[The extraordinary power of ordinary people, TED Talks, February 2003, https://www.ted.com/talks/sherwin_nuland_on_hope] (2:40 of 12:31 in video)
“None know how to prize the Saviour, but such as are zealous in pious works for others.”
Reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 399.
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Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon 1
British countess 1707–1791Related quotes

Source: A Heap o' Livin' (1916), A Song, opening lines, p. 34.

“Tis a secret: none knows how it comes, how it goes:
But the name of the secret is Love!”
Source: Sylvie and Bruno Concluded (1893), Chapter 19: A Fairy Duet
“You know how sailors love to create mystery where there is none.”
A Tradition of Victory, Cap 2 "No Looking Back"

Nobel Prize Speech (1954)
Context: No writer who knows the great writers who did not receive the Prize can accept it other than with humility. There is no need to list these writers. Everyone here may make his own list according to his knowledge and his conscience.

“None of these guys did anything by themselves; they borrowed from other people's work.”
Connections (1979), 10 - Yesterday, Tomorrow and You
Context: The question is in what way are the triggers around us likely to operate to cause things to change -- for better or worse. And, is there anything we can learn from the way that happened before, so we can teach ourselves to look for and recognize the signs of change? The trouble is, that's not easy when you have been taught as I was, for example, that things in the past happened in straight-forward lines. I mean, take one oversimple example of what I'm talking about: the idea of putting the past into packaged units -- subjects, like agriculture. The minute you look at this apparently clear-cut view of things, you see the holes. I mean, look at the tractor. Oh sure, it worked in the fields, but is it a part of the history of agriculture or a dozen other things? The steam engine, the electric spark, petroleum development, rubber technology. It's a countrified car. And, the fertilizer that follows; it doesn't follow! That came from as much as anything else from a fellow trying to make artificial diamonds. And here's another old favorite: Eureka! Great Inventors You know, the lonely genius in the garage with a lightbulb that goes ping in his head. Well, if you've seen anything of this series, you'll know what a wrong approach to things that is. None of these guys did anything by themselves; they borrowed from other people's work. And how can you say when a golden age of anything started and stopped? The age of steam certainly wasn't started by James Watt; nor did the fellow whose engine he was trying to repair -- Newcomen, nor did his predecessor Savorey, nor did his predecessor Papert. And Papert was only doing what he was doing because they had trouble draining the mines. You see what I'm trying to say? This makes you think in straight lines. And if today doesn't happen in straight lines -- think of your own experience -- why should the past have? That's part of what this series has tried to show: that the past zig-zagged along -- just like the present does -- with nobody knowing what's coming next. Only we do it more complicatedly, and it's because our lives are that much more complex than theirs were that it's worth bothering about the past. Because if you don't know how you got somewhere, you don't know where you are. And we are at the end of a journey -- the journey from the past.

“She deserved the Nobel Prize for her work.”
Often said by Hubble about Henrietta Swan Leavitt.

“Seek not only to know about the Saviour, but seek confidence in Him, seek to know Him as your own.”
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 589.