Famous Quotes
482 Quotations with Eight.
- 261. Bernard Mandeville: The only thing of weight that can be said against modern honor is that it is dir ...
- 262. David Hare: The poetry from the eighteenth century was prose; the prose from the seventeenth ...
- 263. Queen Victoria: The poor fatherless baby of eight months is now the utterly broken-hearted and c ...
- 264. Havelock Ellis: The prevalence of suicide, without doubt, is a test of height in civilization; i ...
- 265. Mandell Creighton: The real object of education is to have a man in the condition of continually as ...
- 266. Emma Carleton: The road winds up the hill to meet the height; Beyond the locust hedge it curves ...
- 267. Harry Emerson Fosdick: The Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea are made of the same water. It flows down, c ...
- 268. Charles Baudelaire: The son will run away from the family not at eighteen but at twelve, emancipated ...
- 269. Albert Camus: The struggle itself towards the heights is enough to fill a man's heart. One mus ...
- 270. Author Unknown: The true measure of a man is the height of his ideals, the breadth of his sympat ...
- 271. Adlai E. Stevenson: The whole basis of the United Nations is the right of all nations -- great or sm ...
- 272. Samuel Johnson: The world will never be long without some good reason to hate the unhappy; their ...
- 273. Camille Paglia: There are no accidents, only nature throwing her weight around. Even the bomb me ...
- 274. Elie Wiesel: There is a difference between a book of two hundred pages from the very beginnin ...
- 275. Edward Hoagland: There is a time of life somewhere between the sullen fugues of adolescence and t ...
- 276. Jascha Heifetz: There is no top. There are always further heights to reach.
- 277. Martin Luther: There is no wisdom, save in truth. Truth is everlasting, but our ideas about tru ...
- 278. Creighton Abrams: They've got us surrounded again, the poor bastards.
- 279. Lord Byron: This sort of adoration of the real is but a heightening of the beau ideal.
- 280. Denis Diderot: To attempt the destruction of our passions is the height of folly. What a noble ...