
“The wealth of a soul is measured by how much it can feel… its poverty by how little.”
Source: Invincible
Source: Night-Thoughts (1742–1745), Night VI, Line 519.
“The wealth of a soul is measured by how much it can feel… its poverty by how little.”
Source: Invincible
Source: Education of a Wandering Man (1989), Ch. 11
“What one knows is, in youth, of little moment; they know enough who know how to learn.”
The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
Context: ... education should try to lessen the obstacles, diminish the friction, invigorate the energy, and should train minds to react, not at haphazard, but by choice, on the lines of force that attract their world. What one knows is, in youth, of little moment; they know enough who know how to learn. Throughout human history the waste of mind has been appalling, and, as this story is meant to show, society has conspired to promote it. No doubt the teacher is the worst criminal, but the world stands behind him and drags the student from his course. The moral is stentorian. Only the most energetic, the most highly fitted, and the most favored have overcome the friction or the viscosity of inertia, and these were compelled to waste three-fourths of their energy in doing it.
“There is as much to be learned from a man with little, as there is from a man with much.”
(A.J. Broomhall. Hudson Taylor and China’s Open Century, Book Four: Survivors’ Pact. London: Hodder and Stoughton and Overseas Missionary Fellowship, 1984, 346).
Source: Aphorisms and Reflections (1901), pp. 129-130
Source: The Warrior Within : The Philosophies of Bruce Lee (1996), p. 117