Robert Browning.
The line "Man's reach should exceed his grasp" is from a poem by Robert Browning titled "Andrea del Sarto." Browning was a famous English poet who lived in the 19th century and was known for his dramatic monologues.
"Aim for the stars and maybe you'll reach the sky" was a quote from Karl Paul Reinhold Niebuhr an American Protestant theologian. ================================================ Another contributor added: That answer accurately and authoritatively describes the source and history of the quote. But it doesn't answer the question, which appears to be "What does the quote mean ?". We'll suggest that the meaning of the quote is something like this: Knowing that our accomplishments typically fall short of our targets, one must remember to aim high, set his sites above his objectives, try for more than he expects, or, as Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote, "man's reach should exceed his grasp, else what's a heaven for ?".
Rebecca Stead wrote the book
Wordsworth
David Lindsay Gresham
It was written by Jean Paul Makhlouf
She wrote a diary and went into hiding for about 3 years.
How should schools be written
The sentence should be,"You should have written."
"Why did you wrote" is not grammatically correct. It should read "why did you write"
It depends on which year of viper you own. They will reach near 200mph. person who wrote this is right
You should sing it for him!
lunden cannon