Every great book is an action, and every great action is a book. Luther.
Every great genius has a special vocation, 15 and when he has fulfilled it, he is no longer needed. Goethe.
Every great man is unique. Emerson.
Every great mind seeks to labour for eternity. All men are captivated by immediate advantages; great minds alone are excited by the prospect of distant good. Schiller.
Every great poem is in itself limited by necessity, but in its suggestions unlimited and infinite. Longfellow.
Every great reform which has been effected has consisted, not in doing something new, but in undoing something old. Buckle.
Every great writer is a writer of history, let 20 him treat on almost what subject he may. He carries with him for thousands of years a portion of his times; and, indeed, if only his own effigy were there, it would be greatly more than a fragment of his century. Landor.
Every healthy effort is directed from the inward to the outward world. Goethe.
Every heart knows its own bitterness. Pr.
Every hero becomes a bore at last. Emerson.