top of page
Quote_1.png
William Blake

"Tools were made and born were hands Every farmer understands."

Standard 
 Customized
"Tools were made and born were hands Every farmer understands."

Exlpore more Work quotes

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"Have convictions. Be friendly. Stick to your beliefs as they stick to theirs. Work as hard as they do."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"A good work ethic is not so much a concern for hard work but rather one for responsibility. There have been a great many men and women who have in fact used work or hustle or selfish ambition as an escape from real responsibility, an escape from purpose. In matters such as these, the hard worker is just as dysfunctional as the sloth."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"Ruth Cole was a novelist, novelists are not at their best when they go off half-cocked. She believed that she would prepare what she was going to tell the police - preferably in writing."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"The great work must inevitably be obscure, except to the very few, to those who like the author himself are initiated into the mysteries. Communication then is secondary: it is perpetuation which is important. For this only one good reader is necessary."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"One is not idle because one is absorbed. There is both visible and invisible labor. To contemplate is to toil, to think is to do. The crossed arms work, the clasped hands act. The eyes upturned to Heaven are an act of creation."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"Like every man of sense and good feeling, I abominate work."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"The fact that you are true child of God doesn't mean you will find gold on the floor when sweeping. You got to dig up the gold!"

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"We try, when we wake, to lay the new day at God's feet; before we have finished shaving, it becomes our day and God's share in it is felt as a tribute which we must pay out of 'our own' pocket, a deduction from the time which ought, we feel, to be 'our own'. A man starts a new job with a sense of vocation and, perhaps, for the first week still keeps the discharge of the vocation as his end, taking the pleasures and pains from God's hand, as they came, as 'accidents'. But in the second week he is beginning to 'know the ropes': by the third, he has quarried out of the total job his own plan for himself within that job, and when he can pursue this he feels that he is getting no more than his rights, and when he cannot, that he is being interfered."

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"How many a rustic Milton has passed by Stifling the speechless longings of his heart In unremitting drudgery and care! How many a vulgar Cato has compelled His energies no longer tameless then To mould a pin or fabricate a nail!"

Quote_1.png
Akiroq Brost

"Our boss has been so successful he deserves to retire so that he can spend more time . . . with his servants."

Explore more quotes by William Blake

Quote_1.png
William Blake
"If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man as it is, infinite."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"When a sinister person means to be your enemy, they always start by trying to become your friend."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"Exuberance is beauty."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"The foundation of empire is art and science. Remove them or degrade them, and the empire is no more. Empire follows art and not vice versa as Englishmen suppose."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"For everything that lives is holy, life delights in life."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"Think in the morning. Act in the noon. Eat in the evening. Sleep in the night."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"Man has no Body distinct from his Soul; for that called Body is a portion of Soul discerned by the five Senses, the chief inlets of Soul in this age."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"Lives in eternity's sun rise."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"The thankful receiver bears a plentiful harvest."
Quote_1.png
William Blake
"He who would do good to another must do it in Minute Particulars: general Good is the plea of the scoundrel, hypocrite, and flatterer, for Art and Science cannot exist but in minutely organized Particulars."
bottom of page