Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Gawin Douglas

Quote by Gawin Douglas

Work

The Aeneid, Volume 1: Introduction, Books I - VIII

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Gawin Douglas

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Gawin Douglas. more

You May Also Like

“Call it esoteric, it's an enlightenment I the Word of God of what's going on in the world of government. We all want to be equal to one another, not better nor worst for equity compels performance. But to have that one must remember "Diligence is the responsibility of the party who stands to lose by lack thereof". So believe in God and your lack becomes a cup of overflowing abundance.”

“Have you come across a phenomenon which we might call “parallel conversations” before? What do I mean by that? I mean where one thing can be said at a rational and everyday level, and yet something else, some other message or signal, modulates that basic carrier wave. ... [S]omeone might use a metaphor or a common saying (either knowingly or unconsciously) such as “There's no point in mending fences while the wind s up”, which might rationally fit in with a physical task that they were carrying out at home over the weekend, and yet might convey other meanings to whomever they were talking to.”

“God can lead an organization to increase sales and earn healthy profits, but He values people more than He prizes money. He focuses on the eternal rather than the temporal. When you build a culture that values the same things God does, you experience His pleasure upon your life and work, and people are blessed. Corporate cultures that bless staff, customers, and investors tend to do well over the long haul. The challenge, of course, is not only to construct such a culture but also to protect and nurture that culture so it lasts. Richard Blackaby, Lead On Mission”

“I thought that directness spoke for itself, but hadn’t realized that the English like their ritual and distrust plain speaking as somehow mendacious. Everything has a hidden meaning, does it not? And the more direct the speech, the more carefully hidden the true meaning must be, the more effort must be expended to understand what is really being said.”