“My advice is, do not try to inhabit another's soul. You have your own.”
Source: Songs of Unreason
Twenty-Seven Articles (1917)
Context: Do not try to do too much with your own hands. Better the Arabs do it tolerably than that you do it perfectly. It is their war, and you are to help them, not to win it for them. Actually, also, under the very odd conditions of Arabia, your practical work will not be as good as, perhaps, you think it is.
“My advice is, do not try to inhabit another's soul. You have your own.”
Source: Songs of Unreason
Melissa Johnson, Chapter 26, p. 308-309
2000s, The Rescue (2000)
As quoted in Rasputin: The Untold Story By Joseph T. Fuhrmann p.100
“As to conforming outwardly and living your own life inwardly, I do not think much of that.”
The Amazing Mr. Lutterworth (1958)
“What's your heart telling you to do?
I don't know.'
Maybe, you're trying too hard to hear it.”
Source: A Walk to Remember
Speech to the Hawarden Amateur Horticultural Society (17 August 1876), as quoted in "Mr. Gladstone On Cottage Gardening", The Times (18 August 1876), p. 9
1870s
Context: I am delighted to see how many young boys and girls have come forward to obtain honourable marks of recognition on this occasion, — if any effectual good is to be done to them, it must be done by teaching and encouraging them and helping them to help themselves. All the people who pretend to take your own concerns out of your own hands and to do everything for you, I won't say they are imposters; I won't even say they are quacks; but I do say they are mistaken people. The only sound, healthy description of countenancing and assisting these institutions is that which teaches independence and self-exertion... When I say you should help yourselves — and I would encourage every man in every rank of life to rely upon self-help more than on assistance to be got from his neigbours — there is One who helps us all, and without whose help every effort of ours is in vain; and there is nothing that should tend more, and there is nothing that should tend more to make us see the beneficence of God Almighty than to see the beauty as well as the usefulness of these flowers, these plants, and these fruits which He causes the earth to bring forth for our comfort and advantage.