John Burroughs Quote

A mind that has a lively fancy and a sense of mystery will interpret phenomena quite differently from a mind in which these things are absent.


Under The Apple Tree, Literature and Science (p. 176), Houghton Mifflin Co. 1916


A mind that has a lively fancy and a sense of mystery will interpret phenomena quite differently from a mind in which these things are absent.

A mind that has a lively fancy and a sense of mystery will interpret phenomena quite differently from a mind in which these things are absent.

A mind that has a lively fancy and a sense of mystery will interpret phenomena quite differently from a mind in which these things are absent.

A mind that has a lively fancy and a sense of mystery will interpret phenomena quite differently from a mind in which these things are absent.