Famous Quotes
3900 Quotations with Alway.
- 2561. Cardinal De Rets: Weak souls always set to work at the wrong time.

- 2562. George Eliot: We women are always in danger of living too exclusively in the affections; and t ...

- 2563. Charlotte Lunsford: We won't always know whose lives we touched and made better for our having cared ...

- 2564. Gary Oldman: We're given a code to live our lives by. We don't always follow it, but it's sti ...

- 2565. Robin G. Collingwood: What a man is ashamed of is always at bottom himself; and he is ashamed of himse ...

- 2566. Edgar Quinet: What are all political and social institutions, but always a religion, which in ...

- 2567. Author Unknown: What comes first, the compass or the clock? Before one can truly manage time (th ...

- 2568. Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton: What ever our wandering our happiness will always be found within a narrow compa ...

- 2569. Samuel Johnson: What ever the motive for the insult, it is always best to overlook it; for folly ...

- 2570. Friedrich Holderlin: What has always made a hell on earth has been that man has tried to make it his ...

- 2571. Hermann Hesse: What I always hated and detested and cursed above all things was this contentmen ...

- 2572. Virginia Woolf: What I like, or one of the things I like, about motoring is the sense it gives o ...

- 2573. Marcia Martin: What I point out to people is that it's silly to be afraid that you're not going ...

- 2574. Benjamin Disraeli: What is earnest is not always true; on the contrary, error is often more earnest ...

- 2575. Joseph Joubert: What is true by lamplight is not always true by sunlight.

- 2576. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: What makes lovers never tire of one another is that they talk always about thems ...

- 2577. William Paley: What we are doing is satisfying the American public. That's our job. I always sa ...

- 2578. Walter Lippmann: What we call a democratic society might be defined for certain purposes as one i ...

- 2579. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: What we call virtues are often just a collection of casual actions and selfish i ...

- 2580. E. M. Cioran: What we want is not freedom but its appearances. It is for these simulacra that ...
