3108 Quotations with Hough.
- 921. Author Unknown: Execute every act of thy life as though it were your last.

- 922. Mary Parker Follett: Experience may be hard but we claim its gifts because they are real, even though ...

- 923. John Updike: Facts are generally overesteemed. For most practical purposes, a thing is what m ...

- 924. John Charles Salak: Failures are divided into two classes -- those who thought and never did, and th ...

- 925. John R. Stott: Faith is a reasoning trust, a trust which reckons thoughtfully and confidently u ...

- 926. Stella Benson: Family jokes, though rightly cursed by strangers, are the bond that keeps most f ...

- 927. Theodore Roosevelt: Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though ch ...

- 928. P. J. O'Rourke: Farm policy, although it's complex, can be explained. What it can't be is believ ...

- 929. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Fate, then, is a name for facts not yet passed under the fire of thought; for ca ...

- 930. Charles Dickens: Father Time is not always a hard parent, and, though he tarries for none of his ...

- 931. Dag Hammarskjold: Fatigue dulls the pain, but awakes enticing thoughts of death. So! that is the w ...

- 932. Andrea Dworkin: Feminist art is not some tiny creek running off the great river of real art. It ...

- 933. Janet Malcolm: Fidelity to the subject's thought and to his characteristic way of expressing hi ...

- 934. Lydia M. Child: Flowers have spoken to me more than I can tell in written words. They are the hi ...

- 935. Thomas De Quincey: Flowers that are so pathetic in their beauty, frail as the clouds, and in their ...

- 936. George Savile: Fool hath no dialogue within himself; the first thought carrieth him shout the r ...

- 937. Ludwig Wittgenstein: For a large class of cases -- though not for all -- in which we employ the word ...

- 938. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: For age is opportunity no less than youth itself, though in another dress, and a ...

- 939. Henry David Thoreau: For eighteen hundred years, though perchance I have no right to say it, the New ...

- 940. William Wordsworth: For I have learned to look on nature, not as in the hour of thoughtless youth, b ...

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