Quotes about Magic
For there is no bond more lasting than that formed by the mutual confidences of that magic time when youth is slipping from the sheath of childhood and beginning to wonder what lies for it beyond those misty hills that bound the golden road.
— LM Montgomery
There is such a place as fairyland—but only children can find the way to it. And they do not know that it is fairyland until they have grown so old that they forget the way.
— LM Montgomery
it's delightful when your imaginatios come true, isn't it?
— LM Montgomery
Every night before I goto bed, I look out of my window and wonder if the dryad is really sitting here, combing her locks with the spring for a mirror. Sometimes I look for her footprints in the dew in the morning. Oh, Diana, don't give up your faith in the dryad!
— LM Montgomery
In the hands of a genius, engineering turns to magic, philosophy becomes poetry, and science pure imagination.
— Benjamin Disraeli
Because books, my friends, are true magic bound between two covers.
— Dolly Parton
If we believe in magic, we'll live a magical life.
— Tony Robbins
He felt the long light body, warm against him, comforting against him, abolishing loneliness against him, magically, by a simple touching of flanks, of shoulders and of feet, making an alliance against death with him.
— Ernest Hemingway
There are always mystical countries that are a part of one's childhood. Those we remember and visit sometimes when we are asleep and dreaming. They are as lovely at night as they were when we were children. If you ever go back to see them they are not there. But they are as fine in the night as they ever were if you have the luck to dream of them.
— Ernest Hemingway
Patience and perseverance have a magical effect before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish.
— John Quincy Adams
tied round the neck of the bottle was a paper label, with the words DRINK ME beautifully printed on it in large letters.
— Lewis Carroll
You never see animals going through the absurd and often horrible fooleries of magic and religion. . . . Dogs do not ritually urinate in the hope of persuading heaven to do the same and send down rain. Asses do not bray a liturgy to cloudless skies. Nor do cats attempt, by abstinence from cat's meat, to wheedle the feline spirits into benevolence. Only man behaves with such gratuitous folly. It is the price he has to pay for being intelligent but not, as yet, quite intelligent enough.
— Aldous Huxley