Famous Quotes
2299 Quotations with Fort.
- 1361. Jean de La Fontaine: The fastidious are unfortunate; nothing satisfies them.

- 1362. Arthur Schopenhauer: The first forty years of life give us the text; the next thirty supply the comme ...

- 1363. Sir William Temple: The first glass is for myself, the second for my friends, the third for good hum ...

- 1364. Bliss Carman: The first need of being is endurance; to endure with gladness if we can, with fo ...

- 1365. Francis Bacon: The fortune which nobody sees makes a person happy and un envied.

- 1366. Nicholas Murray Butler: The forty-four-hour week has no charm for me. I'm looking for a forty-hour day.

- 1367. John Mortimer: The freedom to make a fortune on the stock exchange has been made to sound more ...

- 1368. Sigmund Freud: The goal towards which the pleasure principle impels us -- of becoming happy -- ...

- 1369. William Blake: The Goddess Fortune is the devil's servant, ready to kiss any one's ass.

- 1370. Freya Stark: The great and almost only comfort about being a woman is that one can always pre ...

- 1371. Author Unknown: The great destroyers of nations and men are comfort, plenty and security. A cowa ...

- 1372. Og Mandino: The great difference between those who succeed and those who fail does not consi ...

- 1373. Marcus Cato: The greatest comfort of my old age, and that which gives me the highest satisfac ...

- 1374. Timothy Gallwey: The greatest efforts in sports came when the mind is as still as a glass lake.

- 1375. Timothy Gallwey: The greatest efforts in sports came when the mind is as still as a glass lake.

- 1376. John Ruskin: The greatest efforts of the race have always been traceable to the love of prais ...

- 1377. Marquis de Vauvenargues: The greatest evil which fortune can inflict on men is to endow them with small t ...

- 1378. William Hazlitt: The greatest reverses of fortune are the most easily borne from a sort of dignit ...

- 1379. Bertrand Russell: The habit of looking into the future and thinking that the whole meaning of the ...

- 1380. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: The happiness and misery of men depend no less on temper than fortune.
