Quotes 24801 till 24820 of 25137.
-
By respect for life we become religious in a way that is elementary, profound and alive.
-
Cabbage: A familiar kitchen-garden vegetable about as large and wise as a man's head.
-
Calamities are of two kinds: misfortune to ourselves, and good fortune to others.
-
Call a truce, then, to our labors - let us feast with friends and neighbors, and be merry as the custom of our caste; for if ''faint and forced the laughter,'' and if sadness follow after, we are richer by one mocking Christmas past.
-
Can anybody remember when the times were not hard, and money not scarce?
-
Can I see another's woe, and not be in sorrow too? Can I see another's grief, and not seek for kind relief?
-
Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased, pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow, raze out the written troubles of the brain, and with some sweet oblivious antidote cleanse the fraught bosom of that perilous stuff which weighs upon the heart?
-
Character is the result of two things: Mental attitude and the way we spend our time.
-
Character, in great and little things, means carrying through what you feel able to do.
-
Childhood: The period of human life intermediate between the idiocy of infancy and the folly of youth - two removes from the sin of manhood and three from the remorse of age.
-
Compassion, in which all ethics must take root, can only attain its full breadth and depth if it embraces all living creatures and does not limit itself to mankind.
-
Compromise. Such an adjustment of conflicting interests as gives each adversary the satisfaction of thinking he has got what he ought not to have, and is deprived of nothing except what was justly his due.
-
Consider your breed; you were not made to live like beasts, but to follow virtue and knowledge.
-
Constant kindness can accomplish much. As the sun makes ice melt, kindness causes misunderstanding, mistrust, and hostility to evaporate.
-
Creditor. One of a tribe of savages dwelling beyond the Financial Straits and dreaded for their desolating incursions.
-
Culture is only true when implicitly critical, and the mind which forgets this revenges itself in the critics it breeds. Criticism is an indispensable element of culture.
-
Curiosity, n. An objectionable quality of the female mind. The desire to know whether or not a woman is cursed with curiosity is one of the most active and insatiable passions of the masculine soul.
-
Dali is like a man who hesitates between talent and genius, or, as one might once have said, between vice and virtue.
-
Day by day we should weigh what we have granted to the spirit of the world against what we have denied to the spirit of Jesus, in thought and especially in deed.
-
Death remains about the one certain fact in the lives of each one of us, and there will be suffering, sorrow, and sadness next week as there was last week.
All destroyer—and famous quotes and sayings you will always find on greatest-quotations.com (page 1241)