Famous Quotes
441 Quotations with Void.
- 301. Elias Canetti: There is nothing that man fears more than the touch of the unknown. He wants to ...

- 302. Norman Mailer: There is one expanding horror in American life. It is that our long odyssey towa ...

- 303. Victoria Lincoln: This is the art of courage: to see things as they are and still believe that the ...

- 304. Ralph Waldo Emerson: 'Tis a rule of manners to avoid exaggeration.

- 305. Robert Louis Stevenson: To avoid an occasion for our virtues is a worse degree of failure than to push f ...

- 306. Andre Maurois: To be witty is not enough. One must possess sufficient wit to avoid having too m ...

- 307. Georg C. Lichtenberg: To many people virtue consists chiefly in repenting faults, not in avoiding them ...

- 308. Alexis de Tocqueville: Trade is the natural enemy of all violent passions. Trade loves moderation, deli ...

- 309. Gilbert K. Chesterton: Variability is one of the virtues of a woman. It avoids the crude requirement of ...

- 310. Sir Anthony Eden: We best avoid wars by taking even physical action to stop small ones.

- 311. Martin Buber: We cannot avoid using power, cannot escape the compulsion to afflict the world, ...

- 312. Napoleon Bonaparte: We must laugh at man to avoid crying for him.

- 313. Alexander Hamilton: We must make the best of those ills which cannot be avoided.

- 314. Michel Eyquem De Montaigne: We only labor to stuff the memory, and leave the conscience and the understandin ...

- 315. Ihab Hassan: We rarely quote nowadays to appeal to authority... though we quote sometimes to ...

- 316. Author Unknown: We run away all the time to avoid corning face to face with ourselves.

- 317. Neville Chamberlain: We should seek by all means in our power to avoid war, by analyzing possible cau ...

- 318. William Shakespeare: What cannot be avoided, t'were childish weakness to lament or fear.

- 319. William E. Rothschild: What do you want to achieve or avoid? The answers to this question are objective ...

- 320. Marcus T. Cicero: Whatever is done without ostentation, and without the people being witnesses of ...
