Quotes 1401 till 1420 of 3120.
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Men are not prisoners of fate, but only prisoners of their own minds.
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Men are not punished for their for sins, but by them.
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Men are often capable of greater things than they perform. They are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent.
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Men are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent.
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Men are what their mothers made them.
The Conduct of Life (1860) Fate -
Men are wise in proportion, not to their experience, but to their capacity for experience.
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Men at sometime are the masters of their fate.
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Men become civilized, not in proportion to their willingness to believe, but in proportion to their readiness to doubt.
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Men cease to interest us when we find their limitations.
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Men first feel necessity, then look for utility, next attend to comfort, still later amuse themselves with pleasure, thence grow dissolute in luxury, and finally go mad and waste their substance.
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Men give away nothing so liberally as their advice.
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Men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues, and can moderate their desires more than their words.
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Men have always detested women's gossip because they suspect the truth: their measurements are being taken and compared.
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Men have an extraordinarily erroneous opinion of their position in nature; and the error is ineradicable.
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Men have become the tools of their trade.
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Men have to do some awfully mean things to keep up their respectability.
Fanny's First Play 85 -
Men may rise on stepping-stones of their dead selves to higher things.
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Men might as well be imprisoned, as excluded from the means of earning their bread.
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Men must endure, their going hence even as their coming hither. Ripeness is all.
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Men must necessarily be the active agents of their own well-being and well-doing... they themselves must in the very nature of things be their own best helpers.
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