Best 62 quotes of Bayard Taylor on MyQuotes

Bayard Taylor

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    Bayard Taylor

    Above Coblentz almost every mountain has a ruin and a legend. One feels everywhere the spirit of the past, and its stirring recollections come back upon the mind with irresistible force.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Alone each heart must cover up its dead; Alone, through bitter toil, achieve its rest.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Although Damascus is considered the oldest city in the world, the date of its foundation going beyond tradition, there are very few relics of antiquity in or near it.

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    Bayard Taylor

    And far and wide, in a scarlet tide, The poppy's bonfire spread.

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    Bayard Taylor

    And rest, that strengthens unto virtuous deeds, Is one with Prayer.

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    Bayard Taylor

    And the wind that saddens, the sea that gladdens, Are singing the selfsame strain.

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    Bayard Taylor

    An enthusiastic desire of visiting the Old World haunted me from early childhood. I cherished a presentiment, amounting almost to belief, that I should one day behold the scenes, among which my fancy had so long wandered.

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    Bayard Taylor

    As I toiled up the Mount of Olives, in the very footsteps of Christ, panting with the heat and the difficult ascent, I found it utterly impossible to conceive that the Deity, in human form, had walked there before me.

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    Bayard Taylor

    By wisdom wealth is won; but riches purchased wisdom yet for none.

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    Bayard Taylor

    But still I dream that somewhere there must be The spirit of a child that waits for me.

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    Bayard Taylor

    But who will watch my lilies, When their blossoms open white? By day the sun shall be sentry, And the moon and the stars by night!

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    Bayard Taylor

    Could one live on the sense of beauty alone, exempt from the necessity of 'creature comforts,' a sea-voyage would be delightful.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Death is not rare, alas! nor burials few, And soon the grassy coverlet of God Spreads equal green above their ashes pale.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Departed suns their trails of splendor drew Across departed summers: whispers came From voices, long ago resolved again Into the primeval Silence, and we twain, Ghosts of our present selves, yet still the same, As in a spectral mirror wandered there.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Fame is what you have taken, / Character's what you give; / When to this truth you waken, / Then you begin to live.

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    Bayard Taylor

    From the desert I come to thee, On a stallion shod with fire; And the winds are left behind In the speed of my desire.

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    Bayard Taylor

    He teaches best, Who feels the hearts of all men in his breast, And knows their strength or weakness through his own.

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    Bayard Taylor

    I cannot assume emotions I do not feel, and must describe Jerusalem as I found it. Since being here, I have read the accounts of several travellers, and in many cases the devotional rhapsodies - the ecstacies of awe and reverence - in which they indulge, strike me as forced and affected.

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    Bayard Taylor

    I envy those old Greek bathers, into whose hands were delivered Pericles, and Alcibiades, and the perfect models of Phidias. They had daily before their eyes the highest types of Beauty which the world has ever produced; for of all things that are beautiful, the human body is the crown.

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    Bayard Taylor

    I know I am--that simplest bliss The millions of my brothers miss. I know the fortune to be born, Even to the meanest wretch they scorn.

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    Bayard Taylor

    I love thee, I love but thee, With a love that shall not die.

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    Bayard Taylor

    In the glory which overhangs Palestine afar off, we imagine emotions which never come, when we tread the soil and walk over the hallowed sites.

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    Bayard Taylor

    It is an agreeable and yet a painful sense of novelty to stand for the first time in the midst of a people whose language and manners are different from one's own.

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    Bayard Taylor

    I was pleasantly disappointed on entering Bohemia. Instead of a dull, uninteresting country, as I expected, it is a land full of the most lovely scenery. There is every thing which can gratify the eye - high blue mountains, valleys of the sweetest pastoral look and romantic old ruins.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Learn to live, and live to learn, Ignorance like a fire doth burn, Little tasks make large return.

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    Bayard Taylor

    London has the advantage of one of the most gloomy atmospheres in the world.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Love is better than Fame.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Melrose is the finest remaining specimen of Gothic architecture in Scotland. Some of the sculptured flowers in the cloister arches are remarkably beautiful and delicate, and the two windows - the south and east oriels - are of a lightness and grace of execution really surprising.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Mock jewelry on a woman is tangible vulgarity.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Oh! what waves of crime and bloodshed have swept like the waves of a deluge down the valley of the Rhine! War has laid his mailed hand on those desolate towers and ruthlessly torn down what time has spared, yet he could not mar the beauty of the shore, nor could Time himself hurl down the mountains that guard it.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Opportunity is rare, and a wise man will never let it go by him.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Pansies in soft April rains Fill their stalks with honeyed sap Drawn from Earth's prolific lap.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Peace the offspring is of Power.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Really,' thought I, 'we call Baltimore the 'Monumental City' for its two marble columns, and here is Edinburg with one at every street-corner!

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    Bayard Taylor

    So far as female beauty is concerned, the Circassian women have no superiors. They have preserved in their mountain home the purity of the Grecian models, and still display the perfect physical loveliness, whose type has descended to us in the Venus de Medici.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Sometimes an hour of Fate's serenest weather Strikes through our changeful sky its coming beams; Somewhere above us, in elusive ether, Waits the fulfilment of our dearest dreams.

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    Bayard Taylor

    Sweeter than the stolen kiss Are the granted kisses

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    Bayard Taylor

    Swelling in anger or sparkling in glee.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The aquilegia sprinkled on the rocks A scarlet rain; the yellow violet Sat in the chariot of its leaves, the phlox Held spikes of purple flame in meadows wet, And all the streams with vernal-scented reed Were fringed, and streaky bellow of miskodeed.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The bravest are the most tender; the loving are the daring.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The clouds are scudding across the moon, A misty light is on the sea; The wind in the shrouds has a wintry tune, And the foam is flying free.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The healing of the world is in its nameless saints. Each separate star seems nothing, but a myriad scattered stars break up the night and make it beautiful.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The hollows are heavy and dank With the steam of the Goldenrods.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The knowledge of my sin Is half-repentance.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The lamp you lighted in the olden time Will show you my heart's-blood beating through the rhyme: A poet's journal, writ in fire and tears... Then slow deliverance, with the gaps of years.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The loving are the daring.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The maxims tell you to aim at perfection, which is well; but it's unattainable, all the same.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The most annoying of all blockheads is a well-read fool.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The native Jewish families in Jerusalem, as well as those in other parts of Palestine, present a marked difference to the Jews of Europe and America. They possess the same physical characteristics - the dark, oblong eye, the prominent nose, the strongly-marked cheek and jaw - but in the latter, these traits have become harsh and coarse.

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    Bayard Taylor

    The nearest approach I have ever seen to the symmetry of ancient sculpture was among the Arab tribes of Ethiopia. Our Saxon race can supply the athlete, but not the Apollo.