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Biggest affirmative argument I know in favor of 'If a man die, shall he live again?' is just the way you feel inside you that nothin' can stop you from livin' on.
Bess Streeter Aldrich
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Bess Streeter Aldrich
Age: 73 †
Born: 1881
Born: February 17
Died: 1954
Died: August 3
Author
Novelist
Writer
Cedar Falls
Iowa
Feels
Biggest
Way
Argument
Men
Inside
Livin
Shall
Nothin
Stop
Affirmative
Dies
Favor
Live
Immortality
Feel
Favors
More quotes by Bess Streeter Aldrich
It is better to remember our love as it was in the springtime.
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A person may encircle the globe with mind open only to bodily comfort. Another may live his life on a sixty-foot lot and listen to the voices of the universe.
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It was true, she thought, that the big things awe us but the little things touch us.
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Regardless of the popular literary trend of the times, write the thing which lies close to your heart.
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You have to dream things out. It keeps a kind of an ideal before you. You see it first in your mind and then you set about to try and make it like the ideal. If you want a garden,-why, I guess you've got to dream a garden.
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It takes a small town to keep you humble.
Bess Streeter Aldrich
Things last so much longer than people.
Bess Streeter Aldrich
not all clever words are true. ... And inversely most things that are true are not clever.
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When I was young I had no means or time, and now I have the means and time, I have no youth.
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There is no division nor subtraction in the heart-arithmetic of a good mother. There are only addition and multiplication.
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The greatest antidote in the world for grief is work, and the necessity of work.
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For though love has been ridiculed and disgraced, exchanged and bartered, dragged through the courts, and sold for thirty pieces of silver, the bright, steady glow of its fire still shines on the hearth-stones of countless homes.
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thoughts are acrobats, agile and quite often untrustworthy.
Bess Streeter Aldrich
Sometime in their lives, everybody wanted to go home.
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In 1846 the prairie town of Oak River existed only in a settler's dream.
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Mrs. Schneiderman's theory of life was that earth held no sorrow that food could not heal.
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Our souls may all be equal in the sight of the Lord, but our gumption and ingenuity ain't. So the results of man's labor will never be equal.
Bess Streeter Aldrich