Famous Quotes
20587 Quotations with Ther.
- 7581. Plato: It is clear to everyone that astronomy at all events compels the soul to look up ...

- 7582. Marcel Proust: It is comforting when one has a sorrow to lie in the warmth of one's bed and the ...

- 7583. Virginia Woolf: It is curious how instinctively one protects the image of oneself from idolatry ...

- 7584. Havelock Ellis: It is curious how there seems to be an instinctive disgust in Man for his neares ...

- 7585. Author Unknown: It is difficult for any of us to go through life without either increasing or di ...

- 7586. George Bernard Shaw: It is difficult, if not impossible, for most people to think otherwise than in t ...

- 7587. Cornelia Otis Skinner: It is disturbing to discover in oneself these curious revelations of the validit ...

- 7588. Thomas Szasz: It is easier to do one's duty to others than to one's self. If you do your duty ...

- 7589. Author Unknown: It is easier to gather up a bag of loose feathers than to round up or head off a ...

- 7590. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: It is easier to govern others than to prevent being governed.

- 7591. Mahatma Gandhi: It is easy enough to be friendly to one's friends. But to befriend the one who r ...

- 7592. Herbert Samuel: It is easy to be tolerant of the principles of other people if you have none of ...

- 7593. Ralph Waldo Emerson: It is easy to live for others, everybody does. I call on you to live for yoursel ...

- 7594. Salvador Dali: It is either easy or impossible.

- 7595. Hugh Prather: It is enough that I am of value to somebody today.

- 7596. Samuel Johnson: It is easy to talk of sitting at home contented, when others are seeing or makin ...

- 7597. John Ruskin: It is eminently a weariable faculty, eminently delicate, and incapable of bearin ...

- 7598. Theodore Roosevelt: It is essential that there should be organization of labor. This is an era of or ...

- 7599. William M. Evarts: It is faith among men that holds the moral elements of society together, as it i ...

- 7600. Francois-Marie Arouet de Voltaire: It is fancy rather than taste which produces so many new fashions.
