Famous Quotes
617 Quotations with Whos.
- 441. Mencius: To nourish the mind, there is nothing better than to make the desires few. For t ...

- 442. Jean Rostand: To say of men that they are bad is to say they are worse than we think we are, o ...

- 443. Aleister Crowley: To the eyes of a god, mankind must appear as a species of bacteria which multipl ...

- 444. David Hare: To those whose God is honor; only disgrace is a sin.

- 445. Simone Weil: Two prisoners whose cells adjoin communicate with each other by knocking on the ...

- 446. Barbara Ehrenreich: Upscale people are fixated with food simply because they are now able to eat so ...

- 447. Barbara Ehrenreich: Upscale young men seem to go for the kind of woman who plays with a full deck of ...

- 448. Buddha: We are formed and molded by our thoughts. Those whose minds are shaped by selfle ...

- 449. Jean Rostand: We are not naive enough to ask for pure men; we ask merely for men whose impurit ...

- 450. George Farquhar: We are the men of intrinsic value, who can strike our fortunes out of ourselves, ...

- 451. Edward M. Forster: We are willing enough to praise freedom when she is safely tucked away in the pa ...

- 452. Barbara Deming: We learn best to listen to our own voices if we are listening at the same time t ...

- 453. Florence E. King: We want a president who is as much like an American tourist as possible. Someone ...

- 454. Oscar Wilde: We who live in prison, and in whose lives there is no event but sorrow, have to ...

- 455. Tommaso Marinetti: We will sing of great crowds excited by work, by pleasure, and by riot; we will ...

- 456. Charlotte Lunsford: We won't always know whose lives we touched and made better for our having cared ...

- 457. Joseph Conrad: What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-men's existence strong enough ...

- 458. Simone Weil: When once a certain class of people has been placed by the temporal and spiritua ...

- 459. Francis Bacon: Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a god.

- 460. Alexander Solzhenitsyn: Woe to that nation whose literature is cut short by the intrusion of force. This ...
