When we are afraid we ought not to occupy ourselves with endeavoring to prove that there is no danger, but in strengthening ourselves to go on in spite of the danger.
– Hale White
There is always a multitude of reasons both in favor of doing a thing and against doing it. The art of debate lies in presenting them; the art of life lies in neglecting ninety-nine hundredths of them.
– Hale White
Every faculty and virtue I possess can be used as an instrument with which to worry myself.
– Hale White
A true knowledge of ourselves is knowledge of our power.
– Hale White
As I got older I became aware of the folly of this perpetual reaching after the future, and of drawing from to-morrow, and from to-morrow only, a reason for the joyfulness of to-day.
– Hale White
I have a strange fancy – that there is one word which I was sent into the world to say. At times I can dimly make it out but I cannot see it. Nevertheless it seems to make all other speech seem beside the mark and futile.
– Hale White
In the presence of some people we inevitably depart from ourselves: we are inaccurate, we say things we do not feel, and talk nonsense. When we get home we are conscious that we have made fools of ourselves. Never go near these people.
– Hale White
Men should not be too curious in analysing and condemning any means which nature devises to save them from themselves, whether it be coins, old books, curiosities, butterflies, or fossils.
– Hale White
Never say anything remarkable. It is sure to be wrong.
– Hale White
One fourth of life is intelligible, the other three-fourths is unintelligible darkness; and our first duty is to cultivate the habit of not looking round the corner.
– Hale White
Socialism, towards which everything is drifting, may turn out to be a great failure. In my opinion it will certainly fail, and the reaction will be disastrous and put us back beyond where we are now, but at any rate Socialism is an idea, and in so far as it aspires to govern the world by an idea it is progress.
– Hale White
Stonehenge, after you get acquainted with it, is wonderful, but I find it disposes me to indefinite, vague misty sentiments, and these I try to avoid as much as possible.
– Hale White
There is always a multitude of reasons both in favour of doing a thing and against doing it. The art of debate lies in presenting them; the art of life lies in neglecting ninety-nine hundredths of them.
– Hale White
There is in a man an upwelling spring of life, energy, love, whatever you like to call it. If a course is not cut for it, it turns the ground round it into a swamp.
– Hale White
To die is easy when we are in perfect health. On a fine spring morning, out of doors, on the downs, mind and body sound and exhilarated, it would be nothing to lie down on the turf and pass away.
– Hale White
We cannot really understand a religion unless we have believed it.
– Hale White
What are the facts? Not those in Homer, Shakespeare, or even the Bible. The facts for most of us are a dark street, crowds, hurry, commonplaceness, loneliness, and, worse than all, a terrible doubt which can hardly be named as to the meaning and purpose of the world.
– Hale White
What is more wonderful than the delight which the mind feels when it knows? This delight is not for anything beyond the knowing, but is in the act of knowing. It is the satisfaction of a primary instinct.
– Hale White
It was perfect – perfect in its beauty – and perfect because, from the sun in the heavens to the fly with burnished wings on the hot rock, there was nothing out of harmony.
– Hale White