Variant: The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart.
Variant: The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen, nor touched... but are felt in the heart.
“The things which must be must be for the best.”
Imperfection, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
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Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton 14
English statesman and poet 1831–1891Related quotes
“Things which matter most must never be at the mercy of things which matter least.”
Attributed
Source: The Name of the Rose (Everyman's Library
The "thing" which pursues us, we subsequently learn, is either "a Money-Devil" or "some appetite or lust" and "the advice is given to all in youth that they must make up their minds which of the two sorts of exercise they would choose, and the first [i.e. pursuit by a Money-Devil] is commonly praised and thought worthy; the second blamed." (p. 32)
Source: The Four Men: A Farrago (1911), pp. 31–2
Source: 1950s, The Image: Knowledge in Life and Society, 1956, p. 94 as cited in: Richard Arena, Agnés Festrè, Nathalie Lazaric (2012) Handbook of Economics and Knowledge. p. 138
Love – That’s All Cary Grant Ever Thinks About (1964)
“O say what is this thing call'd Light,
Which I must ne'er enjoy”
The Blind Boy (l. 1-2).