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Richard Aldington Quotes

English poet and author (b. 1892), Birth: 8-7-1892, Death: 27-7-1962
1.
A little common sense, goodwill, and a tiny dose of unselfishness could make this goodly earth into an earthly paradise.
Richard Aldington

2.
All nations teach their children to be "patriotic", and abuse the other nations for fostering nationalism.
Richard Aldington

3.
Adventure is allowing the unexpected to happen to you. Exploration is experiencing what you have not experienced before. How can there be any adventure, any exploration, if you let somebody else - above all, a travel bureau - arrange everything before-hand?
Richard Aldington

4.
Patriotism is a lively sense of collective responsibility.
Richard Aldington

5.
Cats are like donkeys and camels, they won't ever quite give in to human tyranny, they won't try to imitate the human soul.
Richard Aldington

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare C. S. Lewis Rumi Samuel Johnson Charles Spurgeon Stephen King Winston Churchill George Herbert Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Wayne Dyer George Eliot
6.
We must grow out of religion. It is either bugaboo, formalism, or hysteria. Besides, what proof is there that "the churches" know more about "God" than the Cockney sentry on duty outside the camp? We have only their say-so.
Richard Aldington

7.
I dream of silent verses where the rhyme glides noiseless as an oar.
Richard Aldington

8.
Such shame is not even skin deep. And as to forgetting, surely, you know that is Woman's First and Greatest Art?
Richard Aldington

Quote Topics by Richard Aldington: Night Earth Men Church Adventure Heaven Patriotism And Nationalism Potency Christian Responsibility Mystery Pieces Silent Art Chemicals Patriotic Cat Garden Children Giving Dark Common Sense Artist Hysteria Unexpected Moon Hands Sects Military Genius
9.
By the sense of mystery I understand the experience of certain places and times when one's whole nature seems to be in touch with a presence, a genius loci, a potency.
Richard Aldington

10.
No man who has managed to keep out of an office can be called a failure in life.
Richard Aldington

11.
I began to write what I called 'rhythms' ie unrhymed pieces with no formal metrical scheme where the rhythm was created by a kind if inner chant... Later I was told I was writing 'free verse' or Vers libre.
Richard Aldington

12.
At night, the moon, a pregnant woman, walks cautiously over the slippery heavens.
Richard Aldington

13.
I have sat here happy in the gardens, Watching the still pool and the reeds And the dark clouds. . . . But though I greatly delight In these and the water lilies, That which sets me nighest to weeping Is the rose and white colour of the smooth flag-stones, And the pale yellow grasses Among them.
Richard Aldington

14.
Millions of human vermin swarm sweating along the night-arched cavernous roads. (Happily rapid chemical processes will disintegrate them all.
Richard Aldington

15.
How on earth did it come about that all the things denounced in the Gospels are violently defended by the Christian sects?
Richard Aldington