Enjoy the best quotes on Fertility , Explore, save & share top quotes on Fertility .
“If your prayers are not fertile, what are they? How do you make the Buddy System feminine? Pink is feminine.”
Charlotte Fairchild“Both the human immune system and the plant immune system are fundamentally interdependent on the quality and fertility of the soil. Our immune system, and even our physical structure, are a reflection of the foods we have eaten from either toxic and nutrient depleted soils, or wonderfully fertile soils.”
Eryn Paige, How to Grow Glorious Wheatgrass at Home Tutorial - With Salty Sea Mineral Eco-Fertilization for Superior Mineral Rich Soil“Someday men will learn to irrigate and spread fertilizer instead of praying for fertility.”
Warren Eyster, The Goblins of Eros“Misery and poverty of a nation does not depend on how fertile their land is but the fertility of their thoughts.”
Debasish Mridha“Remind me that the most fertile lands were built by the fires of volcanoes.”
Andrea Gibson, The Madness Vase: By Andrea Gibson“Check your environment and be sure that it is supportive. Some environments do not support progress. Hiroshima and Nagasaki are not fertile lands for a farmer’s dream seeds. Change location.”
Israelmore Ayivor, Shaping the dream“Spring is the sacred soul of fertility.”
Lailah Gifty Akita“It goes without saying that even those of us who are going to hell will get eternal life—if that territory really exists outside religious books and the minds of believers, that is. Having said that, given the choice, instead of being grilled until hell freezes over, the average sane human being would, needless to say, rather spend forever idling in an extremely fertile garden, next to a lamb or a chicken or a parrot, which they do not secretly want to eat, and a lion or a tiger or a crocodile, which does not secretly want to eat them.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana, The Use and Misuse of Children“For the fact is that disorder is the condition of the mind's fertility: it contains the mind's promise, since its fertility depends on the unexpected rather than the expected, depends on what we do not know, and because we do not know it, than what we know.”
Paul Valéry, Selected Writings“For Alwyn's grandfather, who was known as "the greatest talker in the country," used words which no one else understood, words which he did not understand, and words which do not exist, to swell a passionate theme, to confound his neighbors in an argument, and for their own sake. He would say, for example, "My farm was the very apocalypse of fertility, but the renter has rested on his oars till it is good for nothing," or "Manifest the bounty to pass the salt shaker in my direction." Something of the Bible, something of an Irish inheritance, something of a liar's anxiety, made of his most ordinary remark a strange and wearisome oratory.”
Glenway Wescott, The Grandmothers: A Family Portrait