
The Road Back to Nature (1984; English translation 1987, p. 360).
Quotes from Crash Proof (2006)
The Road Back to Nature (1984; English translation 1987, p. 360).
“Have to sow excellent seeds to have an excellent life. Must start with sowing excellent thoughts.”
Hugh Anderson Memorial lecture at the Cambridge Union (28 February 1975), quoted in The Times (1 March 1975), p. 2
1970s
“The season of failure is the best time for sowing the seeds of success.”
Source: The Flame is Green (1971), Ch. 5 : Muerte De Boscaje
Context: “The world is a garden,” the old man said. “It is a farm, a plantation, a sheep-ranch. In the garden are the cities also; they too are a great part of the planting. Believe me, all these plantations are sowed with good seed. But the Enemy from the Beginning also sows the red blight: these are the charlocks, the tares, called zizania in the Vulgate. Do not be fooled as to what it is and who sowed it. Do not be fooled in the factory or the arsenal, in the ship-yard or the shop; do not be fooled on the bleak farms or in the crowded city, in the club or in the workers’ hall or in the drawing room. The wrong thing that is sowed is the red weed, the red blight. And the Enemy has done this.
"Or let us say that we have a green thing growing forever. Everything that is done is done by it. And on it we also have the red parasite crunching forever: and everything that is undone is undone by that. The parasite will present itself as a modern thing. It will call itself the Great Change. Less often, and warily, it will call itself the Great Renewal. But it can never be another thing than the Red Failure returned. It is a disease, it is a scarlet fever, a typhoid, a diphtheria; it is the Africa disease, it is the red leprosy, it is the crab-cancer. It is the death of the individual and of the corporate soul. And incidentally, but very often, it is also the death of the individual and of the corporate body. We are asked to swear fealty to the parasite disease which the enemy sowed from the beginning. I will not do it, and I hope that you will not."
Source: Your Best Life Now: 7 Steps to Living at Your Full Potential
“Experience is always sowing the seed of one thing after another.”
Semper enim ex aliis alias proseminat usus.
Book I, line 90.
Astronomica
To the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland (31 March 1809)
1800s, Post-Presidency (1809)
“All work is as seed sown; it grows and spreads, and sows itself anew.”
1830s, Boswell's Life of Johnson (1832)
“Man at his best is a system-breaker, an iconoclast seeking not only variety, but destruction.”
Source: Break-Out from the Crystal Palace (1974), p. 152