A Quote by George Earle Buckle

To simplify complications is the first essential of success. — © George Earle Buckle
To simplify complications is the first essential of success.
The first thing that editor does is they take out a red pen, or nowadays you go online, and they start striking things. Basically eliminating things, the biggest task of an editor is to simplify, simplify, simplify and that usually means omitting things.
You have to seek the simplest implementation of a problem solution in order to know when you've reached your limit in that regard. Then it's easy to make tradeoffs, to back off a little, for performance reasons. You can simplify and simplify and simplify yet still find other incredible ways to simplify further.
The most important job of an editor is simplify, simplify simplify, and that usually means omitting things.
In business, the earning of profit is something more than an incident of success. It is an essential condition of success. It is an essential condition of success because the continued absence of profit itself spells failure.
Our life is frittered away by detail Simplify, simplify.” Or, as Plato wrote, “In order to seek one’s own direction, one must simplify the mechanics of ordinary, everyday life.
Three Tips: Simplify, Simplify, Simplify.
The very first essential for success is a perpetually constant and regular employment of violence.
Initiative is as essential to success as a hub is essential to a wagon wheel.
You need to simplify the value proposition in the company's metrics for success on a whiteboard.
Our life is frittered away by detail... simplify, simplify.
By stripping down an image to essential meaning, an artist can simplify that meaning.
My own early experiences in war led me to suspect the value of discipline, even in that sphere where it is so often regarded as the first essential for success.
The first essential to success in the art you practice is respect for the art itself.
Simply put, success in LSU football is essential for the success of Louisiana State University.
Henry David Thoreau is very independent-minded, very iconoclastic, and had quite a corrosive sense of humor. I think that I probably have grown up to have a Thoreauvian perspective on many things. Though in other ways I live a life he would not have approved of. He believed to simplify, simplify, simplify. Make your life very clear and plain and meditative and not confused. Sometimes my life, in fact, is confused.
Your mind, which is yourself, can be likened to a house. The first necessary move then, is to rid that house of all but furnishings essential to success.
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