All praise to the masters indeed, but we too could produce a Kant or a Hugo.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I would say 'The Master' was one of the most inspiring things I've ever got to work on.
Good servants frequently make good masters.
According to my principles, every master has his true and certain value. Praise and criticism cannot change any of that. Only the work itself praises and criticizes the master, and therefore I leave to everyone his own value.
Disciples be damned. It's not interesting. It's only the masters that matter. Those who create.
We should always look upon ourselves as God's servants, placed in God's world, to do his work; and accordingly labour faithfully for him; not with a design to grow rich and great, but to glorify God, and do all the good we possibly can.
The Masters is going to be an awesome challenge.
Hugo Boss is my kind of label.
However great may be the work for which we are responsible, we will always do well if we pause to spend time in sacred praise.
Great masters neither want nor need your worship. Your greatest gift to them and yourself is to emulate their divinity by claiming it as your own.
Why must we be eternally on our knees before the Kants and Hugos?