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Hugh Miller Quotes
Hugh Miller Quotes
Hugh Miller
Scottish
Scientist
Born:
1802
Died:
1856
Always
History
Man
Nature
Opportunities
School
Related authors:
Alexander Fleming
Arthur Keith
David Gill
James Black
James Hutton
Joseph Hume
Patrick Geddes
Robert Fortune
Save for thee and thy lessons, man in society would everywhere sink into a sad compound of the fiend and the wild beast; and this fallen world would be as certainly a moral as a natural wilderness.
Hugh Miller
Sad
Man
Natural
World
Beast
Society
Wild
Wild Beast
Wilderness
Everywhere
Moral
Would
Would-Be
Compound
Thy
Fallen
Sink
Thee
Fiend
Certainly
Lessons
Save
Their humble dwellings were of their own rearing; it was they themselves who had broken in their little fields; from time immemorial, far beyond the reach of history, had they possessed their mountain holdings.
Hugh Miller
Time
Broken
History
Humble
Own
Possessed
Immemorial
Had
Reach
Beyond
Were
Mountain
Fields
Little
Far
Themselves
Rearing
Who
They were, I doubt not, happy enough in their dark stalls, because they were horses, and had plenty to eat; and I was at times quite happy enough in the dark loft, because I was a man, and could think and imagine.
Hugh Miller
Man
Happy
Dark
Doubt
Think
Enough
Plenty
Loft
Eat
Horses
Could
Had
Because
Were
Times
Quite
Imagine
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Alexander Fleming
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