“Travelers are like poets. They are mostly an angry race.”
Richard Burton
“Nobody has ever measured, not even poets, how much the human heart can hold.”
Zelda Fitzgerald
“Poets and heroes are of the same race, the latter do what the former conceive.”
Alphonse de Lamartine
“Murder in the murderer is no such ruinous thought as poets and romancers will have it; it does not unsettle him, or fright him from his ordinary notice of trifles; it is an act quite easy to be contemplated.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson
“The mountains are fountains of men as well as of rivers, of glaciers, of fertile soil. The great poets, philosophers, prophets, able men whose thought and deeds have moved the world, have come down from the mountains.”
John Muir
“HUMANITY, n. The human race, collectively, exclusive of the anthropoid poets.”
Ambrose Bierce
“I did not come here on earth to sleep, I came to work.”
Mitta Xinindlu