Famous Quotes
428 Quotations with Luck.
- 261. Kenneth Hare: The puritan through life's sweet garden goes to pluck the thorn and cast away th ...
- 262. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The right merchant is one who has the just average of faculties we call common s ...
- 263. Carl Jung: The wise man who is not heeded is counted a fool, and the fool who proclaims the ...
- 264. Robert Fulghum: The world does not need tourists who ride by in a bus clucking their tongues. Th ...
- 265. W. C. Fields: The world is getting to be such a dangerous place, a man is lucky to get out of ...
- 266. Joyce Carol Oates: The worst cynicism: a belief in luck.
- 267. Lady Kasluck: The worst thing about work in the house or home is that whatever you do is destr ...
- 268. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: There are no accidents so unlucky from which clever people are not able to reap ...
- 269. Rocky Aoki: There are so many people with all kinds of lucky things happening to them, and t ...
- 270. John Luckey McCreery: There is no death. The stars go down to rise upon some other shore. And bright i ...
- 271. Ralph Waldo Emerson: There is no luck in literary reputation. They who make up the final verdict upon ...
- 272. Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton: There is no such thing as luck. It's a fancy name for being always at our duty, ...
- 273. Friedrich August Gottreu Tholuck: There is not a more repulsive spectacle than an old man who will not forsake the ...
- 274. Euripides: There is nothing like the sight of an old enemy down on his luck.
- 275. Fred W. Fitch: There isn't any luck that enters into anything, unless it's poker or shooting di ...
- 276. Desiderius Erasmus: This type of man who is devoted to the study of wisdom is always most unlucky in ...
- 277. Amelia E. Barr: This world is run with far too tight a rein for luck to interfere. Fortune sells ...
- 278. Joe Poyer: Thorough preparation makes its own luck.
- 279. Christopher Herold: Those who mistake their good luck for their merit are inevitably bound for disas ...
- 280. Logan Pearsall Smith: Those who talk on the razor-edge of double-meanings pluck the rarest blooms from ...