Authors:

Genius Quotes - Page 41

Genius finds its own road and carries its own lamp.

Robert Aris WILLMOTT (1851). “Pleasures,objects and advantages of literature”, p.23

We owe to genius always the same debt, of lifting the curtain from the common, and showing us that divinities are sitting disguised in the seeming gang of gypsies and peddlars.

Ralph Waldo Emerson (2004). “A Dream Too Wild: Emerson Meditations for Every Day of the Year”, Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations

Genius is the power to labor better and more availably. Deserve thy genius: exalt it.

Ralph Waldo Emerson (2014). “The Portable Emerson”, p.93, Penguin

For me, the world of nature bears spectacular witness to the imaginative genius of our Creator.

Philip Yancey (1995). “Finding God in Unexpected Places”, Ballantine Books

True genius walks along a line, and, perhaps, our greatest pleasure is in seeing it so often near falling, without being ever actually down.

Oliver Goldsmith (1856). “The Works of Oliver Goldsmith: Comprising His Poems, Comedies, Essays, and Vicar of Wakefield”, p.287

Genius is merely the capacity for taking infinite pains.

Napoleon Hill (2013). “The Law of Success in Sixteen Lessons”, p.240, Simon and Schuster

Genius has no youth, but starts with the ripeness of age and old experience.

Mark Twain (2012). “Mark Twain at Your Fingertips: A Book of Quotations”, p.141, Courier Corporation