677 Quotations with Allow.
- 21. Unknown: To live for some future goal is shallow. It's the sides of the mountain that sus ...

- 22. Isaac Watts: Do not hover always on the surface of things, nor take up suddenly, with mere ap ...

- 23. Ovid: What is allowed us is disagreeable, what is denied us causes us intense desire.

- 24. Derwood Fincher: Experience is what allows us to repeat our mistakes, only with more finesse!

- 25. Karl Buhler: By the time the child can draw more that scribble, by the age of four or five ye ...

- 26. Aldous Huxley: From their experience or from the recorded experience of others (history), men l ...

- 27. Juliene Berk: Habits - the only reason they persist is that they are offering some satisfactio ...

- 28. Francis Quarles: Rather do what is nothing in the purpose than to be idle, that the devil may fin ...

- 29. Friedrich Nietzsche: "Every man has his price." This is not true. But for every man there exists a ba ...

- 30. Horace: Mediocrity is not allowed to poets, either by the gods or man.

- 31. Andre Bernard Buruch: I was the son of an immigrant. I experienced bigotry, intolerance and prejudice, ...

- 32. J. W. Alexander: There are pauses amidst study, and even pauses of seeming idleness, in which a p ...

- 33. Isadora Duncan: The finest inheritance you can give to a child is to allow it to make its own wa ...

- 34. Sigmund Freud: Innately, children seem to have little true realistic anxiety. They will run alo ...

- 35. Douglas Adams: Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account ...

- 36. Isaac Asimov: The three fundamental Rules of Robotics...One: a robot may not injure a human be ...

- 37. Ambrose Bierce: DIARY, n. A daily record of that part of one's life, which he can relate to hims ...

- 38. Ambrose Bierce: GALLOWS, n. A stage for the performance of miracle plays, in which the leading a ...

- 39. Ambrose Bierce: GHOUL, n. A demon addicted to the reprehensible habit of devouring the dead. The ...

- 40. Ambrose Bierce: HIBERNATE, v.i. To pass the winter season in domestic seclusion. There have been ...

Allow Quotes by Power Quotations
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