2157 Quotations with Count.
- 1261. Henry David Thoreau: To watch this crystal globe just sent from heaven to associate with me. While th ...

- 1262. Willie Brown: To win in this country these days you have got to campaign down to a thirteen ye ...

- 1263. George Burns: Too bad that all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving tax ...

- 1264. Henry Miller: Topographically the country is magnificent -- and terrifying. Why terrifying? Be ...

- 1265. Gerald F. Lieberman: Traditionally the great men of our country have sprung from poor environments; t ...

- 1266. Marge Piercy: Troubles cured you salty as a country ham, smoky to the taste, thick-skinned and ...

- 1267. Vaclav Havel: True enough, the country is calm. Calm as a morgue or a grave, would you not say ...

- 1268. Marcus T. Cicero: True glory takes root, and even spreads; all false pretences, like flowers, fall ...

- 1269. Count Leo Tolstoy: True life is lived when tiny changes occur.

- 1270. George Barrington: True patriots we; for be it understood we left our country for our country's goo ...

- 1271. Count Leo Tolstoy: True science investigates and brings to human perception such truths and such kn ...

- 1272. Henry David Thoreau: True, there are architects so called in this country, and I have heard of one at ...

- 1273. Lewis Mumford: Unable to create a meaningful life for itself, the personality takes its own rev ...

- 1274. Edmund Burke: Under the pressure of the cares and sorrows of our mortal condition, men have at ...

- 1275. Lewis H. Lapham: Unlike any other business in the United States, sports must preserve an illusion ...

- 1276. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always inef ...

- 1277. Benjamin Disraeli: Upon the education of the people of this country, the fate of this country depen ...

- 1278. Barbara Ehrenreich: Upscale young men seem to go for the kind of woman who plays with a full deck of ...

- 1279. Sir Walter Raleigh: Use your youth so that you may have comfort to remember it when it has forsaken ...

- 1280. Countess of Blessington, Marguerite Gardiner: Virtue, like a dowerless beauty, has more admirers than followers.

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