The Apple Tree Quotes
Collection of top 37 famous quotes about The Apple Tree
The Apple Tree Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational The Apple Tree quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Mental Note #50: The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, even though it most desperately wants to. - Notes from Ellen Wasserfeldman
— Alisa Steinberg
I grew it - sorry, drew it - for this book, if for no other reason than to illustrate the old saying that the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
— Connor Franta
Before the war an apple tree had stood behind the church. It was an apple tree that ate its own apples.
— Herta Muller
Part of the trouble is that I've never properly understood that some disasters accumulate, that they don't all land like a child out of an apple tree.
— Janet Burroway
The apple had fallen right next to the crazy tree.
— Ernest Cline
I think in any father-son relationship, there's going to be times you say, 'Well, the apple didn't fall far from the tree.'
— Michael Raymond-James
Death should be different. It should be like bidding farewell to someone at a station before a long journey, but without the strain.
— Daphne Du Maurier
It was not the apple on the tree but the pair on the ground that caused the trouble in the garden of Eden.
— Elizabeth Barrett Browning
At the end of my dream, Eve put the apple back on the branch. The tree went back into the ground. It became a sapling, which became a seed.
— Jonathan Safran Foer
When life gives u lemons, smile, because the apple tree that you have been searching for is a mile or so down that bumpy road.
— April Margeson
Brenda was six when she fell out of the apple tree.
— Norman Mailer
The apple does not fall far from the tree.
— Harper Lee
For an apple you can't reach up and pick, you have to climb that tree; the tree won't bend down for you!
— Mehmet Murat Ildan
A picture of a complete apple tree, however accurate, is in a certain sense much less like the tree itself than is a little daisy.
— Ludwig Wittgenstein
An apple or two should be left on the ground, under the apple tree, to feed any wandering spirits on Halloween night.
— Liz Yetter
Springtime blooms the starry tree
Bearing fruit the mariners see.
High by night and low by dawn
The silver apple guides us home. — F.T. McKinstry
Bearing fruit the mariners see.
High by night and low by dawn
The silver apple guides us home. — F.T. McKinstry
A charitable man is like an apple tree-he gives his fruit and is silent; the philanthropist is like the successful hen.
— Austin O'Malley
But Ahab's glance was averted; like a blighted fruit tree he shook, and cast his last, cindered apple to the soil.
— Herman Melville
The apple tree never asks the beech how he shall grow, nor the lion, the horse, how he shall take his prey.
— William Blake
The fruit is what really matters, not how gnarly or beautiful the apple tree is.
— Aiden Wilson Tozer
The flowers of the apple are perhaps the most beautiful of any tree's, so copious and so delicious to both sight and scent.
— Henry David Thoreau
Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.
— Martin Luther
You can't sow an apple seed and expect to get an avocado tree. The consequences of your life are sown in what you do and how you behave.
— Tom Shadyac
A sheet spread beneath an apple-tree can receive only apples; a sheet spread beneath the stars can receive only star-dust.
— Antoine De Saint-Exupery
For the Earth itself is a blossom, she says,
on the star tree,
pale with luminous
ocean leaves. — Rolf Jacobsen
on the star tree,
pale with luminous
ocean leaves. — Rolf Jacobsen
Sometimes the apple rolls very far from the tree.
— Sara Pennypacker
The purpose of that apple tree is to grow a little new wood each year. That is what I plan to do.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The apple tree in the background, just barely visible, was stretching a single limb out to her, as if wanting to be in the photo with her.
— Sarah Addison Allen
The Blossoms and leaves in plenty From the apple tree fall each day; The merry breezes approach them, And with them merrily play.
— Heinrich Heine
It is remarkable how closely the history of the apple tree is connected with that of man.
— Henry David Thoreau