Love Being In Nature Quotes
Collection of top 29 famous quotes about Love Being In Nature
Love Being In Nature Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Love Being In Nature quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Every person should embrace those [dogmas] that he, being the best judge of himself, feels will do most to strengthen in him love of justice.
— Baruch Spinoza
Jesus never asked a question because HE needed to know the answer.
— Christopher Bozung
Draw near to Nature. Then try like some first human being to say what you see and experience and love and lose.
— Rainer Maria Rilke
Now that I'm older, I have a much better appreciation of nature, and I love being alone.
— Gia Coppola
To love a thing means wanting it to live.
— Confucius
Love is the problem of an animal who must find life, create a dialogue with nature in order to experience his own being.
— Ernest Becker
All the love of the high, wild places, all the amazing joy in being alive sounded in his voice
— Elyne Mitchell
Senator Marco 'amnesty' Rubio, who has worst voting record in Senate, just hit me on national security - but I said don't go into Iraq.
— Donald Trump
It was her nature...her weakness, that for her loving another human being must always have this intensity...this absoluteness.
— Penny Jordan
Her solitary nature means she needs a family to keep her from loneliness my gregarious nature means I will never have to worry about being alone ...
— Elizabeth Gilbert
We never stopped being each other.
— Alicen Grey
This, Barrett Meeks, is your work. You witness, and compile. You persevere.
— Michael Cunningham
Nobody ever took my picture. They didn't want to. Or I wouldn't let them.
You were the only exception. — David Levithan
You were the only exception. — David Levithan
I'm very gregarious, but I love being in the hills on my own.
— Norman MacCaig
In love we listen. We listen to what others say. We listen to what our own being is telling us about the nature of existence.
— Frederick Lenz
God is Love. Love is the deepest depth, the essence of his nature, at the root of all his being.
— George MacDonald
Lincoln had a stubborn concern for first principles.
— Richard Brookhiser