Quotes by Liberty Hyde Bailey

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If a person cannot love a plant after he has pruned it, then he has either done a poor job or is devoid of emotion.
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I do not yet know why plants come out of the land or float in streams, or creep on rocks or roll from the sea. I am entranced by the mystery of them, and absorbed by their variety and kinds. Everywhere they are visible yet everywhere occult.
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The department of home economics was organized to train a woman in efficiency and to develop her outlook to life. Such a department is a necessity as a means of developing a society. It stands for the evolution of women’s work and place.
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There are two essential epochs in any enterprise – to begin, and to get done.
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One’s happiness depends less on what he knows than on what he feels.
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One does not begin to make a garden until he wants a garden. To want a garden is to be interested in plants, in the winds and rains, in birds and insects, in the warm-smelling earth.
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The man who worries morning and night about the dandelions in the lawn will find great relief in loving the dandelions.
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The happiest life has the greatest number of points of contact with the world, and it has the deepest feeling and sympathy with everything that is.
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There is great satisfaction in a well-made clean tool that does its work well.
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Tools of many kinds and well chosen, are one of the joys of a garden.
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