Quotes about Boston
Tomorrow night I appear for the first time before a Boston audience of 4000 critics.
— Mark Twain
A hypocritical businessman, whose fortune had been the misfortune of many others, told Mark Twain piously, "Before I die I intend to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. I want to climb to the top of Mount Sinai and read the Ten Commandments aloud." "I have a better idea," suggested Twain. "Why don't you stay right at home in Boston and keep them?
— Mark Twain
spent much of the next two years cowriting and editing her biography. Emerson was a signatory of the "Declaration of Sentiments" of the first Women's Rights Convention, held in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848. And in 1855, he attended and addressed the convention in Boston.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
was a melancholy introvert who declined to join in philosophical discussions.) The Concord circle of sympathetically-minded thinkers, writers, and social activists became known as Transcendentalists. What exactly is Transcendentalism? That's the question Emerson set out to answer at Boston's Masonic Temple in 1842. In addition to defining his own philosophy, this lecture planted the seeds of the modern self-help and personal development movements.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
They say the cows laid out Boston. Well, there are worse surveyors.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson