1393 Quotations with Late.
- 1321. Charlotte Whitton: Boredom is like a pitiless zooming in on the epidermis of time. Every instant is ...
- 1322. George E. Woodberry: Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse. Murphy's First Corollar ...
- 1323. Iannis Xenakis: The collision of hail or rain with hard surfaces, or the song of cicadas in a su ...
- 1324. Chuck Yeager: Later, I realized that the mission had to end in a let-down because the real bar ...
- 1325. Marguerite Young: I think most people don't like others who, without a voice of their own, emulate ...
- 1326. Anthony Zinni: In the lead up to the Iraq war and its later conduct, I saw at a minimum, true d ...
- 1327. James Atlas: I'm so obsessed with this theme that I actually keep a “failure file.” What stan ...
- 1328. Jane Austen: Vanity and pride are different things, though the words are often used synonymou ...
- 1329. Edmund Burke: Among precautions against ambition, it may not be amiss to take precautions agai ...
- 1330. U. S. Constitution: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the r ...
- 1331. John Donne: All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter ...
- 1332. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The results of life are uncalculated and uncalculable. The years teach much whic ...
- 1333. Nathaniel Hawthorne: It was a folly, with the materiality of this daily life pressing so intrusively ...
- 1334. C.S. Lewis: In peace we can make many of them ignore good and evil entirely; in danger, the ...
- 1335. John Stuart Mill: The opening of a foreign trade, by making them acquainted with new objects, or t ...
- 1336. Richard Moore: Language is a field of battle, the media is the artillery, and vocabulary is the ...
- 1337. Sir Isaac Newton: What Des-Cartes did was a good step. You have added much several ways, & especia ...
- 1338. Plutarch: “The God, as it were, addresses each of us, as he enters, with his Know Thyself, ...
- 1339. Arthur Quinn: The omission of an expected conjunction is called an asyndeton. Caesar is suppos ...
- 1340. William Wordsworth: Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin fro ...
<< 1 ... 66 67 68 ... 70 >> Late Quotes by Power Quotations
|