Horatio Alger Quotes

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The institution of chivalry forms one of the most remarkable features in the history of the Middle Ages.

Horatio Alger
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Similar Quotes by Horatio Alger

The institution of chivalry forms one of the most remarkable features in the history of the Middle Ages.

Horatio Alger
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Words of love, are works of love.

William R. Alger
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A crowd always thinks with its sympathy, never with its reason.

William R. Alger
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After every storm the sun will smile; for every problem there is a solution, and the soul's indefeasible duty is to be of good cheer.

William R. Alger
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For all my wanderings, I'm ordinary. I came to terms long ago with my littleness. A man is what he is--he can't rise so much as an inch above his shortcomings--Horatio Alger be damned!

Norman Lock, American Meteor
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Men often make up in wrath what they want in reason.

W. R. Alger
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You're perfect. To me you are. You always will be. When you're small you think that about your parents. When you're old, you think that about your kids. You'll see.

Cristina Alger, The Darlings
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Whether you attribute it to some mysterious triple package or to your own Horatio Alger story, to succeed in America is, somehow, to be complicit with the idea of America—which means that at some level you’ve made peace with its rather ugly past.

Vijay Iyer
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I had hundreds of books under my skin already. Not selected reading, all of it. Some of it could be called trashy. I had been through Nick Carter, Horatio Alger, Bertha M. Clay and the whole slew of dime novelists in addition to some really constructive reading. I do not regret the trash. It has harmed me in no way. It was a help, because acquiring the reading habit early is the important thing. Taste and natural development will take care of the rest later on.

Zora Neale Hurston, Dust Tracks on a Road
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But there also seems to be in our culture a curious cautiousness—“You’ll get these abundant gratifications only if you don’t feel too much, don’t let on you want too much.” The result is that, instead of conquering the world like Horatio Alger, we should wait passively until the genie of technology—which we don’t push or influence, only await—brings us our appointed gratifications. All of this is a part of the rewards which go with belief in the vast myth of the machine in the twentieth century.

Rollo May, Love and Will
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