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There are temptations which strong exercise best enables us to resist
John Lubbock
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John Lubbock
Age: 79 †
Born: 1834
Born: April 30
Died: 1913
Died: May 28
Anthropologist
Archaeologist
Banker
Biologist
Botanist
Entomologist
Politician
Prehistorian
Statesman
Statistician
Zoologist
London
England
John Lord Avebury
Avebury
Sir John Lubbock
Resist
Temptation
Exercise
Strong
Best
Temptations
Enables
More quotes by John Lubbock
However vexed you may be overnight, things will often look very different in the morning.
John Lubbock
It is sad, indeed, to see how man wastes his opportunities. How many could be made happy, with the blessings which are recklessly wasted or thrown away.
John Lubbock
Though it is a great mistake to make friends of the wicked and foolish, it is unwise to make enemies of them, for they are very numerous.
John Lubbock
Do not lay things too much to heart. No one is ever really beaten unless he is discouraged.
John Lubbock
Art trains the mind through the eye, and the eye through the mind. As the sun colors flowers, so does art color life.
John Lubbock
It would be a great thing if people could be brought to realize that they can never add to the sum of their happiness by doing wrong.
John Lubbock
The idle man does not know what it is to enjoy rest, for he has not earned it.
John Lubbock
A wise system of education will at last teach us how little man yet knows, how much he has still to learn.
John Lubbock
What we see depends mainly on what we look for.
John Lubbock
A poor woman from Manchester, on being taken to the seaside, is said to have expressed her delight on seeing for the first time something of which there was enough for everybody.
John Lubbock
Everyone must have felt that a cheerful friend is like a sunny day, which sheds its brightness on all around and most of us can, as we choose, make of this world either a palace or a prison.
John Lubbock
Reading and writing, arithmetic and grammar do not constitute education, any more than a knife, fork and spoon constitute a dinner.
John Lubbock
We may sit in our library and yet be in all quarters of the earth.
John Lubbock
Endurance is a much better test of character than any single act of heroism, however noble.
John Lubbock
Earth and Sky, Woods and Fields, Lakes and Rivers, the Mountain and the Sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.
John Lubbock
False pleasures come from without and are imperfect: happiness is internal and our own.
John Lubbock
Our own happiness ought not to be our main objective in life.
John Lubbock
A day of worry is more exhausting than a week of work.
John Lubbock
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is by no means a waste of time.
John Lubbock
Exercise of the muscles keeps the body in health, and exercise of the brain brings peace of mind.
John Lubbock