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Quote by Mary Abigail Dodge

Work

Woman's Worth and Worthlessness: The Complement to

This book delves into the complex and evolving concepts of worth and worthlessness as they relate to women, examining historical and contemporary perspectives. more

Author

Mary Abigail Dodge

Mary Abigail Dodge was an American writer renowned for her contributions to children's literature. Born on March 31, 1833, she spent much of her life in New York and New England. Dodge's works were characterized by their moral lessons and imaginative storytelling, making her a prominent figure in the field of children's literature during the late 19th century. more

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“A thing is either alive or it isn’t; there is nothing that is almost alive. There is but the remotest possibility of the origin of life by spontaneous generation, and every likelihood that Arrhenius is right when he dares to claim that life is a cosmic phenomenon, something that drifts between the spheres, like light, and like light transiently descends upon those fit to receive it.”

“As the brain of man is the speck of dust in the universe that thinks, so the leaves—the fern and the needled pine and the latticed frond and the seaweed ribbon—perceive the light in a fundamental and constructive sense. … Their leaves see the light, as my eyes can never do. … They impound its stellar energy, and with that force they make life out of the elements.”