Reading Thoreau Quotes
Collection of top 19 famous quotes about Reading Thoreau
Reading Thoreau Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Reading Thoreau quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
How many a man has dated a new era in his life from the reading of a book.
— Henry David Thoreau
Why should we leave it to Harper & Brothers and Redding & Co. to select our reading?
— Henry David Thoreau
And after reading Thoreau I felt how much I have lost by leaving nature out of my life.
— F Scott Fitzgerald
The whole of the day should not be daytime; there should be one hour, if not more, which the day did not bring forth.
— Henry David Thoreau
Read the best books first, otherwise you'll find you do not have time.
- Henry David Thoreau — Leo Tolstoy
- Henry David Thoreau — Leo Tolstoy
I have now a library of nearly nine hundred volumes, over seven hundred of which I wrote myself.
— Henry David Thoreau
After all, I believe it is the style of thought entirely, and the style of expression, which makes the difference in books.
— Henry David Thoreau
Whatever sentence will bear to be read twice, we may be sure was thought twice.
— Henry David Thoreau
He who cannot read is worse than deaf and blind, is yet but half alive, is still-born.
— Henry David Thoreau
It is not all books that are as dull as their readers.
— Henry David Thoreau
Read the best books first, or you may not have a chance to read them at all.
— Henry David Thoreau
The Library is a wilderness of books.
— Henry David Thoreau
Books of natural history make the most cheerful winter reading.
— Henry David Thoreau
I never read a novel, they have so little real life and thought in them.
— Henry David Thoreau
My residence was more favorable, not only to thought, but to serious reading, than a university;
— Henry David Thoreau
Do not read the newspapers.
— Henry David Thoreau
Books that are books are all that you want, and there are but a half dozen in any thousand.
— Henry David Thoreau
The other thing that happened in 1883 was my reading of Thoreau's Walden.
— Edward Carpenter