Friedrich Schiller Quotes About Heart

We have collected for you the TOP of Friedrich Schiller's best quotes about Heart! Here are collected all the quotes about Heart starting from the birthday of the Poet – November 10, 1759! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 22 sayings of Friedrich Schiller about Heart. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Wouldst thou know thyself, observe the actions of others. Wouldst thou other men know, look thou within thine own heart.

    Friedrich Schiller (1851). “The Poems of Schiller, Complete: Including All His Early Suppressed Pieces”, p.269
  • It is not flesh and blood, but heart which makes us fathers and sons.

  • Fate always wins, for our own heart within us Imperiously furthers its designs.

    F. Lamport, Friedrich Schiller (1979). “The Robbers and Wallenstein”, p.474, Penguin UK
  • The dictates of the heart are the voice of fate.

    "Wallenstein" by Friedrich Schiller, translated by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Act III, sc. viii, 1798.
  • Fate hath no voice but the heart's impulse.

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Friedrich Schiller (1847). “The Piccolomini; or, The first part of Wallenstein. Tr. from Schiller. The death of Wallenstein”, p.86
  • Truth exists for the wise, beauty for the feeling heart.

    "Don Carlos". Play by Friedrich Schiller, IV. 21. 186, 1783-1787.
  • If you want to study yourself, look into the hearts of other people. If you want to study other people, look into your own heart.

  • As noble Art has survived noble nature, so too she marches ahead of it, fashioning and awakening by her inspiration. Before Truth sends her triumphant light into the depths of the heart, imagination catches its rays, and the peaks of humanity will be glowing when humid night still lingers in the valleys.

    Friedrich Schiller (2012). “On the Aesthetic Education of Man”, p.52, Courier Corporation
  • Not he who scorns the Saviour's yoke Should wear his cross upon the heart.

    Friedrich Schiller (1864). “The Poems and Ballads of Schiller”, p.77
  • Don't let your heart depend on things That ornament life in a fleeting way! He who possesses, let him learn to lose, He who is fortunate, let him learn pain.

    "The Bride of Messina" by Friedrich Schiller, Act IV, sc. iv, 1803.
  • As freely as the firmament embraces the world, so mercy must encircle friend and foe. The sun poursforth impartially his beams through all the regions of infinity; heaven bestows the dew equally on every thirsty plant. Whatever is good and comes from on high is universal and without reserve: but in the heart's recesses darkness dwells.

  • Whatever lives, lives to die in sorrow. We engage our hearts, and grasp after the things of this world, only to undergo the pang of losing them.

    Friedrich Schiller, Henry George Bohn (1849). “Works”, p.80
  • A noble heart will always capitulate to reason.

  • Let him that sows the serpent's teeth not hope to reap a joyous harvest. Every crime has, in the moment of its perpetration, its own avenging angel,--dark misgivings at the inmost heart.

  • O tender yearning, sweet hoping! The golden time of first love! The eye sees the open heaven, The heart is intoxicated with bliss; O that the beautiful time of young love Could remain green forever.

    "The Song of the Bell". Poem by Friedrich Schiller, 1799.
  • If you wish to know yourself observe how others act. If you wish to understand others look into your own heart.

  • Many a smiling face hides a mourning heart; but grief alone teaches us what we are.

  • If the art of gardening is at last to turn back from her extravagances and rest with her other sisters, it is, above everything, necessary to have clearly before you what you require . . . It is certainly tasteless and inconsistent to desire to encompass the world with a garden-wall, but very practicable and reasonable to make a garden . . . into a characteristic whole to the eye, heart, and nderstanding alike.

  • The game of life looks cheerful when one carries a treasure safe in his heart.

  • Be noble minded! Our own heart, and not other men's opinions of us, forms our true honor.

    Friedrich Schiller (1884). “Works”
  • No emperor has the power to dictate to the heart.

  • I follow my heart, for I can trust it.

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