13+ John Frederick Boyes Quotes On Education, Slavery And Religion
John Frederick Boyes was a British scholar and academic who was active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society and a professor of philosophy at the University of Oxford. He was known for his work in the philosophy of religion, ethics, and metaphysics. Following is our collection on famous quotes by John Frederick Boyes on education, life, slavery.
Sombre thoughts and fancies often require a little real soil or substance to flourish in; they are the dark pine-trees which take root in, and frown over the rifts of the scathed and petrified heart, and are chiefly nourished by the rain of unavailing tears, and the vapors of fancy. — John Frederick Boyes
Strict punctuality is perhaps the cheapest virtue which can give force to an otherwise utterly insignificant character. — John Frederick Boyes
Nobility of birth is like a cipher; it has no power in itself, like wealth or talent; but, it tells with all the power of a cipher when added to either of the other two. — John Frederick Boyes
Where we find echoes, we generally find emptiness and hollowness; it is the contrary with the echoes of the heart. — John Frederick Boyes
There is scarcely a man who is not conscious of the benefits which his own mind has received from the performance of single acts of benevolence. How strange that so few of us try a course of the same medicine! — John Frederick Boyes
Friends should be very delicate and careful in administering pity as medicine, when enemies use the same article as poison. — John Frederick Boyes
Where there is much general deformity nature has often, perhaps generally, accorded some one bodily grace even in over-measure. So, no doubt, with the intellect and disposition, only it is frequently less apparent, and we give ourselves but little trouble to discover it. — John Frederick Boyes
We should remember that it is quite as much a part of friendship to be delicate in its demands as to be ample in its performances. — John Frederick Boyes
There are some books and characters so pleasant, or rather which contain so much that is pleasant, that criticism is perplexed or silent. The hounds are perpetually at fault among the sweet-scented herbs and flowers that grow at the base of Etna. — John Frederick Boyes
It is only with the best judges that the highest works of art would lose none of their honor by being seen in their rudiments. — John Frederick Boyes
Those who, from the desire of our perfection, have the keenest eye far our faults generally compensate for it by taking a higher view of our merits than we deserve. — John Frederick Boyes
It would be a great advantage to some schoolmasters if they would steal two hours a day from their pupils and give their own minds the benefit of the robbery. — John Frederick Boyes
It is vain to be always looking toward the future and never acting toward it. — John Frederick Boyes
Life Lessons by John Frederick Boyes
- John Frederick Boyes taught us the importance of understanding and respecting different cultures and their values. He also showed us the power of intercultural dialogue and collaboration to create positive social change.
- Through his research and writing, Boyes demonstrated the importance of education in understanding and appreciating cultural diversity. He also highlighted the need to challenge the status quo and to strive for social justice.
- Boyes' work has highlighted the importance of listening to and learning from people from different backgrounds, and the need to create a more equitable and inclusive society.
Citation
Feel free to cite and use any of the quotes by John Frederick Boyes. For popular citation styles (APA, Chicago, MLA), go to citation page.
Embed HTML Link
Copy and paste this HTML code in your webpage