Quotes 521 till 540 of 546.
-
You cannot be friends upon any other terms than upon the terms of equality.
-
You end up as you deserve. In old age you must put up with the face, the friends, the health, and the children you have earned.
-
You find out who your real friends are when you're involved in a scandal.
-
You have been my friends, replied Charlotte, that in itself is a tremendous thing...
-
You have to be responsible when you're running an organization, and firing people who are your friends is part of that responsibility.
-
You know, my friends, with what a brave carouse I made a Second Marriage in my house; favored old barren reason from my bed, and took the daughter of the vine to spouse.
-
You may depend upon it that he is a good man whose intimate friends are all good, and whose enemies are decidedly bad.
-
You meet people who forget you. You forget people you meet. But sometimes you meet those people you can't forget. Those are your friends.
-
You mistake me, my dear. I have a high respect for your nerves. They are my old friends. I have heard you mention them with consideration these twenty years at least.
-
You must go to bed with friends or whores, where money makes up the difference in beauty or desire.
-
You shall judge a man by his foes as well as by his friends.
-
You who live your lives in cities or among peaceful ways cannot always tell whether your friends are the kind who would go through fire for you. But on the Plains one's friends have an opportunity to prove their mettle.
Buffalo Bills Life Story: An Autobiography -
Your friends will know you better in the first minute they meet you than your acquaintances will know you in a thousand years.
-
Your lost friends are not dead, but gone before, advanced a stage or two upon that road which you must travel in the steps they trod.
-
Ambition. An overmastering desire to be vilified by enemies while living and made ridiculous by friends when dead.
-
Ambition: An overmastering desire to be vilified by enemies while living and made ridiculous by friends when dead.
The Devil's Dictionary (1911) -
Beggar: One who has relied on the assistance of his friends.
The Devil's Dictionary (1911) -
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.
-
Fate chooses our relatives, we choose our friends.
-
Future: That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our friends are true and our happiness is assured.
All friends famous quotes and sayings you will always find on greatest-quotations.com (page 27)