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Quotes --> Character
Character Quotes:
Abigail Van Buren:
The best index to a person's
character is (a) how he treats
people who can't do him any
good, and (b) how he treats
people who can't fight back.
Abraham Lincoln:
Character is like a tree and
reputation like its shadow.
The shadow is what we think of
it; the tree is the real
thing.
Abraham Lincoln:
Character is like a tree and
reputation like a shadow. The
shadow is what we think of it;
the tree is the real thing.
Albert Einstein:
Try not to become a man of
success but rather try to
become a man of value.
Anne Frank:
Parents can only give good
advice or put them on the
right paths, but the final
forming of a person's
character lies in their own
hands.
Benjamin Franklin:
There never was a good knife
made of bad steel.
Clarence Darrow:
With all their faults, trade
unions have done more for
humanity than any other
organization of men that ever
existed. They have done more
for decency, for honesty, for
education, for the betterment
of the race, for the
developing of character in
men, than any other
association of men.
Goethe:
Character develops itself in
the stream of life.
Helen Keller:
Character cannot be developed
in ease and quiet. Only
through experience of trial
and suffering can the soul be
strengthened, vision cleared,
ambition inspired, and success
achieved.
Henry David Thoreau:
How can we expect a harvest of
thought who have not had a
seedtime of character?
James A. Froude:
You cannot dream yourself into
a character; you must hammer
and forge yourself one.
Margaret Chase Smith:
Moral cowardice that keeps us
from speaking our minds is as
dangerous to this country as
irresponsible talk. The right
way is not always the popular
and easy way. Standing for
right when it is unpopular is
a true test of moral
character.
Mark Twain:
To arrive at a just estimate
of a renowned man's character
one must judge it by the
standards of his time, not
ours.
Martin Luther King, Jr.:
I look forward confidently to
the day when all who work for
a living will be one with no
thought to their separateness
as Negroes, Jews, Italians or
any other distinctions. This
will be the day when we bring
into full realization the
American dream -- a dream yet
unfulfilled. A dream of
equality of opportunity, of
privilege and property widely
distributed; a dream of a land
where men will not take
necessities from the many to
give luxuries to the few; a
dream of a land where men will
not argue that the color of a
man's skin determines the
content of his character; a
dream of a nation where all
our gifts and resources are
held not for ourselves alone,
but as instruments of service
for the rest of humanity; the
dream of a country where every
man will respect the dignity
and worth of the human
personality.
Rabbi Zusya:
In the world to come, I shall
not be asked, "Why were you
not Moses?" I shall be asked,
"Why were you not Zusya?"
Ralph Waldo Emerson:
Judge of your natural
character by what you do in
your dreams.
Ralph Waldo Emerson:
People seem not to see that
their opinion of the world is
also a confession of
character.
Ralph Waldo Emerson:
It is the duty of men to judge
men only by their actions. Our
faculties furnish us with no
means of arriving at the
motive, the character, the
secret self. We call the tree
good from its fruits, and the
man, from his works. (sermon,
October 15, 1826)
Ralph Waldo Emerson:
A person will worship
something, have no doubt about
that. We may think our tribute
is paid in secret in the dark
recesses of our hearts, but it
will out. That which dominates
our imaginations and our
thoughts will determine our
lives, and our character.
Therefore, it behooves us to
be careful what we worship,
for what we are worshipping we
are becoming.
Robert Coles:
Abraham Lincoln did not go to
Gettysburg having commissioned
a poll to find out what would
sell in Gettysburg. There were
no people with percentages for
him, cautioning him about this
group or that group or what
they found in exit polls a
year earlier. When will we
have the courage of Lincoln?
Thomas Carlyle:
Instead of saying that man is
the creature of circumstance,
it would be nearer the mark to
say that man is the architect
of circumstance.
Victor Frankl:
What man actually needs is not
a tensionless state but rather
the striving and struggling
for some goal worthy of him.
What he needs is not the
discharge of tension at any
cost, but the call of a
potential meaning waiting to
be fulfilled by him.
Woodrow Wilson:
If you will think about what
you ought to do for other
people, your character will
take care of itself. Character
is a by-product, and any man
who devotes himself to its
cultivation in his own case
will become a selfish prig. |