Famous Quotes
3555 Quotations with Into.
- 1941. Thornton Wilder: The test of an adventure is that when you're in the middle of it, you say to you ...

- 1942. Clark Gable: The things a man has to have are hope and confidence in himself against odds, an ...

- 1943. Augusto Roa Bastos: The things that have come into being change continually. The man with a good mem ...

- 1944. Epicurus: The time when most of you should withdraw into yourself is when you are forced t ...

- 1945. Gerard de Nerval: The tree of knowledge is not the tree of life! And yet can we cast out of our sp ...

- 1946. Philip K. Dick: The trouble with being educated is that it takes a long time; it uses up the bet ...

- 1947. Daffy Duck: The trouble you can get into, just cause you want 5, 000 bucks.

- 1948. Eldridge Cleaver: The Twist was a guided missile, launched from the ghetto into the very heart of ...

- 1949. Harold Rosenberg: The values to which the conservative appeals are inevitably caricatured by the i ...

- 1950. Brooks Atkinson: The virtue of the camera is not the power it has to transform the photographer i ...

- 1951. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The virtues of society are vices of the saint. The terror of reform is the disco ...

- 1952. Florence E. King: The vitamin has been reified. A chemical intangible originally defined as a unit ...

- 1953. Sir John Vanbrugh: The want of a thing is perplexing enough, but the possession of it, is intolerab ...

- 1954. Virgil: The wavering multitude is divided into opposite factions.

- 1955. I Ching: The way of the creative works through change and transformation, so that each th ...

- 1956. Charles R. Brown: The white light streams down to be broken up by those human prisms into all the ...

- 1957. Remy de Gourmont: The whole effort of a sincere man is to erect his personal impressions into laws ...

- 1958. Eric Hoffer: The wisdom of others remains dull till it is writ over with our own blood. We ar ...

- 1959. Charles Haddon Spurgeon: The wishing gate opens into nothing.

- 1960. Virginia Woolf: The word-coining genius, as if thought plunged into a sea of words and came up d ...
