The development of an individual will invariably be in the direction of his ideal, and will partake largely of the nature and character of that ideal. - William H. Crogman

" "

The development of an individual will invariably be in the direction of his ideal, and will partake largely of the nature and character of that ideal.

English
Collect this quote

About William H. Crogman

William Henry Crogman (May 5, 1841 - October 16, 1931) was a pioneering African American educator and classicist at Clark University of Atlanta in the United States.

Also Known As

Alternative Names: William Henry Crogman W H Crogman W. H. Crogman William Henry Crogman, Sr.
Go Premium

Support Quotewise while enjoying an ad-free experience and premium features.

View Plans

Related quotes. More quotes will automatically load as you scroll down, or you can use the load more buttons.

Additional quotes by William H. Crogman

Young men, don't be in a hurry to distiuguish yourselves. Don't feel when you go into a strange community, that it is necessary to inform the people how wise you are, and what vast stores of learning you possess. Too many are doing that now, wasting precious time and life. Life was not made for that. Life hath a deeper meaning. If you know anything, if you are of any value to the community, the people will discover it in time, and give you credit for it; and if they do not, you can better afford to go without such recognition than not to have merited it.

A large proportion of the offices in this vast country is not held by the best, most learned and most cultivated men, but by men of mediocre attainments, whose hearts and whose eyes have been fixed on those places, and who, to obtain them, have used every means, honorable and dishonorable.

Works in ChatGPT, Claude, or Any AI

Add semantic quote search to your AI assistant via MCP. One command setup.

Neither the black boy nor the white will ever be educated in the best and broadest sense of the term who seeks an education merely to reach an office, for, as in nature a stream never rises higher than its source, so in life men never rise higher than their ideals. The education that merely seeks an office must of necessity be limited to the dimensions of that office.

Loading...