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Quotes about Harmony

In their presence, there's no need for continuous conversation, but you find you're quite content in just having them nearby.
— Bob Marley
Love your neighbor as yourself and your country more than yourself.
— Thomas Jefferson
For Faith is the beginning and the end is love, and God is the two of them brought into unity. After these comes whatever else makes up a Christian gentleman.
— Ignatius of Antioch
In the created world around us we see the Eternal Artist, Eternal Love at work.
— Evelyn Underhill
As much as I love crisp, clean whites, there's always a time for rich but balanced Chardonnays with oak, especially at Thanksgiving.
— Gary Vaynerchuk
The honorary duty of a human being is to love.
— Maya Angelou
The best, most beautiful, and most perfect way that we have of expressing a sweet concord of mind to each other is by music.
— Jonathan Edwards
Every saint in heaven is as a flower in that garden of God, and holy love is the fragrance and sweet odor that they all send forth, and with which they fill the bowers of that paradise above. Every soul there, is as a note in some concert of delightful music, that sweetly harmonizes with every other note, and all together blend in the most rapturous strains in praising God and the Lamb forever.
— Jonathan Edwards
The best, most beautiful, and most perfect way that we have of expressing a sweet concord of mind to each other, is by music. When I would form in my mind an idea of a society in the highest degree happy, I think of them as expressing their love, their joy, and the inward concord and harmony and spiritual beauty of their souls by sweetly singing to each other.
— Jonathan Edwards
He who is calm disturbs neither himself nor others.
— Epicurus
We must laugh and philosophize and manage our households and look after our other affairs all at the same time, and never stop proclaiming the words of the true philosophy.
— Epicurus
It is impossible to live a pleasant life without living wisely and well and justly, and it is impossible to live wisely and well and justly without living pleasantly.
— Epicurus