167 Quotes by Annie Besant

  • Author Annie Besant
  • Quote

    To look at food and say that it is good will not satisfy a starving man; he must put forth his hand and eat. So to hear the Master’s words is not enough; you must do what He says, attending to every word, taking every hint”.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    The peril was pressing; the menace unmistakable. The.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    The Buddha over and over again spoke clearly and definitely on post-mortem states – as in his conversation with Vasetta.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    What Religion has to face in the controversies of to-day is not the unbelief of the sty, but the unbelief of the educated conscience and of the soaring intellect;.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    Mysticism is the most scientific form of religion, for it bases itself, as does all science, on experience and experiment – experiment being only a specialised form of experience, devised either to discover or to verify.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    When we recognise that unity of all living things, then at once arises the question – how can we support this life of ours with least injury to the lives around us; how can we prevent our own life adding to the suffering of the world in which we live?

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    They who cannot face the world have not the strength to face the difficulties of Yoga practice. If the outer world out-wearies your powers, how do you expect to conquer the difficulties of the inner life? If you cannot climb over the little troubles of the world, how can you hope to climb over the difficulties that a yogi has to scale? Those men blunder, who think that running away from the world is the road to victory, and that peace can be found only in certain localities.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    This coarse and insulting way of regarding woman, as though they existed merely to be the safety-valves of men’s passions, and that the best men were above the temptation of loving them, has been the source of unnumbered evils.

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  • Author Annie Besant
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    There was a time when any idea of voluntary limitation was regarded by pious people as interfering with Providence. We are beyond that now, and have become capable of recognising that Providence works through the common sense of individual brains.

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