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Albert Pike

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What we have done for ourselves alone dies with us; what we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal.
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"1860. In Lodge of Sorrow at Washington: March 30."
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In sentiment this is similar to the expression made much earlier by Giordano Bruno in On the Infinite Universe and Worlds (1584) : "What you receive from others is a testimony to their virtue; but all that you do for others is the sign and clear indication of your own."

 
Albert Pike

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Even the most inspired verse, which boasts not without a relative justification to be immortal, becomes in the course of ages a scarcely legible hieroglyphic; the language it was written in dies, a learned education and an imaginative effort are requisite to catch even a vestige of its original force. Nothing is so irrevocable as mind.

 
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