Quotes with all-enacting

Quotes 4421 till 4440 of 6278.

  • Bill Walton The great thing about being a broadcaster is you have this incredible responsibility to the people that make it all happen, the people that turn on the television set.
    Bill Walton
    American basketball player (1952 - )
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  • Billie Lourd The great thing about women directors is that they're not only involved in the performances - they can gauge where we all are personally and know how to direct us better because of that.
    Billie Lourd
    American actress (1992 - )
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  • Carl Gustav Jung The greatest and most important problems of life are all fundamentally insoluble. They can never be solved but only outgrown.
    Carl Gustav Jung
    Swiss psychiatrist (1875 - 1961)
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  • Carl Sandburg The greatest cunning is to have none at all.
    Carl Sandburg
    American Poet (1878 - 1967)
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  • Stanley Kubrick The greatest nations have all acted like gangsters and the smallest like prostitutes.
    Stanley Kubrick
    American film director, screenwriter, and producer (1928 - 1999)
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  • Thomas Carlyle The greatest of all faults, I should say, is to be conscious of none.
    Thomas Carlyle
    Scottish writer and historicus (1795 - 1881)
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  • Sydney Smith The greatest of all mistakes is to do nothing because you can only do a little. Do what you can.
    Sydney Smith
    English writer and cleric (1856 - 1934)
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  • Oscar Wilde The greatest of all sins is stupidity.
    Oscar Wilde
    Irish writer (1854 - 1900)
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  • Buffalo Bill The greatest of all the Sioux in my time, or in any time for that matter, was that wonderful old fighting man, Sitting Bull, whose life will some day be written by a historian who can really give him his due.
    Source: An Autobiography of Buffalo Bill (1920)
    Buffalo Bill
    American soldier, bison hunter, and showman (1846 - 1917)
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  • Jacques BéNigne Bossuet The greatest weakness of all is the great fear of appearing weak.
    Jacques BéNigne Bossuet
    French bishop and writer (1627 - 1704)
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  • John Updike The guarantee that our self enjoys an intended relation to the outer world is most, if not all, we ask from religion. God is the self projected onto reality by our natural and necessary optimism. He is the not-me personified.
    John Updike
    American writer and criticus (1932 - 2009)
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  • Lyndon B. Johnson The guns and bombs, the rockets and the warships, all are symbols of human failure.
    Lyndon B. Johnson
    American president (1908 - 1973)
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  • Anthony Trollope The habit of reading is the only enjoyment in which there is no alloy; it lasts when all other pleasures fade.
    Anthony Trollope
    British writer (1815 - 1882)
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  • Agatha Christie The happiness of one man and one woman is the greatest thing in all the world.
    Source: The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920)
    Agatha Christie
    British writer (1890 - 1976)
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  • Nelson Algren The hard necessity of bringing the judge on the bench down into the dock has been the peculiar responsibility of the writer in all ages of man.
    Nelson Algren
    American writer (1909 - 1981)
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  • Nan Fairbrother The hardest of all is learning to be a well of affection, and not a fountain; to show them we love them not when we feel like it, but when they do.
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  • Charles M. Schwab The hardest struggle of all is to be something different from what the average man is.
    Charles M. Schwab
    American industrialist (1862 - 1939)
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  • Adam Weishaupt The head of every family will be what Abraham was, the patriarch, the priest and the unlettered lord of his family, and Reason will be the code of laws to all mankind.
    Adam Weishaupt
    German philosopher (1748 - 1830)
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  • Benjamin Disraeli The health of the people is really the foundation upon which all their happiness and all their powers as a state depend.
    Source: Speech of 24 june 1877
    Benjamin Disraeli
    English statesman and writer (1804 - 1881)
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  • Elizabeth Bowen The heart may think it knows better: the senses know that absence blots people out. We really have no absent friends. The friend becomes a traitor by breaking, however unwillingly or sadly, out of our own zone: a hard judgment is passed on him, for all the pleas of the heart.
    Elizabeth Bowen
    Anglo-Irish Novelist (1899 - 1973)
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