Quotes 801 till 820 of 1450.
-
Old age equalizes - we are aware that what is happening to us has happened to untold numbers from the beginning of time. When we are young we act as if we were the first young people in the world.
-
Old age has a great sense of calm and freedom. When the passions have relaxed their hold and have escaped, not from one master, but from many.
-
Old age has deformities enough of its own. It should never add to them the deformity of vice.
-
Old age has its pleasures, which, though different, are not less than the pleasures of youth.
-
Old age is a shipwreck.
-
Old age is a tyrant, who forbids, under pain of death, the pleasures of youth.
-
Old age is always wakeful; as if, the longer linked with life, the less man has to do with aught that looks like death.
-
Old age is an insult. It's like being smacked.
-
Old age is far more than white hair, wrinkles, the feeling that it is too late and the game finished, that the stage belongs to the rising generations. The true evil is not the weakening of the body, but the indifference of the soul.
-
Old age is like everything else. To make a success of it, you've got to start young.
-
Old age is like everything else. To make a success of it, you've got to start young.
-
Old age is like flying through a storm. Once you're aboard, there's nothing you can do.
-
Old age is not so bad when you consider the alternatives.
-
Old age is ready to undertake tasks that youth shirked because they would take too long.
-
Old age is the most unexpected of all the things that can happen to a man.
-
Old age is the verdict of life.
-
Old age is, so to speak, the sanctuary of ills: they all take refuge in it.
-
Old age isn't a battle; old age is a massacre.
Everyman (2006) -
Old age isn't so bad when you consider the alternatives.
-
Old age realizes the dreams of youth: look at Dean Swift; in his youth he built an asylum for the insane, in his old age he was himself an inmate.
All four-year-old famous quotes and sayings you will always find on greatest-quotations.com (page 41)