Sigrid
Undset:
All things that a man owns hold him far more than
he holds them.
Agnes
Repplier:
The pleasure of possession, whether we possess trinkets,
or offspring - or possibly books, or prints, or chessmen,
or postage stamps - lies in showing these things to
friends who are experiencing no immediate urge to
look at them.
Helen
Hayes:
Through the years I have found it wonderful to acquire,
but it is also wonderful to divest. It's rather like
exhaling.
Audre
Lorde:
We are all more blind to what we have than to what
we have not.
Doris
Mortman:
Until you make peace with who you are, you'll never
be content with what you have.
Lucy
Larcom:
I do not own an inch of land, / But all I see is mine,
- / The orchard and the mowing-fields, / The lawns
and gardens fine. / The winds my tax-collectors are,
/ They bring me tithes divine.
Hilda
Lawrence:
The things people discard tell more about them than
the things they keep.
Nancy
Willard:
Lost things, she felt certain, had a life of their
own. They come back to their families like stray dogs.
Susan
Hale:
As for things, how they do accumulate, how often I
wish to exclaim, "Oh don't give me that!"
Ann
Landers:
The best things in life aren't things.
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