“There can be no rainbow without a cloud and a storm.”
John Heyl Vincent (1832–1920) American theologian
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 556.
Canto II, stanza 20.
The Bride of Abydos (1813)
“There can be no rainbow without a cloud and a storm.”
John Heyl Vincent (1832–1920) American theologian
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 556.
William Jennings Bryan (1860–1925) United States Secretary of State
Address at Illinois College (1881)
Context: Character is the entity, the individuality of the person, shining from every window of the soul, either as a beam of purity, or as a clouded ray that betrays the impurity within. The contest between light and darkness, right and wrong, goes on; day by day, hour by hour, moment by moment, our characters are being formed, and this is the all-important question which comes to us in accents ever growing fainter as we journey from the cradle to the grave, "Shall those characters be good or bad?"
James Macpherson (1736–1796) Scottish writer, poet, translator, and politician
"Carthon", pp. 163–164
The Poems of Ossian
“Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.”
Maya Angelou book Letter to My Daughter
Variant: Be a rainbow in somebody else's cloud.
Source: Letter to My Daughter
James Macpherson (1736–1796) Scottish writer, poet, translator, and politician
"The Songs of Selma"
The Poems of Ossian
Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) Bengali polymath
61 <br class="br"> Gitanjali http://www.spiritualbee.com/gitanjali-poems-of-tagore/ (1912)
“I’m so storming pure I practically belch rainbows.”
Brandon Sanderson book Words of Radiance
Source: Words of Radiance
Herman Melville book Billy Budd, Sailor
Source: Billy Budd, the Sailor (1891), Ch. 21
Source: Billy Budd, Sailor
Context: Who in the rainbow can draw the line where the violet tint ends and the orange tint begins? Distinctly we see the difference of the colors, but where exactly does the one first blendingly enter into the other? So with sanity and insanity. In pronounced cases there is no question about them. But in some supposed cases, in various degrees supposedly less pronounced, to draw the exact line of demarcation few will undertake tho' for a fee some professional experts will. There is nothing nameable but that some men will undertake to do it for pay.
“Thou living ray of intellectual fire.”
William Falconer (1732–1769) British writer
Canto I, line 104.
The Shipwreck (1762)