And what of Nature itself, you say — that callous and cruel engine, red in tooth and fang? Well, it is not so much of an engine as you think. As for "red in tooth and fang, " whenever I hear the phrase or its intellectual echoes I know that some passer-by has been getting life from books. Henry Beston
About This Quote

Shakespeare was one of the greatest playwrights of all time. To him, the meaning of life was to live life to its fullest. He understood that if you are not fully alive then you are missing out on the true joys of life.

Source: The Outermost House: A Year Of Life On The Great Beach Of Cape Cod

Some Similar Quotes
  1. Nature is pleased with simplicity. And nature is no dummy - Isaac Newton

  2. Could two live that way? Could two live under the wild rose, and explore by the pond, so that the smooth mind of each is as everywhere present to the other, and as received and as unchallenged, as falling snow? - Annie Dillard

  3. When two creatures meet, the one that is able to intimidate its opponent is recognized as socially superior, so that a social decision does not always depend on a fight; an encounter in some circumstances may be enough. - Hediger

  4. There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore, There is society, where none intrudes, By the deep sea, and music in its roar: I love not man the less, but Nature more - George Gordon Byron

  5. The tides are in our veins, we still mirror the stars, life is your child, but there is in me Older and harder than life and more impartial, the eye that watched before there was an ocean. - Robinson Jeffers

More Quotes By Henry Beston
  1. Poetry is as necessary to comprehension as science. It is as impossible to live without reverence as it is without joy.

  2. The world to-day is sick to its thin blood for lack of elemental things, for fire before the hands, for water welling from the earth, for air, for the dear earth itself underfoot. In my world of beach and dunes these elemental presences lived and...

  3. Our fantastic civilization has fallen out of touch with many aspects of nature, and with none more completely than with night. Primitive folk, gathered at a cave mouth round a fire, do not fear night; they fear, rather, the energies and creatures to whom night...

  4. I muse again on the dogmatic assertion which I often make that the countryman's relation to Nature must never be anything else but an alliance... When we begin to consider Nature as something to be robbed greedily like an unguarded treasure, or used as an...

  5. My house completed, and tried and not found wanting by a first Cape Cod year, I went there to spend a fortnight in September. The fortnight ending, I lingered on, and as the year lengthened into autumn, the beauty and mystery of this earth and...

Related Topics