Quotes 1481 till 1500 of 4541.
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How can you expect a man who's warm to understand one who's cold?
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How could you be a Great Man if history brought you no Great Events, or brought you to them at the wrong time, too young, too old?
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How difficult it is to get men to believe that any other man can or does act from disinterestedness.
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How ironical that it is by means of speech that man can degrade himself below the level of dumb creation - for a chatterbox is truly of a lower category than a dumb creature.
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How little is the promise of the child fulfilled in the man.
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How little praise warms out of a man the good that is in him, as the sneer of contempt which he feels is unjust chill the ardor to excel.
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How many a man has thrown up his hands at a time when a little more effort, a little more patience would have achieved success?
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How ridiculous and unrealistic is the man who is astonished at anything that happens in life.
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How true is the saying that man was forced to invent work in order to escape the strain of having to think.
Death on the Nile (1937) -
How wrong it is for a woman to expect the man to build the world she wants, rather than to create it herself.
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However low a man sinks he never reaches the level of the police.
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However toplofty and idealistic a man may be, he can always rationalize his right to earn money.
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However, all gifts seem now to be absorbed in one and a man must be either a Preacher or nothing.
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Humanity is the virtue of a woman, generosity that of a man.
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Humans are imperfect. That's one of the reasons that classical and jazz are in trouble. We're on the quest for the perfect performance and every note has to be right. Man, every note is not right in life.
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Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in the blood of his followers and the sacrifices of his friends.
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Humor is something that thrives between man's aspirations and his limitations. There is more logic in humor than in anything else. Because, you see, humor is truth.
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Hypocrisy in anything whatever may deceive the cleverest and most penetrating man, but the least wide-awake of children recognizes it, and is revolted by it, however ingeniously it may be disguised.
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Hypocrisy is the most difficult and nerve-racking vice that any man can pursue; it needs an unceasing vigilance and a rare detachment of spirit. It cannot, like adultery or gluttony, be practiced at spare moments; it is a whole-time job.
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I add this, that rational ability without education has oftener raised man to glory and virtue, than education without natural ability.
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