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“A graceless pastor is a blind man elected to a professorship of optics.”
Charles Haddon Spurgeon“A graceless pastor is a blind man elected to a professorship of optics.”
Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Lectures to My Students“Whining is not only graceless, but can be dangerous. It can alert a brute that a victim is in the neighborhood.”
Maya Angelou, Wouldn't Take Nothing for My Journey Now“For modes of faith let graceless zealots fight, His can't be wrong whose life is in the right.”
Alexander Pope“There can be a fundamental gulf of gracelessness in a human heart which neither our love nor our courage can bridge.”
Patrick Campbell“I think it's fair to say that I don't pick up languages. If anything, I roll around in them gracelessly and pray that something sticks.”
Elizabeth Little“Jules stood up and stretched gracelessly. “Let’s hurry up and pay before she”-she indicated Claire with a flick of her thumb-“sees something shiny and we lose her again.”
Kimberly Derting, The Body Finder“An acceptable death is a death which can be accepted or tolerated by the survivors. It has its antithesis: ‘the embarrassingly graceless dying,’ which embarrasses the survivors because it causes too strong an emotion to burst forth; and emotions must be avoided both in the hospital and everywhere in society. One does not have the right to become emotional other than in private, that is to say, secretly.”
Philippe Ariès, Western Attitudes toward Death: From the Middle Ages to the Present“I see God now as an unimaginative writer of popular fictions, someone who builds stories around sadistic and graceless plots, narratives that exist only to express His terror of a woman's power to choose who and how to love, to redefine love as she sees fit, not as God thinks it ought to be. The author is unworthy of His own characters.”
Joe Hill, Horns“But I still wonder how it was possible, in those graceless years of transition, long ago, that men did not see whither they were going, and went on, in blindness and cowardice, to their fate. I wonder, for it is hard for me to conceive how men who knew the word "I," could give it up and not know what they lost. But such has been the story, for I have lived in the City of the damned, and I know what horror men permitted to be brought upon them.”
Ayn Rand, Anthem“What a vapid job title our culture gives to those honorable laborers the ancient Egyptians and Sumerians variously called Learned Men of the Magic Library, Scribes of the Double House of Life, Mistresses of the House of Books, or Ordainers of the Universe. 'Librarian' - that mouth-contorting, graceless grind of a word, that dry gulch in the dictionary between 'libido' and 'licentious' - it practically begs you to envision a stoop-shouldered loser, socks mismatched, eyes locked in a permanent squint from reading too much microfiche. If it were up to me, I would abolish the word entirely and turn back to the lexicological wisdom of the ancients, who saw librarians not as feeble sorters and shelvers but as heroic guardians. In Assyrian, Babylonian, and Egyptian cultures alike, those who toiled at the shelves were often bestowed with a proud, even soldierly, title: Keeper of the Books. - p.113”
Miles Harvey, The Island of Lost Maps: A True Story of Cartographic Crime