Charles Lindbergh Quotes About Earth

We have collected for you the TOP of Charles Lindbergh's best quotes about Earth! Here are collected all the quotes about Earth starting from the birthday of the Aviator – February 4, 1902! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 14 sayings of Charles Lindbergh about Earth. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • The life of an aviator seemed to me ideal. It involved skill. It brought adventure. It made use of the latest developments of science. Mechanical engineers were fettered to factories and drafting boards while pilots have the freedom of wind with the expanse of sky. There were times in an aeroplane when it seemed I had escaped mortality to look down on earth like a God.

  • After my death, the molecules of my being will return to the earth and sky. They came from the stars. I am of the stars.

    Charles A. Lindbergh (1992). “Autobiography of Values”, Harcourt
  • My aging body transmits an ageless life stream. Molecular and atomic replacement change life's composition. Molecules take part in structure and in training, countless trillions of them. After my death, the molecules of my being will return to the earth and sky. They came from the stars. I am of the stars.

    Charles A. Lindbergh (1978). “Autobiography of Values”, Harcourt
  • I'm not bound to be in aviation at all. I'm here only because I love the sky and flying more than anything else on earth. Of course there's danger; but a certain amount of danger is essential to the quality of life. I don't believe in taking foolish chances' but nothing can be accomplished without taking any chance at all.

    "The Spirit of St. Louis".
  • It is about a period in aviation which is now gone, but which was probably more interesting than any the future will bring. As time passes, the perfection of machinery tends to insulate man from contact with the elements in which he lives. The 'stratosphere' planes of the future will cross the ocean without any sense of the water below. Like a train tunneling through a mountain, they will be aloof from both the problems and the beauty of the earth's surface.

    Men  
  • I owned the world that hour as I rode over it. free of the earth, free of the mountains, free of the clouds, but how inseparably I was bound to them.

    Charles Augustus Lindbergh (1970). “The wartime journals of Charles A. Lindbergh”, Harcourt
  • God made life simple. It is man who complicates it.

    Simple   Men   Earth Life  
    Reader's Digest, July 1972.
  • This is earth again, the earth where I've lived and now will live once more ... I've been to eternity and back. I know how the dead would feel to live again.

  • Science, freedom, beauty, adventure: what more could you ask of life? Aviation combined all the elements I loved. There was science in each curve of an airfoil, in each angle between strut and wire, in the gap of a spark plug or the color of the exhaust flame. There was freedom in the unlimited horizon, on the open fields where one landed. A pilot was surrounded by beauty of earth and sky. He brushed treetops with the birds, leapt valleys and rivers, explored the cloud canyons he had gazed at as a child. Adventure lay in each puff of wind.

    Charles Lindbergh, “Untitled”
  • By day, or on a cloudless night, a pilot may drink the wine of the gods, but it has an earthly taste; he's a god of the earth, like one of the Grecian deities who lives on worldly mountains and descended for intercourse with men. But at night, over a stratus layer, all sense of the planet may disappear. You know that down below, beneath that heavenly blanket is the earth, factual and hard. But it's an intellectual knowledge; it's a knowledge tucked away in the mind; not a feeling that penetrates the body.

    Men  
  • I believe that for permanent survival, man must balance science with other qualities of life, qualities of body and spirit as well as those of mind - qualities he cannot develop when he lets mechanics and luxury insulate him too greatly from the earth to which he was born.

    Men  
  • I began to feel that I lived on a higher plane than the skeptics of the ground; one that was richer because of its very association with the element of danger they dreaded, because it was freer of the earth to which they were bound. In flying, I tasted a wine of the gods of which they could know nothing. Who valued life more highly, the aviators who spent it on the art they loved, or these misers who doled it out like pennies through their antlike days? I decided that if I could fly for ten years before I was killed in a crash, it would be a worthwhile trade for an ordinary life time.

  • Time is an abstraction which, on earth, exists only for the human brain it has evolved.

    Charles A. Lindbergh (1992). “Autobiography of Values”, Harcourt
  • Man must feel the earth to know himself and recognize his values. God made life simple. It is man who complicates it.

    Simple   Men   Earth Life  
    Reader's Digest, July 1972.
Page 1 of 1
Did you find Charles Lindbergh's interesting saying about Earth? We will be glad if you share the quote with your friends on social networks! This page contains Aviator quotes from Aviator Charles Lindbergh about Earth collected since February 4, 1902! Come back to us again – we are constantly replenishing our collection of quotes so that you can always find inspiration by reading a quote from one or another author!

Charles Lindbergh

  • Born: February 4, 1902
  • Died: August 26, 1974
  • Occupation: Aviator