Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

Edwin Way Teale

Read through the most famous quotes from Edwin Way Teale




Reduce the complexity of life by eliminating the needless wants of life and the labors of life reduce themselves.


— Edwin Way Teale


#life

The difference between utility and utility plus beauty is the difference between telephone wires and the spider web.


— Edwin Way Teale


#between #difference #plus #spider #telephone

Those who wish to pet and baby wild animals "love" them. But those who respect their natures and wish to let them live normal lives, love them more.


— Edwin Way Teale


#live #lives #love #more #natures

Time and space - time to be alone, space to move about - these may well become the great scarcities of tomorrow.


— Edwin Way Teale


#alone #become #great #may #move

For the mind disturbed, the still beauty of dawn is nature's finest balm.


— Edwin Way Teale


#beauty #dawn #disturbed #finest #mind

In nature, there is less death and destruction than death and transmutation.


— Edwin Way Teale


#destruction #less #nature #than

Reduce the complexity of life by eliminating the needless wants of life, and the labors of life reduce themselves.


— Edwin Way Teale


#eliminating #labors #life #needless #reduce

How vivid is the suffering of the few when the people are few and how the suffering of nameless millions in two world wars is blurred over by numbers.


— Edwin Way Teale


#few #how #millions #nameless #numbers






About Edwin Way Teale

Edwin Way Teale Quotes





Did you know about Edwin Way Teale?

Teale worked as a co-writer for a segment titled "Vernal Equinox" on the March 20 1955 episode of Omnibus a TV-Radio Workshop of the Ford Foundation produced by Robert Saudek and hosted by Alistair Cooke on the CBS Television Network. Bibliography
The Book of Gliders (1930)
Grassroot Jungles (1937)
The Boys' Book of Insects (1939)
The Boys' Book of Photography (1939)
The Golden Throng (1940)
Byways to Adventure: A Guide to Nature Hobbies (1942)
Near Horizons (1942)
Dune Boy: The Early Years of a Naturalist (1943)
The Lost Woods (1945)
Walden - Introduction commentary photographs (1946)
Days without Time (1948)
The Insect World of J. He received an Indiana Author's Day award in 1960 and the Doctor of Humane Letters (LHD) honorary degree from Indiana University in 1970.

He is perhaps best known for his series The American Seasons four books documenting over 75000 miles (121000 km) of automobile travel across North America following the changing seasons. Teale's works serve as primary source material documenting environmental conditions across North America from 1930 - 1980.

back to top