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Quotes about Exploration

If you have never failed, you have never tried anything new.
— Albert Einstein
I want to see friends more and travel more.
— Jennifer Aniston
Winter is not here yet. There's a little flower, up yonder, the last bud from the multitude of bluebells that clouded those turf steps in July with a lilac mist. Will you clamber up and pluck it to show papa?
— Emily Bronte
You could not open a book in this library that I have not looked into...it is as much as you can expect from a poor man's daughter.
— Emily Bronte
I'll walk, but not in old heroic traces, And not in paths of high morality, And not among the half-distinguished faces, The clouded forms of long-past history. I'll walk where my own nature would be leading: It vexes me to choose another guide: Where the grey flocks in ferny glens are feeding; Where the wild wind blows on the mountain side.
— Emily Bronte
Adventure is worthwhile in itself.
— Amelia Earhart
You haven't seen a tree until you've seen its shadow from the sky.
— Amelia Earhart
the stars seemed near enough to touch and never before have i seen so many. i always believed the lure of flying is the lure of beauty, but i was sure of it that night.
— Amelia Earhart
I grew up thinking that a research scientist was a natural thing to be.
— Stephen Hawking
The late Dag Hammarskjöld, once the secretary general of the United Nations, suggested that we have become adept at exploring outer space, but we have not developed similar skills in exploring our own personal inner spaces. He wrote, "The longest journey of any person is the journey inward."4 Most of us feel much more equipped to manipulate objects, control situations, and "do" things than to take that very long journey inward. Painful Honesty
— Peter Scazzero
What St. Augustine so aptly says of the mutual relation of the Old and New Testament, "Novum Testamentum in Vetere latet, Vetus in Novo patet,
— Philip Schaff
If I had a time machine, I'd visit Marilyn Monroe in her prime or drop in on Galileo as he turned his telescope to the heavens.
— Stephen Hawking