2161 Quotations with Ends.
- 1501. George Eliot: To be candid, in Middlemarch phraseology, meant, to use an early opportunity of ...

- 1502. William Hazlitt: To be capable of steady friendship or lasting love, are the two greatest proofs, ...

- 1503. Samuel Johnson: To be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition, the end to which eve ...

- 1504. Captain J. G. Stedman: To be sure an European woman would blush to her fingers ends at the very idea of ...

- 1505. George Santayana: To cement a new friendship, especially between foreigners or persons of a differ ...

- 1506. Author Unknown: To each one of us friendship has a different meaning. For all of us it is a gift ...

- 1507. Flannery O'Connor: To expect too much is to have a sentimental view of life, and this is a softness ...

- 1508. Socrates: To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise, without being wise: ...

- 1509. Fred Van Amburgh: To have a tranquil mind, a clean, calm, conscientious purpose, a few true friend ...

- 1510. Harry Emerson Fosdick: To keep the Golden Rule we must put ourselves in other people's places, but to d ...

- 1511. Samuel Johnson: To let friendship die away by negligence and silence is certainly not wise. It i ...

- 1512. Sallust: To like and dislike the same things, this is what makes a solid friendship.

- 1513. Author Unknown: To make a change often takes a lot of initial energy and effort. This is not unl ...

- 1514. Helen Rowland: To make a man perfectly happy tell him he works too hard, that he spends too muc ...

- 1515. Thomas Jefferson: To myself, personally, it brings nothing but increasing drudgery and daily loss ...

- 1516. Henry David Thoreau: To say that a man is your Friend means commonly no more than this, that he is no ...

- 1517. Aeschylus: To the man who himself strives earnestly, God also lends a helping hand.

- 1518. Simone Weil: To write the lives of the great, in separating them from their works, necessaril ...

- 1519. Luis Bunuel: Tobacco and alcohol, delicious fathers of abiding friendships and fertile reveri ...

- 1520. Arlene Francis: Trouble is a sieve through which we sift our acquaintances. Those too big to pas ...

<< 1 ... 75 76 77 ... 109 >> Ends Quotes by Power Quotations
|