12+ Edwin Muir Quotes On Nature, Education And Yosemite
Edwin Muir was a Scottish poet, novelist, translator and critic. He was born in Deerness, Orkney in 1887 and died in Edinburgh in 1959. His work is known for its exploration of the relationship between man and nature, and his writing often contained elements of myth and fantasy. Following is our collection on famous quotes by Edwin Muir on nature, education, life.
Kindness and courage can repair time's faults, And serving him breeds patience and courtesy In us, light sojourners and passing subjects. — Edwin Muir
The curse of Scottish literature is the lack of a whole language, which finally means the lack of a whole mind. — Edwin Muir
There is a road that turning always Cuts off the country of Again. Archers stand there on every side And as it runstime's deer is slain, And lies where it has lain. — Edwin Muir
Sometimes we think of the nations lying asleep, Curled blindly in impenetrable sorrow, And then the thought confounds us with its strangeness. — Edwin Muir
Packed in my skin from head to toe is one I know and do not know. — Edwin Muir
See him, the gentle Bible beast, / With lacquered hoofs and curling mane, / His wondering journey from the East / Half done, between the rock and plain. — Edwin Muir
Dostoyevsky wrote of the unconscious as if it were conscious; that is in reality the reason why his characters seem 'pathological', while they are only visualized more clearly than any other figures in imaginative literature... He was in the rank in which we set Dante, Shakespeare and Goethe. — Edwin Muir
I have observed in foolish awe The dateless mid-days of the law And seen indifferent justice done By everyone on everyone. — Edwin Muir
And without fear the lawless roads Ran wrong through all the land. — Edwin Muir
The life of every man is an endlessly repeated performance of the life of man. — Edwin Muir
We meet ourselves at every turn In the long country of the past. — Edwin Muir
The ancestral deed is thought and done, And in a million Edens fall A million Adams drowned in darkness, For small is great and great is small, And a blind seed all. — Edwin Muir
Life Lessons by Edwin Muir
- Edwin Muir's work emphasizes the importance of accepting life's hardships and embracing the beauty of nature as a source of solace and inspiration.
- His poetry often explores themes of alienation, displacement, and loss, highlighting the need to find meaning in life despite its difficulties.
- Muir's work encourages readers to be mindful of their own mortality and to appreciate the beauty of the natural world around them.
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