the heart of a prophet is not his own to bestow.
– Geraldine Brooks
Related Quotes:
- You don’t need a prophet to tell you to eat. – Geraldine Brooks
- I thought it best to add nothing further, to let the line of his thought lead him to his own conclusions. – Geraldine Brooks
- Where was his empathy? Buried, I supposed, beneath his self-regard. – Geraldine Brooks
- Any prophet who does not refer you to christ is not a true prophet. – Patience Johnson
- A prophet is always underestimated, and part of what makes one a prophet is that he doesn’t really mind it. – Criss Jami
- False prophet: A prophet whose god is not yet known – Bangambiki Habyarimana
- The wiles of a veteran turned the younger man’s own gift of speed against him. – Geraldine Brooks
- Whose are all these ghosts?- she said, smiling at a flustered-looking Geraldine. -œOh,- said Geraldine, -œI think they might be mine…? – Diane Hall
- A dog has one aim in life… to bestow his heart. – JR Ackerley
- A book is more than the sum of its materials. It is an artifact of the human mind and hand. – Geraldine Brooks
- Book burnings. Always the forerunners. Heralds of the stake, the ovens, the mass graves. – Geraldine Brooks
- Who is the brave man–he who feels no fear? If so, then bravery is but a polite term for a mind devoid of rationality and imagination. – Geraldine Brooks
- I have lived most of my life in soldiers’ camps. I know what they saw. I know how they think. Their confidence sours as sudden as curdled milk. – Geraldine Brooks
- Avner had lived too long and become too canny to claim the crown of Israel for himself. – Geraldine Brooks
- Even though he said no store in uncanny things, he was soldier enough to value with whatever weapon came to hand. – Geraldine Brooks
- When a kingdom rests on it, I always expect difficulty. Then, if there is none, no blame. But if there is, one is prepared. – Geraldine Brooks
- No one sits, as you do, so close to a king, who does not begin to grasp how the levers of power work, and the cost of the oil that must grease them. – Geraldine Brooks
- This night he was a king before he was a man. At this time, this troubled me. Later, I would have cause to wish it were always so. – Geraldine Brooks
- He is able to put aside personal feelings and see the broad strokes. Experience counts in these things. – Geraldine Brooks
- David ran through concrete advantages. And then set aside the practical. The pragmatist was gone, replaced by the poet and mystic. – Geraldine Brooks
- The stories that grow up around a king are strong vines with a fierce grip. – Geraldine Brooks
- To know a man’s library is, in some measure, to know a man’s mind. – Geraldine Brooks
- Curiosity -“ if not desire, if not plain kindness -“ might have led him to greater zeal. – Geraldine Brooks
- the greatest cruelty of madness is the power it has to blot out a person. – Geraldine Brooks
- You go on. You set one foot in front of the other, and if a thin voice cries out, somewhere behind you, you pretend not to hear, and keep going. – Geraldine Brooks
- We look at the Ark of the Covenant and remember who we are. – Geraldine Brooks
- I was not 15 anymore, and choices no longer had that same clear, bright edge to them. – Geraldine Brooks
- I liked to be off by myself, away from the eyes of adults who always had some task or errand to demand of an unoccupied child. – Geraldine Brooks
- Even the ordinary business of cleaning house seemed somehow to have become sacramental. – Geraldine Brooks
- It is one thing to know what is to come. It is another thing to confront it. – Geraldine Brooks
- He did wrong. He has acknowledged it before the people. He repents it. How many kings have the humility to do that? – Geraldine Brooks
- It’s remarkable how very many things there are that a king may not do. – Geraldine Brooks
- I ceased to serve a king and began, instead, to serve a kingdom. – Geraldine Brooks
- David set me to learn other skills, too, in those days of restless waiting. – Geraldine Brooks
- Dying on your own terms, this is the greatest gift anyone can bestow upon a mortal man. – Mario Stinger
- We built that Wendy House our own selves, for Wendy! And you can’t keep a Wendy out of her own Wendy House! – Geraldine McCaughrean
- He that is proud eats up himself: pride is his own gl???, his own trumpet, his own chronicle. – William Shakespeare
- Just as he was slowly bringing order to his own internal life, he would also bring order to his language. – David Brooks
- The sun is never denied the light it gives; likewise, you are never denied the kindness you bestow. – Matshona Dhliwayo
- … Remember that forgiveness too is a power. To beg for it is a power, and to withold or bestow it is a power, perhaps the greatest. – Margaret Atwood