Quotes about Creature
So expressive it was, of a hopeless and lost creature, that a famished traveler, wearied out by lonely wandering in a wilderness, would have remembered home and friends in such a tone before lying down to die.
- Charles Dickens
So expressive it was, of a hopeless and lost creature, that a famished traveller, wearied out by lonely wandering in a wilderness, would have remembered home and friends in such a tone before lying down to die.
- Charles Dickens
There cannot live a more unhappy creature than an ill-natured old man, who is neither capable of receiving pleasures, nor sensible of conferring them on others.
- William Temple
I am a unique creature of nature. I am rare and there is value in all rarity; therefore, I am valuable
- Og Mandino
The mother dead these fourteen years did incubate in her own bosom the creature who would carry her off.
- Cormac McCarthy
Creation is thus God's presence in creatures. The Greek Orthodox theologian Philip Sherrard has written that Creation is nothing less than the manifestation of God's hidden Being. This means that we and all other creatures live by a sanctity that is inexpressibly intimate, for to every creature, the gift of life is a portion of the breath and spirit of God. (pg. 308, Christianity and the Survival of Creation)
- Wendell Berry
Nature, then, is incapable of conceiving what lies above nature. As a consequence, no creature can achieve divinization for itself naturally, simply because it cannot grasp God. It belongs wholly to God's grace to distribute divinization by grace, according to the measure of each being, to enlighten nature with supernatural light and to lift it above its own limitations by the superabundance of glory.
- Hans Urs von Balthasar
Man is the creature with a mystery in his heart that is bigger than himself.
- Hans Urs von Balthasar
She is a monster, without being a myth, which is rather unfair.
- Oscar Wilde
A creature is not a creator, and cannot be. There is only one Creation, and we are its members.
- Wendell Berry
a creature cloistered now by deliberate choice and still in the throes of enforced apprenticeship to, rather than voluntary or even acquiescent participation in, breathing
- William Faulkner
The cry of a young raven is nothing but the natural cry of a creature, but your cry, if it be sincere, is the result of a work of grace in your heart.
- Charles Spurgeon