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Letter "L" » Liberty Hyde Bailey Quotes
«Science may eventually explain the world of How. The ultimate world of Why may remain for contemplation, philosophy, religion.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«We accept it because we have seen the vision. We know that we cannot reap the harvest, but we hope that we may so well prepare the land and so diligently sow the seed that our successors may gather the ripened grain.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«My life has been a continuous fulfillment of dreams. It appears that everything I saw and did has a new, and perhaps, more significant meaning, every time I see it. The earth is good. It is a privilege to live thereon.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«I do not yet know why plants come out of the land or float in streams, or creep on rocks or roll from the sea. I am entranced by the mystery of them, and absorbed by their variety and kinds. Everywhere they are visible yet everywhere occult.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«I have no patience with the doctrine of pure science, that science is science only when it is uncontaminated by application in the arts of life; and I also have no patience with the spirit that considers a piece of work to be legitimate only as it has direct bearing on the arts and affairs of men.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«Even though the college man raises no more wheat than his neighbor, he will have more satisfaction raising it. He will know why he turns the clod; he will challenge the worm that burrows in the furrow; his eyes will follow the field mouse that scuds under the grass; he will see the wild fowl winging its way across the heaven. All these things will add to the meaning of life and they are his.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«Humble is the grass in the field, yet it has noble relations. All the bread grains are grass - wheat and rye, barley, sorghum and rice; maize, the great staple of America; millet, oats and sugar cane. Other things have their season but the grass is of all seasons... the common background on which the affairs of nature and man are conditioned and displayed.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«Extension work is not exhortation. Nor is it exploitation of the people, or advertising of an institution, or publicity work for securing students. It is a plain, earnest, and continuous effort to meet the needs of the people on their own farms and in the localities.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
«If there is no land, there are porches or windows, balconies or small green spaces attached to houses.»
Author: Liberty Hyde Bailey
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