
“Those who find beautiful meanings in beautiful things are the cultivated. For these there is hope.”
Source: The Picture of Dorian Gray
“Those who find beautiful meanings in beautiful things are the cultivated. For these there is hope.”
Source: The Picture of Dorian Gray
This appears as an anonymous proverb in Frank Leslie's Sunday Magazine Vol. XIII, (January - June 1883) edited by T. De Witt Talmage, and apparently only in recent years has it become attributed to Addison.
Disputed
“We are on a mission: we are called to the cultivation of the earth.”
Fragment No. 32; Variant translations: We are on a mission.We are called to form the earth.
We are on a mission.We are called to educate the earth.
Blüthenstaub (1798)
“We are all sprung from a heavenly seed.”
Caelesti sumus omnes semine oriundi.
Book II, line 991 (tr. Munro)
De Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things)
In Place of Fear (William Heinemann Ltd, 1952), p. 157
1950s
“We cultivate literature on a little oatmeal.”
Vol. I, ch. 2, p. 60.
Motto proposed by Smith for the Edinburgh Review.
Lady Holland's Memoir (1855)
“A taste for the beautiful is most cultivated out of doors”
Source: Walden, or Life in the Woods
Source: Natural Right and History (1953), p. 6