Quotes 781 till 800 of 3662.
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Every thought which genius and piety throw into the world alters the world.
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Everybody has his own theatre, in which he is manager, actor, prompter, playwright, sceneshifter, boxkeepeer, doorkeeper, all in one, and audience into the bargain.
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Everyone confesses in the abstract that exertion which brings out all the powers of body and mind is the best thing for us all; but practically most people do all they can to get rid of it, and as a general rule nobody does much more than circumstances drive them to do.
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Everyone enjoys doing the kind of work for which he is best suited.
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Everyone has his faults which he continually repeats: neither fear nor shame can cure them.
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Everyone has three characters, that which they exhibit, that which they have, and that which they think they have.
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Everyone is like a moon, and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody.
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Everyone knows that by far the happiest and universally enjoyable age of man is the first. What is there about babies which makes us hug and kiss and fondle them, so that even an enemy would give them help at that age?
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Everyone knows that on any given day there are energies slumbering in him which the incitement's of that day do not call forth. Compared with what we ought to be, we are only half awake. The human individual usually lives far within his limits.
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Everyone suffers wrongs for which there is no remedy.
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Everything starts with yourself - with you making up your mind about what you're going to do with your life. I tell kids that it's a cruel world, and that the world will bend them either left or right, and it's up to them to decide which way to bend.
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Everything that exists is in a manner the seed of that which will be.
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Everywhere, the ethical predicament of our time imposes itself with an urgency which suggests that even the question ''Have we anything to eat?'' will be answered not in material but in ethical terms.
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Evil is a moral entity and not a created one, an eternal and not a perishable entity: it existed before the world; it constituted the monstrous, the execrable being who was also to fashion such a hideous world. It will hence exist after the creatures which people this world.
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Exaggeration is a prodigality of the judgment which shows the narrowness of one's knowledge or one's taste.
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Excellence, then, is a state concerned with choice, lying in a mean, relative to us, this being determined by reason and in the way in which the man of practical wisdom would determine it.
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Existence itself does not feel horrible; it feels like an ecstasy, rather, which we have only to be still to experience.
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Experience demands that man is the only animal which devours his own kind, for I can apply no milder term to the general prey of the rich on the poor.
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Experience is a dim lamp, which only lights the one who bears it.
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Experience which was once claimed by the aged is now claimed exclusively by the young.
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