Famous Quotes
828 Quotations with Pens.
- 501. Sir Walter Scott: The willow which bends to the tempest, often escapes better than the oak which r ...

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

- 503. Gilbert K. Chesterton: The worst of work nowadays is what happens to people when they cease to work.

- 504. Will Rogers: The worst thing that happens to you may be the best thing for you if you don't l ...

- 505. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: There are crimes that become innocent and even glorious by their brilliancy, num ...

- 506. Viola Spolin: There are few places outside his own play where a child can contribute to the wo ...

- 507. Joseph Conrad: There are men here and there to whom the whole of life is like an after-dinner h ...

- 508. Samuel Johnson: There are minds so impatient of inferiority that their gratitude is a species of ...

- 509. Roland Barthes: There are two kinds of liberalism. A liberalism which is always, subterraneously ...

- 510. Benjamin Franklin: There are two ways of being happy: we must either diminish our wants or augment ...

- 511. Brian Moore: There comes a point in many people's lives when they can no longer play the role ...

- 512. Louis Aragon: There exists a black kingdom which the eyes of man avoid because its landscape f ...

- 513. Joseph Roux: There is a slowness in affairs which ripens them, and a slowness which rots them ...

- 514. Coretta Scott King: There is a spirit and a need and a man at the beginning of every great human adv ...

- 515. Deepak Chopra: There is always one moment in childhood when the door opens and lets the future ...

- 516. Freda Adler: There is another side to chivalry. If it dispenses leniency, it may with equal j ...

- 517. Helen Keller: There is much in the Bible against which every instinct of my being rebels, so m ...

- 518. Anwar El-Sadat: There is no happiness for people at the expense of other people.

- 519. Franklin D. Roosevelt: There is no indispensable man.

- 520. Benjamin Haydon: There surely is in human nature an inherent propensity to extract all the good o ...
