Quotes with man-not

Quotes 12461 till 12480 of 13894.

  • Joseph Wood Krutch What a man knows is everywhere at war with what he wants.
    Joseph Wood Krutch
    American writer, critic, and naturalist (1893 - 1970)
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  • Brendan Francis What a man most enjoys about a woman's clothes are his fantasies of how she would look without them.
    Brendan Francis
    Irish poet and writer (1923 - 1964)
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  • Meister Eckhart What a man takes in by contemplation, that he pours out in love.
    Meister Eckhart
    German mystic (1260 - 1328)
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  • Robert M. Lindner What a person wills and not what they know determines their worth or unworth, power or impotence, happiness or unhappiness.
    Robert M. Lindner
    American author and psychologist (1914 - 1956)
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  • William Shakespeare What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty, in form and moving how express and admirable, in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god - the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals!
    William Shakespeare
    English playwright and poet (1564 - 1616)
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  • Lord George Byron What a strange thing man is; and what a stranger thing woman.
    Lord George Byron
    English poet (1788 - 1824)
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  • Blaise Pascal What a strange vanity painting is; it attracts admiration by resembling the original, we do not admire.
    Blaise Pascal
    French mathematician, physicist and philosopher (1623 - 1662)
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  • Dan Quayle What a waste it is to lose one's mind. Or not to have a mind is being very wasteful. How true that is.
    Dan Quayle
    American politician (1947 - )
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  • John Masefield What am I, Life? A thing of watery salt held in cohesion by unresting cells. Which work they know not why, which never halt, myself unwitting where their Master dwells?
    John Masefield
    English poet and writer (1878 - 1967)
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  • Bernard Bailyn What Americans were really objecting to had nothing to do with constitutional principles. their objection was not to Parliament's constitutional right to levy certain kinds of taxes as opposed to others, but to its effort to collect any.
    Source: The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution Ch. V, TRANSFORMATION, p. 218
    Bernard Bailyn
    American historian, author, and academic (1922 - 2020)
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  • André Gide What another would have done as well as you, do not do it. What another would have said as well as you, do not say it; what another would have written as well, do not write it. Be faithful to that which exists nowhere but in yourself-and thus make yourself indispensable.
    André Gide
    French writer and Nobel laureate in literature (1947) (1869 - 1951)
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  • Alan Cohen What are you accepting that would not be a part of your ideal day?
    Alan Cohen
    American businessman (1954 - )
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  • Arthur Hertzberg What are you going to do to preserve a tradition that is the peculiar and unique culture that Judaism inculcates? The American Jewish community is not going to survive by lining up against its common enemy.
    Arthur Hertzberg
    Jewish-American scholar and activist (1921 - 2006)
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  • Thomas Carlyle What are your historical Facts; still more your biographical? Wilt thou know a man by stringing-together beadrolls of what thou namest Facts?
    Thomas Carlyle
    Scottish writer and historicus (1795 - 1881)
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  • Albrecht Durer What beauty is, I know not, though it adheres to many things.
    Albrecht Durer
    German painter (1471 - 1528)
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  • Carole Bouquet What bothers you isn't so much whether you're beautiful or not. What bothers you is the way that people stare.
    Carole Bouquet
    French actress and fashion (1957 - )
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  • Alan Paton What broke in a man when he could bring himself to kill another?
    Alan Paton
    South African author and anti-apartheid activist (1903 - 1988)
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  • Anatole France What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of heaven and earth could come by chance, when all the skill of art is not able to make an oyster!
    Anatole France
    French writer and Nobel laureate in literature (1921) (1844 - 1924)
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  • Jeremy Taylor What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of heaven and earth could come by chance, when all the skill of science is not able to make an oyster.
    Jeremy Taylor
    British churchman and writer (1613 - 1667)
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  • Nelson Mandela What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It is what difference we have made to the lives of others that will determine the significance of the life we lead.
    Source: Speech 18 may 2002
    Nelson Mandela
    South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and political leader (1918 - 2013)
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