Famous Quotes
6611 Quotations with Thou.
- 4741. Winston Churchill: It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations. Bartlett's ...

- 4742. Victor Hugo: The human heart ... can contain only a limited amount of despair. Once the spong ...

- 4743. Victor Hugo: For each of us, there are certain parallelisms between our intellect, our habits ...

- 4744. Thomas A. Edison: The first requisite of success is the ability to apply your physical and mental ...

- 4745. Thomas A. Edison: I have far more respect for the person with a single idea who gets there than fo ...

- 4746. Thomas A. Edison: Because I readily absorb ideas from every source - frequently starting where the ...

- 4747. Thomas A. Edison: A good idea is never lost. Even though its originator or possessor may die, it w ...

- 4748. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Beauty without expression is boring.

- 4749. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Enthusiasm is the mother of effort, and without it nothing great was ever achiev ...

- 4750. Ralph Waldo Emerson: He that can heroically endure adversity will bear prosperity with equal greatest ...

- 4751. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all d ...

- 4752. Ralph Waldo Emerson: People care more about being thought to have taste than about being good, clever ...

- 4753. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Faith: You can do very little with it, but you can do nothing without it.

- 4754. Ralph Waldo Emerson: I worry that the person who thought up Muzak may be thinking up something else.

- 4755. Ralph Waldo Emerson: A man cannot be comfortable without his own approval.

- 4756. Ralph Waldo Emerson: When I stand before thee at the day's end, thou shalt see my scars and know that ...

- 4757. Ralph Waldo Emerson: It is hard enough to remember my opinions, without also remembering my reasons f ...

- 4758. Ralph Waldo Emerson: All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking

- 4759. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Is life not a thousand times too short for us to bore ourselves?

- 4760. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Thought takes man out of servitude, into freedom.
