« All Seeing Quotes · Rumi's Page
Seeing Quotes by Rumi
- God's purpose for man is to acquire a seeing eye and an understanding heart." "God gave you life and bestowed upon you his attributes; eventually…
- A SEEING eye is better than three hundred blind men's: The eye can distinguish pearls from pebbles.
- Try another way of looking. Try you looking and the whole universe seeing.
- God's purpose for man is to acquire a seeing eye and an understanding heart.
- Stop looking for something out there and begin seeing within.
- If Your Eyes Are Opened, You'll See The Things Worth Seeing.
- Achieve some perfection [excellence] yourself, so that you may not fall into sorrow by seeing the perfection in others.
- Suddenly the drunken sweetheart appeared out of my door. She drank a cup of ruby wine and sat by my side. Seeing and holding the…
- This is love: to fly toward a secret sky, to cause a hundred veils to fall each moment. First, to let go of life. In…
- Behead yourself!... Dissolve your whole body into Vision: become seeing, seeing, seeing!
- Lovers have heartaches that cant be cured by drugs, or sleep, or games, but only by seeing their beloved
More Seeing Quotes
- The hardest job kids face today is learning good manners without seeing any. — Fred Astaire
- I feel like soundtrack music is almost like seeing the movie again, but with my ears. — Dave Attell
- God's purpose for man is to acquire a seeing eye and an understanding heart." "God gave you life and bestowed upon you… — Rumi
- On the other side, I do believe that the rhetoric we are seeing from the Democrats today is unprecedented, is a new… — Ed Gillespie
- Even in New York, there are a lot of very attractive girls pedaling around. That just happens to be one of the… — Paul Auster
- I'm a father. It isn't just my life any more. I don't want my kid finding bottles in the house or seeing… — Billie Joe Armstrong
- Oh, the most important thing about myself is that my life has been full of changes. Therefore, when I observe the world,… — Chinua Achebe
- A mind lively and at ease, can do with seeing nothing, and can see nothing that does not answer. — Jane Austen