Lewes Quotes
Collection of top 64 famous quotes about Lewes
Lewes Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Lewes quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
It is unhappily true that much insincere Literature and Art, executed solely with a view to effect, does succeed by deceiving the public.
— George Henry Lewes
I am suspicious without a motive, and jealous without love; although I feel I ought to love since I desire to be loved.
— George Henry Lewes
In complex trains of thought signs are indispensable.
— George Henry Lewes
It is not enough that a man has clearness of vision, and reliance on sincerity, he must also have the art of expression, or he will remain obscure.
— George Henry Lewes
The opinion of the majority is not lightly to be rejected; but neither is it to be carelessly echoed.
— George Henry Lewes
No man was ever eloquent by trying to be eloquent, but only by being so.
— George Henry Lewes
Sincerity is moral truth.
— George Henry Lewes
There are many justifications of silence; there can be none of insincerity.
— George Henry Lewes
When a man fails to see the truth of certain generally accepted views, there is no law compelling him to provoke animosity by announcing his dissent.
— George Henry Lewes
Vehemence without feeling is but rant.
— George Henry Lewes
To one man a stream is so much water-power, to another a rendezvous for lovers.
— George Henry Lewes
Speak for yourself and from yourself, or be silent.
— George Henry Lewes
If you feel yourself to be above the mass, speak so as to raise the mass to the height of your argument.
— George Henry Lewes
Genius is rarely able to give any account of its own processes.
— George Henry Lewes
Science is not addressed to poets.
— George Henry Lewes
Character is built out of circumstances. From exactly the same materials, one man builds palaces, while another builds hovels.
— George Henry Lewes
To write much, and to write rapidly, are empty boasts. The world desires to know what you have done, and not how you did it.
— George Henry Lewes
Individual experiences being limited and individual spontaneity feeble, we are strengthened and enriched by assimilating the experience of others.
— George Henry Lewes
There are occasions when the simplest and fewest words surpass in effect all the wealth of rhetorical amplification.
— George Henry Lewes
Science is the systematic classification of experience.
— George Henry Lewes
Love is blind; couch not his eyes.
— George Henry Lewes
The object of Literature is to instruct, to animate, or to amuse.
— George Henry Lewes
We are not judicious in love; we do not select those whom we ought to love, but those whom we cannot help loving.
— George Henry Lewes
Good writers are of necessity rare.
— George Henry Lewes
No man ever made a great discovery without the exercise of the imagination.
— George Henry Lewes
A man may be variously accomplished, and yet be a feeble poet.
— George Henry Lewes
Insight is the first condition of Art.
— George Henry Lewes
Books have become our dearest companions, yielding exquisite delights and inspiring lofty aims.
— George Henry Lewes
Many a genius has been slow of growth. Oaks that flourish for a thousand years do not spring up into beauty like a reed.
— George Henry Lewes
The air is crowded with birds
beautiful, tender, intelligent birds
to whom life is a song. — George Henry Lewes
beautiful, tender, intelligent birds
to whom life is a song. — George Henry Lewes
All great authors are seers.
— George Henry Lewes
Books minister to our knowledge, to our guidance, and to our delight, by their truth, their uprightness, and their art.
— George Henry Lewes
Literature is at once the cause and the effect of social progress.
— George Henry Lewes
Philosophy and Art both render the invisible visible by imagination.
— George Henry Lewes
Pliny ... makes the statement, and for untrustworthiness of statement he cannot easily be surpassed.
— George Henry Lewes
Insincerity is always weakness; sincerity even in error is strength.
— George Henry Lewes
No deeply rooted tendency was ever extirpated by adverse judgment. Not having originally been founded on argument, it cannot be destroyed by logic
— George Henry Lewes
We must never assume that which is incapable of proof.
— George Henry Lewes
A cell is regarded as the true biological atom.
— George Henry Lewes
To some men popularity is always suspicious. Enjoying none themselves, they are prone to suspect the validity of those attainments which command it.
— George Henry Lewes
Murder, like talent, seems occasionally to run in families.
— George Henry Lewes
Originality is independence, not rebellion; it is sincerity, not antagonism.
— George Henry Lewes
Language, after all, is only the use of symbols, and Art also can only affect us through symbols.
— George Henry Lewes
The artist is called a creator ...
— George Henry Lewes
Imagination is not the exclusive appanage of artists, but belongs in varying degrees to all men.
— George Henry Lewes
The history of the race is but that of the individual "writ large".
— George Henry Lewes
All bad Literature rests upon imperfect insight, or upon imitation, which may be defined as seeing at second-hand.
— George Henry Lewes
The public can only be really moved by what is genuine.
— George Henry Lewes
The delusions of self-love cannot be prevented, but intellectual misconceptions as to the means of achieving success may be corrected.
— George Henry Lewes
Mathematicians do not write for the circulating library.
— George Henry Lewes
The real people of genius were resolute workers not idle dreamers.
— George Henry Lewes
The magic of the pen lies in the concentration of your thoughts upon one object.
— George Henry Lewes
The intensity of vision in the artist and of vividness in his creations are the sole tests of his imaginative power.
— George Henry Lewes
Ordinary men live among marvels and feel no wonder, grow familiar with objects and learn nothing new about them.
— George Henry Lewes
The superiority of one mind over another depends on the rapidity with which experiences are thus organised.
— George Henry Lewes
All good Literature rests primarily on insight.
— George Henry Lewes
Whatever lies beyond the limits of experience, and claims another origin than that of induction and deduction from established data, is illegitimate.
— George Henry Lewes
Sincerity is not only effective and honourable, it is also much less difficult than is commonly supposed.
— George Henry Lewes
Shakespeare is a good raft whereon to float securely down the stream of time; fasten yourself to that and your immortality is safe.
— George Henry Lewes
As all Art depends on Vision, so the different kinds of Art depend on the different ways in which minds look at things.
— George Henry Lewes
In all sincere speech there is power, not necessarily great power, but as much as the speaker is capable of.
— George Henry Lewes
Remember that every drop of rain that falls bears into the bosom of the earth a quality of beautiful fertility.
— George Henry Lewes
Literature delivers tidings of the world within and the world without.
— George Henry Lewes