
A storyteller, a displaced poet, will absorb reading differently.
– Richard Brookhiser
Related Quotes:
- I know that when I read the Bible, my life is transformed. I think differently. I act differently. I talk differently. – Jim George
- Do not discern it differently — pursue it differently. – Andy Harglesis
- All Superheroes are differently abled.All differently abled are Superheroes. – Mohith Agadi
- Forest rangers see the forest differently. Likewise, entrepreneurs see the world differently. – Richie Norton
- Everyone who tells a story tells it differently, just to remind us that everybody sees it differently – Jeanette Winterson
- Healing comes through God’s work, and God deals differently with us when we deal differently with him. – Rosaria Champagne erfield
- When I’m focusing on what’s important to God, I live differently. I invest my time differently. – Craig Groeschel
- Darkness is the womb from which a poet is born. – Ged Thompson Liverpool Poet
- No, there was nothing unusual in any of these dreams as dreams. They were merely displaced in Time. – JW Dunne
- The whole world seems tilted, my inner ear displaced by a hole where my spouse used to be. – Suzanne Finnamore
- The time for careers and passions was gone. Hunger pangs displaced ambition. – Panashe Chigumadzi
- His adolescents are displaced aristocrats who have lost their kingdom and wealth, which was childhood. [On J.D. Salinger] – Heather ONeill
- Dams also tend to be built in remote areas which are the last refuge for species that have been displaced by development in other regions. – Patrick McCully
- Everything suddenly seems displaced, subtle gradations erase borders, but it’s more forceful than that. – Bret Easton Ellis
- Young, healthy communities can afford to roll the dice. – Richard Brookhiser
- The towering genius is not apolitical. – Richard Brookhiser
- He might not take their advice, but he took their temperature. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln was a master of small group theatrics. – Richard Brookhiser
- To use the past, he had to save it from aspects of itself. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln told a family friend that his father taught him to work, but never learned him to love it. – Richard Brookhiser
- Literature offered a safe circumscribed outlet for sadness. – Richard Brookhiser
- God produced great writing, a matter of first importance to a man like Lincoln, ever impressed with the nature of cause and forces. – Richard Brookhiser
- She became at once more intimate and more exalted. – Richard Brookhiser
- Depression can seem absurdly self aggrandizing to those who do not experience it, But that does not make it any less painful to those who do. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln bore down or anything he handled, mastering both the details and the principles. – Richard Brookhiser
- One of the highest marks of citizenship is fighting for the common defense. – Richard Brookhiser
- Any man’s life can be seen as a series of engagements with his fathers, Including the surrogates provided by life and literature. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln admitted his infirmities to make way for his spring. – Richard Brookhiser
- As with almost every long oration, there were loose ends. – Richard Brookhiser
- Humor and seriousness can be an unstable mix. – Richard Brookhiser
- It was as simple as walking and as hard as walking on with so far gone and so far yet to go. – Richard Brookhiser
- Most principles are limp until they are tested. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln had a stubborn concern for first principles. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln began to emerge from his funk by helping a coworker who looked up to him out of a funk of his own. – Richard Brookhiser
- Since we never get everything we want or need from our families, we look for sufficiency in surrogates. – Richard Brookhiser
- She noticed, as an exceptional woman would, that her stepson was exceptional. – Richard Brookhiser
- The lightheaded and the fashionable are always willing to shed tears for distant underdogs. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln was less well-read than many a professor or journalist, but what he read, he read deeply. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln loved other people’s jokes as much as his own. – Richard Brookhiser
- Lincoln learned to summon the passions, but he never addressed his audience as sweethearts. – Richard Brookhiser
