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John Burroughs

Read through the most famous quotes from John Burroughs




Joy in the universe, and keen curiosity about it all - that has been my religion.


— John Burroughs


#been #curiosity #joy #keen #religion

One may summon his philosophy when they are beaten in battle, not till then.


— John Burroughs


#beaten #his #may #philosophy #summon

Science has done more for the development of western civilization in one hundred years than Christianity did in eighteen hundred years.


— John Burroughs


#civilization #development #did #done #eighteen

Some men are like nails, very easily drawn; others however are more like rivets never drawn at all.


— John Burroughs


#easily #however #like #men #more

The secret of happiness is something to do.


— John Burroughs


#secret #something

There is hardly a man on earth who will take advice unless he is certain that it is positively bad.


— John Burroughs


#bad #certain #earth #hardly #man

Travel and society polish one, but a rolling stone gathers no moss, and a little moss is a good thing on a man.


— John Burroughs


#gathers #good #good thing #little #man

To treat your facts with imagination is one thing, to imagine your facts is another.


— John Burroughs


#facts #imagination #imagine #one thing #thing

A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.


— John Burroughs


#blame #else #fail #failure #man

For anything worth having one must pay the price; and the price is always work, patience, love, self-sacrifice - no paper currency, no promises to pay, but the gold of real service.


— John Burroughs


#always #anything #currency #gold #having






About John Burroughs

John Burroughs Quotes




Did you know about John Burroughs?

Long for their fantastical representations of wildlife he also denounced the booming genre of "naturalistic" animal stories as "yellow journalism of the woods". He continued to write and continued as a federal bank examiner for several more years. Among Burroughs's classmates was future financier Jay Gould.

By the turn of the 20th century he had become a virtual cultural institution[peacock term] in his own right: the Grand Old Man of Nature at a time when the American romance with the idea of nature and the American conservation movement had come fully into their own. " The result was a body of work whose perfect resonance with the tone of its cultural moment perhaps explains both its enormous popularity at that time and its relative obscurity since. His extraordinary popularity and popular visibility were sustained by a prolific stream of essay collections beginning with Wake-Robin in 1871.

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