Famous Quotes
1484 Quotations with Often.
- 461. George Robert Gissing: Honest winter, snow clad and with the frosted beard, I can welcome not uncordial ...
- 462. Elizabeth Drew: How frail and ephemeral is the material substance of letters, which makes their ...
- 463. Herman Melville: How it is I know not; but there is no place like a bed for confidential disclosu ...
- 464. Catharine Esther Beecher: How many young hearts have revealed the fact that what they had been trained to ...
- 465. Herbert Spencer: How often misused words generate misleading thoughts.
- 466. Nicolas Bouleau-Despreaux: How often the fear of one evil leads into a worse.
- 467. Terence: How often things occur by mere chance which we dared not even hope for.
- 468. Henry David Thoreau: How often we find ourselves turning our backs on our actual friends, that we may ...
- 469. Author Unknown: How well you like hard work often depends on whether you are doing it or paying ...
- 470. Antonin Artaud: However fiercely opposed one may be to the present order, an old respect for the ...
- 471. Robert Heinlein: Human beings hardly ever learn from the experience of others. They learn; when t ...
- 472. Charles Caleb Colton: Human foresight often leaves its proudest possessor only a choice of evils.
- 473. Franklin D. Roosevelt: Human kindness has never weakened the stamina or softened the fiber of a free pe ...
- 474. H. L. Mencken: Human life is basically a comedy. Even its tragedies often seem comic to the spe ...
- 475. Francois Mauriac: Human love is often but the encounter of two weaknesses.
- 476. Primo Levi: Human memory is a marvelous but fallacious instrument. The memories which lie wi ...
- 477. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: Humility is often a false front we employ to gain power over others.
- 478. Constance Rourke: Humor has been a fashioning instrument in America, cleaving its way through the ...
- 479. Elwyn Brooks White: I am often mad, but I would hate to be nothing but mad: and I think I would lose ...
- 480. William James: I am often confronted by the necessity of standing by one of my empirical selves ...