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Liberty Hyde Bailey Quotes

American botanist and academic, Birth: 15-3-1858 Liberty Hyde Bailey Quotes
1.
Every decade needs its own manual of handicraft.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

2.
When the traveler goes alone he gets acquainted with himself.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

3.
The man who worries morning and night about the dandelions in the lawn will find great relief in loving the dandelions.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

4.
A garden requires patient labor and attention. Plants do not grow merely to satisfy ambitions or to fulfill good intentions. They thrive because someone expended effort on them.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

5.
Give the children an opportunity to make garden. Let them grow what they will. It matters less that they grow good plants than that they try for themselves.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

Similar Authors: Terence McKenna James Madison Edward Snowden Milton Friedman Patrick Rothfuss Ludwig Wittgenstein Anne Sexton Brandon Sanderson Dan Brown Dallas Willard Leo Buscaglia Jeffrey Eugenides Zadie Smith Peter Singer Philip Pullman
6.
The true purpose of education is to teach a man to carry himself triumphant to the sunset.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

7.
The happiest life has the greatest number of points of contact with the world, and it has the deepest feeling and sympathy with everything that is.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

8.
One does not begin to make a garden until he wants a garden. To want a garden is to be interested in plants, in the winds and rains, in birds and insects, in the warm-smelling earth.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

Quote Topics by Liberty Hyde Bailey: Garden World Needs Tools Land Dream Education May Earth Mind Excellence Past Teaching Done Children Love Philosophy Night Vision Saws Beast Made Morning Wind People Ambition Miracle Usual Rocks Acquaintance
9.
There is no excellence without labor. One cannot dream oneself into either usefulness or happiness.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

10.
We accept it because we have seen the vision. We know that we cannot reap the harvest, but we hope that we may so well prepare the land and so diligently sow the seed that our successors may gather the ripened grain.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

11.
Science may eventually explain the world of How. The ultimate world of Why may remain for contemplation, philosophy, religion.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

12.
My life has been a continuous fulfillment of dreams. It appears that everything I saw and did has a new, and perhaps, more significant meaning, every time I see it. The earth is good. It is a privilege to live thereon.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

13.
Yesterday the twig was brown and bare; To-day the glint of green is there; Tomorrow will be leaflets spare; I know no thing so wondrous fair, No miracle so strangely rare. I wonder what will next be there!
Liberty Hyde Bailey

14.
A person cannot love a plant after he has pruned it, then he has either done a poor job or is devoid of emotion.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

15.
There is great satisfaction in a well-made clean tool that does its work well.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

16.
Extension work is not exhortation. Nor is it exploitation of the people, or advertising of an institution, or publicity work for securing students. It is a plain, earnest, and continuous effort to meet the needs of the people on their own farms and in the localities.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

17.
Is there any progress in horticulture? If not, it is dead, uninspiring. We cannot live in the past good as it is; we must draw our inspiration from the future.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

18.
The department of home economics was organized to train a woman in efficiency and to develop her outlook to life. Such a department is a necessity as a means of developing a society. It stands for the evolution of women's work and place.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

19.
Anyone who acquires more than the usual amount of knowledge concerning a subject is bound to leave it as his contribution to the knowledge of the world.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

20.
I do not yet know why plants come out of the land or float in streams, or creep on rocks or roll from the sea. I am entranced by the mystery of them and absorbed by their variety and kinds. Everywhere, they are visible yet everywhere occult.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

21.
A garden is half made when it is well planned.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

22.
No beast has ever overcome the earth; and the natural world has never been conquered by muscular force.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

23.
There are two essential epochs in any enterprise - to begin, and to get done.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

24.
One must first seek to love plants and nature, and then to cultivate that happy peace of mind which is satisfied with little. He will be happier if he has no rigid and arbitrary ideals, for gardens are coquettish, particularly with the novice.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

25.
Tools of many kinds and well chosen, are one of the joys of a garden.
Liberty Hyde Bailey

26.
One's happiness depends less on what he knows than on what he feels.
Liberty Hyde Bailey