Famous Quotes
2481 Quotations with Once.
- 1441. Arnold Palmer: The secret of concentration is the secret of self-discovery. You reach inside yo ...
- 1442. Luigi Pirandello: The secret of living is to find... the pivot of a concept on which you can make ...
- 1443. Michelene Wand: The sight of a cage is only frightening to the bird that has once been caught.
- 1444. Friedrich Nietzsche: The significance of language for the evolution of culture lies in this, that man ...
- 1445. William Hazlitt: The slaves of power mind the cause they have to serve, because their own interes ...
- 1446. Earl Musselman: The sun was shining in my eyes, and I could barely see to do the necessary task ...
- 1447. Samuel Butler: The thief. Once committed beyond a certain point he should not worry himself too ...
- 1448. Dorothy Canfield Fisher: The trouble with many of us is that we just slide along in life. If we would onl ...
- 1449. Oliver Goldsmith: The true use of speech is not so much to express our wants as to conceal them.
- 1450. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The value of a principle is the number of things it will explain; and there is n ...
- 1451. Camille Paglia: The visual is sorely undervalued in modern scholarship. Art history has attained ...
- 1452. Florence E. King: The vitamin has been reified. A chemical intangible originally defined as a unit ...
- 1453. Orison Swett Marden: The waste of life occasioned by trying to do too many things at once is appallin ...
- 1454. Robert Bierstedt: The way we imagine ourselves to appear to another person is an essential element ...
- 1455. Bette Davis: The weak are the most treacherous of us all. They come to the strong and drain t ...
- 1456. Og Mandino: The weakest living creature, by concentrating his powers on a single object, can ...
- 1457. Andrea Dworkin: The will to domination is a ravenous beast. There are never enough warm bodies t ...
- 1458. Denis Waitley: The winners in life think constantly in terms of I can, I will and I am. Losers, ...
- 1459. Baltasar Gracian: The wise does at once what the fool does at last.
- 1460. Walter Brower: The wolf was sick, he vowed a monk to be: But when he got well, a wolf once more ...