Quotes with one-to-one

Quotes 4321 till 4340 of 5903.

  • Ezra Pound The jargon of these sculptors is beyond me. I do not know precisely why I admire a green granite female, apparently pregnant monster with one eye going around a square corner.
    Ezra Pound
    American poet (1885 - 1972)
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  • Ad Reinhardt The job at Brooklyn is interesting because Brooklyn reflects what happened to university art departments everywhere. It might be the worst department now, and yet at one point it was the best in the country.
    Ad Reinhardt
    American abstract painter (1913 - 1967)
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  • Aleister Crowley The joy of life consists in the exercise of one's energies, continual growth, constant change, the enjoyment of every new experience. To stop means simply to die. The eternal mistake of mankind is to set up an attainable ideal.
    Aleister Crowley
    British occultist, writer, and mountaineer (1875 - 1947)
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  • Barton Seaver The key to good grilling is to recognize that you are setting yourself up to cook in a whole new environment. This is actually one of the main purposes of grilling - to get yourself outside.
    Barton Seaver
    American author and chef (1979 - )
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  • Meister Eckhart The knower and the known are one. Simple people imagine that they should see God as if he stood there and they here. This is not so. God and I, we are one in knowledge.
    Meister Eckhart
    German mystic (1260 - 1328)
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  • Victor Frankl The last of the human freedoms is to choose one's attitudes.
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  • Blaise Pascal The last thing one discovers in composing a work is what to put first.
    Blaise Pascal
    French mathematician, physicist and philosopher (1623 - 1662)
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  • Edgar Quinet The law of humanity ought to be composed of the past, the present, and the future, that we bear within us; whoever possesses but one of these terms, has but a fragment of the law of the moral world.
    Edgar Quinet
    French poet, historian and politician (1803 - 1875)
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  • Bertolt Brecht The law was made for one thing alone, for the exploitation of those who don't understand it, or are prevented by naked misery from obeying it.
    Bertolt Brecht
    German - Austrian writer (1898 - 1956)
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  • Ben Horowitz The laws of business physics have been broken in terms of how many customers you can acquire and how fast. No one in history has ever acquired 450 million customers in the same amount of time that WhatsApp did.
    Ben Horowitz
    American businessman, investor, blogger, and author (1966 - )
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  • Adolf Hitler The leader of genius must have the ability to make different opponents appear as if they belonged to one category.
    Adolf Hitler
    German politician (1889 - 1945)
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  • Jean Rostand The least one can say of power is that a vocation for it is suspicious.
    Jean Rostand
    French writer (1894 - 1977)
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  • Barney Frank The left and the right live in parallel universes. The right listens to talk radio, the left's on the Internet and they just reinforce one another. They have no sense of reality. I have now one ambition: to retire before it becomes essential to tweet.
    Barney Frank
    American politician (1940 - )
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  • Lord Chesterfield The less one has to do, the less time one finds to do it in.
    Lord Chesterfield
    English statesman, diplomat and writer (Philip Dormer Stanhope) (1694 - 1773)
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  • Allan Bloom The liberally educated person is one who is able to resist the easy and preferred answers, not because he is obstinate but because he knows others worthy of consideration.
    Allan Bloom
    American writer (1930 - 1992)
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  • Sir James Matthew Barrie The life of every person is like a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another.
    Sir James Matthew Barrie
    British playwright (1860 - 1937)
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  • Robert Louis Stevenson The little rift between the sexes is astonishingly widened by simply teaching one set of catchwords to the girls and another to the boys.
    Robert Louis Stevenson
    Scottish writer and poet (1850 - 1894)
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  • Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe The little that is completed, vanishes from the sight of one who looks forward to what is still to do.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
    German writer and poet (1749 - 1832)
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  • George Santayana The little word is has its tragedies: it marries and identifies different things with the greatest innocence; and yet no two are ever identical, and if therein lies the charm of wedding them and calling them one, therein too lies the danger.
    George Santayana
    Spanish - American philosopher (1863 - 1952)
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  • Friedrich Nietzsche The lonely one offers his hand too quickly to whomever he encounters.
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    German poet and philosopher (1844 - 1900)
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