No grace can save any man unless he helps himself. Ward Beecher.

No grain of sand / But moves a bright and million-peopled land, / And hath its Eden and its Eves, I deem. Blanchard.

No grand doer in this world can be a copious speaker about his doings. Carlyle.

No great composition was ever produced but with the same heavenly involuntariness in which a bird builds her nest. Ruskin.

No great intellectual thing was ever done 15 by great effort. Ruskin.

No great man was ever other than a genuine man. Carlyle.

No great truth is allowed by Nature to be demonstrable to any person who, foreseeing its consequences, desires to refuse it. Ruskin.

No greater hell than to be a slave to fear. Ben Jonson.

No greater men are now than ever were. Emerson.

No greater misfortune can befall a man than 20 to be the victim of an idea which has no hold on his life, still more which detaches him from it. Goethe.