
“A shadow never sees the sun.”
Ron English's Fauxlosophy: Volume 2 (2022)
Variant: Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadows. It's what the sunflowers do.
“A shadow never sees the sun.”
Ron English's Fauxlosophy: Volume 2 (2022)
“Keep your face always toward the sunshine – and shadows will fall behind you.”
This has become attributed to both Walt Whitman and Helen Keller, but has not been found in either of their published works, and variations of the quote are listed as a proverb commonly used in both the US and Canada in A Dictionary of American Proverbs (1992), edited by Wolfgang Mieder, Kelsie B. Harder and Stewart A. Kingsbury.
Misattributed
“Keep yourself to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadow.”
"Looking For Your Own Face" as translated by Coleman Barks in The Hand of Poetry: Five Mystic Poets of Persia
W. W. Rouse Ball, A Short Account of the History of Mathematics (1893, 1925)
Twilight of the Illicit
The Book of Repulsive Women (1915)