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For he who is honest is noble, Whatever his fortunes or birth.
Alice Cary
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Alice Cary
Age: 50 †
Born: 1820
Born: April 26
Died: 1871
Died: February 12
Author
Novelist
Poet
Suffragist
Writer
Cincinnati
Ohio
Alice Cary
Fortunes
Noble
Fortune
Birth
Honest
Whatever
More quotes by Alice Cary
There must be room for penitence to mend Life's broken chance else noise of wars would unmake heaven.
Alice Cary
Desolate--Life is so dreary and desolate-- Women and men in the crowd meet and mingle, Yet with itself every soul standeth single, Deep out of sympathy moaning its moan-- Holding and having its brief exultation-- Making its lonesome and low lamentation-- Fighting its terrible conflicts alone.
Alice Cary
Not what we think, but what we do, / Makes saints of us: all stiff and cold, / The outlines of the corpse show through / The cloth of gold.
Alice Cary
Every life is meant to help all lives each man should live for all men's betterment.
Alice Cary
True worth is in being, not seeming
Alice Cary
There's nothing so kingly as kindness, And nothing so royal as truth.
Alice Cary
He who loves best his fellow-man, is loving God the holiest way he can.
Alice Cary
Yea, when mortality dissolves, Shall I not meet thine hour unawed? My house eternal in the heavens Is lighted by the smile of God!
Alice Cary
With hand on the spade and heart in the sky Dress the ground and till it Turn in the little seed, brown and dry, Turn out the golden millet. Work, and your house shall be duly fed: Work, and rest shall be won I hold that a man had better be dead Than alive when his work is done.
Alice Cary
I sit where the leaves of the maple and the gnarled and knotted gum are circling and drifting around me.
Alice Cary
The fisher droppeth his net in the stream, And a hundred streams are the same as one And the maiden dreameth her love-lit dream And what is it all, when all is done? The net of the fisher the burden breaks, And always the dreaming the dreamer wakes.
Alice Cary
The attempt is all the wedge that splits its knotty way betwixt the impossible and possible.
Alice Cary
Women and men in the crowd meet and mingle, Yet with itself every soul standeth single.
Alice Cary
True worth is in being, not seeming- In doing, each day that goes by, Some little good, not in the dreaming Of great things to do by and by. For whatever men say in their blindness, And spite of the fancies of youth, There's nothing so kingly as kindness, And nothing so royal as truth.
Alice Cary
My soul is full of whispered song,-My blindness is my sightThe shadows that I feared so longAre full of life and light.
Alice Cary
How many lives we live in one, And how much less than one, in all.
Alice Cary
We serve Him most who take the most of His exhaustless love.
Alice Cary
Even for the dead I will not bind my soul to grief, death cannot long divide for is it not as if the rose that climbed my garden wall had bloomed the other side?
Alice Cary
Shut up the door: who loves me must not look / Upon the withered world, but haste to bring / His lighted candle, and his story-book, / And live with me the poetry of spring.
Alice Cary
I hold that a man had better be dead than alive when his work is done.
Alice Cary