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Quotes about nature
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All men by nature desire to know. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature does nothing uselessly. (Crook Mackenzie)
To sit in the shade on a fine day, and look upon verdure is the most perfect refreshment. (Crook Mackenzie)
The subtlety of nature is greater many times over than the subtlety of the senses and understanding. (Crook Mackenzie)
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Nature is commanded by obeying her. (Crook Mackenzie)
Disease is the retribution of outraged Nature. (Crook Mackenzie)
As a profession advertising is young; as a force it is as old as the world. The first four words ever uttered, Let there be light, constitute its charter. All nature is vibrant with its impulse. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature... is nothing but the inner voice of self-interest. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature always tends to act in the simplest way. (Crook Mackenzie)
I look upon all creatures equally; none are less dear to me and none more dear. But those who worship me with love live in me, and I come to life in them. (Crook Mackenzie)
The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing that stands in the way. Some see nature all ridicule and deformity... and some scarce see nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination, nature is imagination itself. (Crook Mackenzie)
Man masters nature not by force but by understanding. This is why science has succeeded where magic failed: because it has looked for no spell to cast over nature. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature is the art of God. (Crook Mackenzie)
All things are artificial, for nature is the art of God. (Crook Mackenzie)
Like Confucius of old, I am so absorbed in the wonder of the earth and the life upon it, that I cannot think of heaven and the angels. (Crook Mackenzie)
What law, what reason can deny that gift so sweet, so natural that God has given a stream, a fish, a beast, a bird? (Crook Mackenzie)
If only nature is real and if, in nature, only desire and destruction are legitimate, then, in that all humanity does not suffice to assuage the thirst for blood, the path of destruction must lead to universal annihilation. (Crook Mackenzie)
And thus they give the time, that Nature meant for peaceful sleep and meditative snores, to ceaseless din and mindless merriment and waste of shoes and floors. (Crook Mackenzie)
The control of nature is a phrase conceived in arrogance, born of the Neanderthal age of biology and the convenience of man. (Crook Mackenzie)
Whenever man comes up with a better mousetrap, nature immediately comes up with a better mouse. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nothing is more beautiful than the loveliness of the woods before sunrise. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature is a good name for an effect whose cause is God. (Crook Mackenzie)
A wind has blown the rain away and blown the sky away and all the leaves away, and the trees stand. I think, I too, have known autumn too long. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature, like us is sometimes caught without her diadem. (Crook Mackenzie)
Nature, like man, sometimes weeps from gladness. (Crook Mackenzie)
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