Willie Dixon (1915–1992) American blues musician
I am the Blues: the Willie Dixon Story (with Don Snowden, 1990), p. 4.
Attributed
Willie Dixon (1915–1992) American blues musician
I am the Blues: the Willie Dixon Story (with Don Snowden, 1990), p. 4.
Utah Phillips (1935–2008) American labor organizer, folk singer, storyteller and poet
Of Mentors and Intellectuals http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2008/05/29/weir, by Rob Weir (May 29, 2008)
“The roots of education … are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.”
Aristotle (-384–-321 BC) Classical Greek philosopher, student of Plato and founder of Western philosophy
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers
“Money is the fruit of evil as often as the root of it.”
Henry Fielding (1707–1754) English novelist and dramatist
Don Quixote in England (1731), Act I, scene vi http://books.google.com/books?id=8_VbAAAAQAAJ&q=%22Money+is+the+fruit+of+evil+as+often+as+the+root+of+it%22&pg=PA13#v=onepage
“Where there is a rotten root, there will always be rotten fruit.”
Joyce Meyer (1943) American author and speaker
Variant: Where there is a rotten root, there will always be rotten fruit. We must be rooted in Jesus Christ.
“The roots below the earth claim no rewards for making the branches fruitful.”
Rabindranath Tagore Stray Birds
134
Source: Stray Birds (1916)
“God will transplant the root, if he wills to rear it into fruit-bearing.”
Margaret Fuller (1810–1850) American feminist, poet, author, and activist
Letter (Spring 1850).
Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (1852)
Context: I feel perfectly willing to stay my threescore years and ten, if it be thought I need so much tuition from this planet; but it seems to me that my future upon earth will soon close. It may be terribly trying, but it will not be so very long, now. God will transplant the root, if he wills to rear it into fruit-bearing.
“Remorse is virtue's root; its fair increase
Are fruits of innocence and blessedness.”
William Cullen Bryant (1794–1878) American romantic poet and journalist
Mutation. A Sonnet
“and everything burned in blue, everything a star”
Pablo Neruda (1904–1973) Chilean poet
Source: 100 Love Sonnets
“To me, our destinies seem flower and fruit
Born of an ever-generating root…”
Margaret Fuller (1810–1850) American feminist, poet, author, and activist
Life Without and Life Within (1859), The One In All