
“Good, old-fashioned ways keep hearts sweet, heads sane, hands busy.”
Letter to Frederick J. Gregg (undated, Sligo, late summer, 1886)
“Good, old-fashioned ways keep hearts sweet, heads sane, hands busy.”
Roger Kimball, "A gospel of emancipation", The New Criterion, October 1997
“But bowed his comely head
Down as upon a bed.”
Upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland (1650)
" The Presence of Love http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/stc/Coleridge/poems/Presence_Love.html" (1807), lines 1-4.
Context: p>And in Life's noisiest hour,
There whispers still the ceaseless Love of Thee,
The heart's Self-solace and soliloquy.You mould my Hopes, you fashion me within.</p
“A good heart is better than all the heads in the world.”
The Disowned (1828), Chapter xxxiii.
“[A] person whose head is bowed and whose eyes are heavy cannot look at the light.”
Source: Ditié de Jehanne d'Arc
“The place to improve the world is first in one's own heart and head and hands.”
“And, hungry for the old, familiar ways,
I turned aside and bowed my head and wept.”
The Tropics in New York, l. 11-12