“Time stays long enough for those who use it.”
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
Ensign Roderick Venables, p. 20
Sharpe (Novel Series), Sharpe's Fortress (1999)
“Time stays long enough for those who use it.”
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
“Time stays long enough for anyone who will use it.”
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452–1519) Italian Renaissance polymath
William Morris (1834–1896) author, designer, and craftsman
The Decorative Arts (1877)
Context: To give people pleasure in the things they must perforce use, that is one great office of decoration; to give people pleasure in the things they must perforce make, that is the other use of it.
Does not our subject look important enough now? I say that without these arts, our rest would be vacant and uninteresting, our labour mere endurance, mere wearing away of body and mind.
Ben Carson (1951) 17th and current United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; American neurosurgeon
Source: Think Big (1996), p. 154
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841–1935) United States Supreme Court justice
Speech to the Bar Association of Boston, in Speeches (1913), p. 85.
1910s