Quotes with -which-

Quotes 1581 till 1600 of 3662.

  • David Herbert Lawrence Life and love are life and love, a bunch of violets is a bunch of violets, and to drag in the idea of a point is to ruin everything. Live and let live, love and let love, flower and fade, and follow the natural curve, which flows on, pointless.
    David Herbert Lawrence
    English writer (1885 - 1930)
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  • Carl Gustav Jung Life has always seemed to me like a plant that lives on its rhizome. Its true life is invisible, hidden in the rhizome. The part that appears above ground lasts only a single summer. What we see is the blossom, which passes. The rhizome remains.
    Source: Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1963) Closing lines of the preface.
    Carl Gustav Jung
    Swiss psychiatrist (1875 - 1961)
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  • Søren Kierkegaard Life has its own hidden forces which you can only discover by living.
    Søren Kierkegaard
    Danish philosopher (1813 - 1855)
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  • Reinhold Niebuhr Life is a battle between faith and reason in which each feeds upon the other, drawing sustenance from it and destroying it.
    Reinhold Niebuhr
    American theologist, historian (1892 - 1971)
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  • Robert Thibodeau Life is a classroom in which each of us is being tested, tried, and passed.
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  • George Bernard Shaw Life is a disease; and the only difference between on man and another is the stage of the disease at which he lives.
    George Bernard Shaw
    Irish-English writer and critic (1856 - 1950)
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  • Victor Hugo Life is a flower of which love is the honey.
    Victor Hugo
    French writer (1802 - 1885)
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  • John Tyndall Life is a wave, which in no two consecutive moments of its existence is composed of the same particles.
    John Tyndall
     
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  • Jose Ortega Y Gasset Life is an operation which is done in a forward direction. One lives toward the future, because to live consists inexorably in doing, in each individual life making itself.
    Jose Ortega Y Gasset
    Spanish writer and philosopher (1883 - 1955)
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  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Life is infinitely stranger than anything which the mind of man could invent.
    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    British author (1859 - 1930)
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  • Philip Roth Life is just a short period of time in which you are alive.
    Philip Roth
    American Novelist (1933 - 2018)
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  • Sir Humphry Davy Life is made up, not of great sacrifices or duties, but of little things, in which smiles and kindness, and small obligations given habitually, are what preserve the heart and secure comfort.
    Sir Humphry Davy
    British chemist and inventor
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  • George Bernard Shaw Life is no brief candle to me. It is a sort of splendid torch which I have got a hold of for the moment, and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing it on to future generations.
    George Bernard Shaw
    Irish-English writer and critic (1856 - 1950)
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  • Leon Trotsky Life is not an easy matter. You cannot live through it without falling into frustration and cynicism unless you have before you a great idea which raises you above personal misery, above weakness, above all kinds of perfidy and baseness.
    Leon Trotsky
    Russian revolutionary and writer (1879 - 1940)
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  • Arthur Rimbaud Life is the farce which everyone has to perform.
    Arthur Rimbaud
    French poet (1854 - 1891)
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  • Victor Hugo Life is the flower for which love is the honey.
    Victor Hugo
    French writer (1802 - 1885)
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  • Henry Ward Beecher Life would be a perpetual flea hunt if a man were obliged to run down all the innuendoes, inveracities, and insinuations and misrepresentations which are uttered against him.
    Henry Ward Beecher
    American Congregationalist clergyman, social reformer, and speaker (1813 - 1887)
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  • Oscar Wilde Life! Life! Don't let us go to life for our fulfillment or our experience. It is a thing narrowed by circumstances, incoherent in its utterance, and without that fine correspondence of form and spirit which is the only thing that can satisfy the artistic
    Oscar Wilde
    Irish writer (1854 - 1900)
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  • W. H. Auden Like everything which is not the involuntary result of fleeting emotion but the creation of time and will, any marriage, happy or unhappy, is infinitely more interesting than any romance, however passionate.
    W. H. Auden
    American poet (1907 - 1973)
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  • Bertolt Brecht Literary works cannot be taken over like factories, or literary forms of expression like industrial methods. Realist writing, of which history offers many widely varying examples, is likewise conditioned by the question of how, when and for what class it is made use of.
    Bertolt Brecht
    German - Austrian writer (1898 - 1956)
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