Famous Quotes
26 Quotations with Accused.
- 1. King Charles I: Never make a defense or an apology until you are accused.

- 2. Ambrose Bierce: SORCERY, n. The ancient prototype and forerunner of political influence. It was, ...

- 3. Ambrose Bierce: TECHNICALITY, n. In an English court a man named Home was tried for slander in h ...

- 4. Ambrose Bierce: TRIAL, n. A formal inquiry designed to prove and put upon record the blameless c ...

- 5. Al Capone: I've been accused of every death except the casualty list of the World War.

- 6. I.F. Stone: If you live long enough, the venerability factor creeps in; first, you get accus ...

- 7. Jonathan Swift: Although men are accused of not knowing their own weakness, yet perhaps few know ...

- 8. Lionel Trilling: Every neurosis is a primitive form of legal proceeding in which the accused carr ...

- 9. King Charles I: In grave difficulties, and with little hope, the boldest measures are the safest ...

- 10. Charles I: Never make a defense or apology before you are accused.

- 11. Charles I: Never make a defense or apology before you are accused.

- 12. Don Shula: One thing I never want to be accused of is not working.

- 13. Blaise Pascal: The highest order of mind is accused of folly, as well as the lowest. Nothing is ...

- 14. Leon Trotsky: The slanders poured down like Niagara. If you take into consideration the settin ...

- 15. Charles Caleb Colton: There are two way of establishing a reputation; one to be praised by honest peop ...

- 16. Simone de Beauvoir: When women act like women, they are accused of being inferior. When women act li ...

- 17. Elizabeth Banks: When I was in college I was accused of being a goody two-shoes. But every goody ...

- 18. Tucker Carlson: This assumption is mostly true-most people accused of a crime are criminals-but ...

- 19. Johnnie Cochran: Money will determine whether the accused goes to prison or walks out of the cour ...

- 20. Samuel Dash: In high school English we were supposed to write a paper on Shakespeare, and I d ...
