in the furrow, We'll sow the golden grain Today-- The Harvest comes tomorrow.
Gerald Massey
15.
This world is full of beauty, as other worlds above, and if we did our duty, it might be as full of love.
Gerald Massey
16.
Cling closer, closer, life to life, Cling closer, heart to heart; The time will come, my own wed Wife, When you and I must part! Let nothing break our band but Death, For in the world above 'Tis the breaker Death that soldereth Our ring of Wedded Love.
Gerald Massey
17.
All the rarest hues of human life take radiance and are rainbowed out in tears.
Gerald Massey
18.
The heart is like an instrument whose strings Steal magic music from Life's mystic frets.
Gerald Massey
19.
I was a dweller amid shadows grim: Till FREEDOM touched my yearning eyes, and lo! Life in a shining circle, rounding rose, As heaven on heaven goes up the jewell'd night. New floods of passionate life swirl'd at my heart, Like Ocean-surges rolling round the world: And FREEDOM was my glittering Bride.
Gerald Massey
20.
In this dim world of clouding cares,
We rarely know, till wildered eyes
See white wings lessening up the skies,
The angels with us unawares.
Gerald Massey
21.
In the wounds our sufferings plough immortal love sows sovereign seed.
Gerald Massey
22.
Upon Love's bosom Earth floats like an Ark Safely through all the Deluge of the dark.
Gerald Massey
23.
The Future, like a fruitfuller Summer, sits Ripening her Eden silently.
Gerald Massey
24.
Our dearest hopes in pangs are born,
The kingliest Kings are crown'd with thorn.
Gerald Massey
25.
Still all the day the iron wheels go onward, Grinding life down from its mark.
Gerald Massey
26.
The plough of Time breaks up our Eden-land, And tramples down its fruitful flowery prime. Yet thro' the dust of ages living shoots O' the old immortal seed start in the furrows; And, where Love looked on with glorious eye, These quicken'd germs of everlastingness Flower lusty, as of old in Paradise!
Gerald Massey