The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life Quotes

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The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life by William Rounseville Alger
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“It is true that the real world of the soul is an invisible place, removed from the rush and chatter of crowds, and that the most important portion of life is the secret and solitary portion. Yet the most influential element even of this secluded world and this hidden life, is the element which consists of the ideas and feelings we habitually cherish in relation to our fellow-beings.”
William Rounseville Alger, The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life
“The higher we look on the scale of strength and individuality, the more isolated we see that the nature and habits of creatures are. The eagle chooses his eyrie in the bleakest solitude; the condor affects the deserted empyrean; the leopard prowls through the jungle by himself; the lion has a lonely lair. So with men. While savages, like the Hottentots, gibber in their kraals, and, among civilized nations, the dissipated and the frivolous collect in clubs and assemblies, dreading to be left in seclusion, the poet loves his solitary walk, the saint retreats to be closeted with God, and the philosopher wraps himself in immensity.”
William Rounseville Alger, The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life
“There are many disappointed and discontented men and women, exasperated with society, uneasy with seclusion, galled by the bonds of the world when they feel its multitudinous emulation, unable to enjoy freedom and repose when they retreat into solitude.”
William Rounseville Alger, The Solitudes of Nature and of Man; or, The Loneliness of Human Life