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The man who becomes a critic by trade ceases, in reality, to be one at all.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
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Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Age: 58 †
Born: 1813
Born: April 20
Died: 1871
Died: December 17
Biographer
Diplomat
Essayist
Literary Critic
Poet
Writer
Boston
Massachusetts
Henry T. Tuckerman
Becomes
Reality
Men
Ceases
Critic
Cease
Critics
Trade
More quotes by Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Travel gives a character of experience to our knowledge, and brings the figures on the tablet of memory into strong relief.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Literature is so common a luxury that the age has grown fastidious.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Poetry is the overflowing of the Soul.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
To a nice ear, the quality of a voice is singularly affecting. Its depth seems to be allied to feeling at least, the contralto notes alone give an adequate sense of pathos. They are born near the heart.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Fashion seldom interferes with nature without diminishing her grace and efficiency.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
The eye speaks with an eloquence and truthfulness surpassing speech. It is the window out of which the winged thoughts often fly unwittingly. It is the tiny magic mirror on whose crystal surface the moods of feeling fitfully play, like the sunlight and shadow on a still stream.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
If conversation be an art, like painting, sculpture, and literature, it owes its most power charm to nature and the least shade of formality or artifice destroys the effect of the best collection of words.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Without the definiteness of sculpture and painting, music is, for that very reason, far more suggestive. Like Milton's Eve, an outline, an impulse, is furnished, and the imagination does the rest.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
National enthusiasm is the nursery of genius.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Far better one unpurchased heart than glory's proudest name.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
No man flatters the woman he truly loves.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
A pilgrimage is an admirable remedy for over-fastidiousness and sickly refinement.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Let us recognize the beauty and power of true enthusiasm and whatever we may do to enlighten ourselves and others, guard against checking or chilling a single earnest sentiment.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
The soul, by an instinct stronger than reason, ever associates beauty with truth.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Society is the offspring of leisure and to acquire this forms the only rational motive for accumulating wealth, notwithstanding the cant that prevails on the subject of labor.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
To impress others we must be earnest to amuse them, it is only necessary to be kindly and fanciful.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Whatever is genuine in social relations endures, despite of time, error, absence, and destiny and that which has no inherent vitality had better die at once. A great poet has truly declared that constancy is no virtue, but a fact.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
To analyze the charms of flowers is like dissecting music it is one of those things which it is far better to enjoy, than to attempt to fully understand.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
Credulity is perhaps a weakness almost inseparable from eminently truthful characters.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman
It has been said that self-respect is the gate of heaven, and the most cursory observation shows that a degree of reserve adds vastly to the latent force of character.
Henry Theodore Tuckerman