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Quotes About Lesson

The first and last lesson of religion is, 'The things that are seen are temporal; the things that are not seen are eternal.' It puts an affront upon nature.
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
The aspect of nature is devout. Like the figure of Jesus, she stands with bended head, and hands folded upon the breast. The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
It doesn't like or dislike. It just functions. It's like a lesson in ballistics. It has a trajectory we decide for it. It follows through. It targets itself, homes itself, and cuts off. It's only copper wire, storage batteries, and electricity.
~ Ray Bradbury
I said; 'his example too. Yes, his example. I forgot that.' 'But I do not. I cannot—I
~ Joseph Conrad
How the right hand became disabled would be a long story for the left to tell," he wrote to William Stephens Smith. "It was by one of those follies from which good cannot come, but ill may.
~ Joseph J. Ellis
seed deposited in the soil attracts to itself everything necessary for its unfolding, and that all he had to do was to take a lesson from the seed and deposit the required idea in his subconscious mind.
~ Joseph Murphy
The first lesson a watcher learns is to separate truth from illusion. Because in the world of magicks, it's the hardest thing to do.
~ Joss Whedon
Home is elusive. It shapeshifts with the currents of my heart and its will. Home is a trickster changing according to the medicine of the season and its lesson. -Prodigal Daughters (Kimberly Wesnaut)
~ Joy Harjo
Well, that's a first-year teacher for you! Didn't he know that was a bad idea?
~ Judy Blume
That night after supper, Jimmy and I used up a whole jar of Noxzema. We had sunburned faces, necks and ears. Our ears hurt more than anything. "Why didn't you use suntan lotion?" Mom asked. "I never burn," Jimmy said. "Famous last words," Grandma said.
~ Judy Blume
The clear lesson of New England's history is that when there are not enough suitable men around to run the world, women are perfectly capable of doing so.
~ Wallace Stegner
Each delicately and fiercely imaged poem is a tribute to perseverance and survival and a lesson for us all.
~ WALTER BARGEN
That was a day that taught me the meaning of abject failure.
~ Walter Moers
Like most shortcuts, it was an ill-chosen route
~ Washington Irving
Wisdom teaches you the lesson before you make the mistake. On the other hand, consequences demand that you make the mistake first. Only then will it teach you the lesson. Wisdom puts up the fence at the top of the cliff; Consequences visits you in the hospital when you're in traction . . . after they've scraped you up from the cliff's bottom.
~ Wayne Cordeiro
Do you want to know the biggest difference between Consequences and Wisdom? Wisdom teaches you the lesson before you make the mistake. On the other hand, consequences demand that you make the mistake first.
~ Wayne Cordeiro
The most important lesson Louise learned a week before her ninth birthday was the hardest one to keep in mind. Sometimes what sounded like a good plan wasn't.
~ Wen Spencer
MR. MCALLISTER'S
~ Wendy Mass
If there is one lesson we can take away from the extravagant lives of our tyrants it is the fragility of our democratic society which, after all, is the exception, not the norm, in that dark, violent story known as human history.
~ Daniel Myerson
The lesson of the Declaration's structure is that solidarity cannot be built without principle.
~ Danielle S. Allen
There are degrees of love. If not, the vibratory rate would be so high we wouldn't be able to be on this plane. The degrees exist because this is the planet of lesson, and as our lessons are learned, we progress to a higher degree of embodiment of Love. We notice "evil" people because their behavior indicates separateness, not oneness, i.e., a lack of regard for others.
~ Dannye Williamsen
If I couldn't be a good example, I'd just have to be a horrible warning.
~ Darynda Jones
Scaffolding is applied in this context, not to engage students through authentic and meaningful activities, but to transmit a designated set of skills and knowledge. It becomes simply another way to exert control over a lesson, to prevent any deviation from language and content objectives. A more accurate term would be "straitjacketing.
~ James Crawford