One could get a first-class education from a shelf of books five feet long.
Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the most patient of teachers.
The best way to secure future happiness is to be as happy as is rightfully possible to-day.
Let us remember that the times which future generations delight to recall are not those of ease and prosperity, but those of adversity bravely borne.
Be unselfish. That is the first and final commandment for those who would be useful and happy in their usefulness. If you think of yourself only, you cannot develop because you are choking the source of development, which is spiritual expansion through thought for others.
All business proceeds on beliefs, or judgements of probabilities, and not on certainties.
The fruit of liberal education is not learning, but the capacity and desire to learn, not knowledge, but power.
Nobody has any right to find life uninteresting or unrewarding who sees within the sphere of his own activity a wrong he can help to remedy, or within himself an evil he can hope to overcome.
Liberal education develops a sense of right, duty and honor; and more and more in the modern world, large business rests on rectitude and honor as well as on good judgment.
In the modern world the intelligence of public opinion is the one indispensable condition for social progress.
The most satisfactory thing in all this earthly life is to be able to serve our fellow-beings-first, those who are bound to us by ties of love, then the wider circle of fellow-townsmen, fellow-countrymen, or fellow-men. To be of service is a solid foundation for contentment in this world.
The efficient man is the man who thinks for himself.
Messenger of sympathy and love, Servant of parted friends, Consoler of the lonely, Bond of the scattered family, Enlarger of the common life.
Truth and right are above utility in all realms of thought and action.
Books are the quietest and most constant of friends.
I recognize but one mental acquisition as a necessary part of the education of a lady or gentlemen, namely, an accurate and refined use of the mother tongue.
You know that it is only through work that you can achieve anything, either in college or in the world.
When blocked or defeated in an enterprise I had much at heart, I always turned immediately to another field of work where progress looked possible, biding my time for a chance to resume the obstructed road.
Philosophy is the thoughts of men about human thinking, reasoning and imagining, and the real values in human existence.
In some small field each child should attain, within the limited range of its experience and observation, the power to draw a justly limited inference from observed facts.