Quotes with us—but

Quotes 4761 till 4780 of 8624.

  • Ron Nesen Nobody believes the official spokesman... but everybody trusts an unidentified source.
    - +
     0
  • Lady Mary Wortley Montagu Nobody can deny but religion is a comfort to the distressed, a cordial to the sick, and sometimes a restraint on the wicked; therefore whoever would argue or laugh it out of the world without giving some equivalent for it ought to be treated as a common enemy.
    Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
    English writer (1689 - 1762)
    - +
     0
  • Jane Austen Nobody can tell what I suffer! But it is always so. Those who do not complain are never pitied.
    Jane Austen
    English writer (1775 - 1817)
    - +
     0
  • Samuel Johnson Nobody can write the life of a man but those who have eat and drunk and lived in social intercourse with him.
    Samuel Johnson
    English writer (1709 - 1784)
    - +
     0
  • Bob Barr Nobody is denying we should investigate and do what we can to prevent gun crime in our cities and towns. But, we should not scapegoat the American gun owner for complicated, cultural problems we are just beginning to understand.
    Bob Barr
    American attorney and politician (1948 - )
    - +
     0
  • F. Faber Nobody is kind only to one person at once, but to many persons in one.
    - +
     0
  • B. B. King Nobody loves me but my mother, and she could be jivin', too.
    B. B. King
    American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and record producer (1925 - 2015)
    - +
     0
  • Jack Dempsey Nobody owes anybody a living, but everybody is entitled to a chance.
    - +
     0
  • Bobby Unser Nobody remembers who finished second but the guy who finished second.
    - +
     0
  • Jerry Garcia Nobody stopped thinking about those psychedelic experiences. Once you've been to some of those places, you think, ''How can I get back there again but make it a little easier on myself?''
    Jerry Garcia
    American singer-songwriter and guitarist (1942 - 1995)
    - +
     0
  • Anita Roddick Nobody talks of entrepreneurship as survival, but that's exactly what it is and what nurtures creative thinking.
    Anita Roddick
    British businesswoman and human rights activist (1942 - 2007)
    - +
     0
  • Bart Chilton Nobody wants to be against technology, but I think that regulators should not - and people should not - assume that faster is always better in markets. We need to question technology to insure that markets continue to perform their fundamental purposes.
    Bart Chilton
    American civil servant, consultant and author (1960 - 2019)
    - +
     0
  • Bob Sheppard Nobody, but nobody stays a public-address announcer for more than a couple of years. Truly. Public-address announcing is not a career. Public-address announcers only work 81 days a year, so you don't make a living.
    - +
     0
  • Edith Hamilton None but a poet can write a tragedy. For tragedy is nothing less than pain transmuted into exaltation by the alchemy of poetry.
    Edith Hamilton
    American educator and author (1867 - 1963)
    - +
     0
  • John Milton None can love freedom heartily, but good men... the rest love not freedom, but license.
    John Milton
    English poet, polemicist and man of letters (1608 - 1674)
    - +
     0
  • Francis Bacon None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and bewitch but envy.
    Francis Bacon
    English philosopher and statesman (1561 - 1626)
    - +
     0
  • Elie Wiesel None of us is in a position to eliminate war, but it is our obligation to denounce it and expose it in all its hideousness. War leaves no victors, only victims.
    Hope, Despair, and Memory (1986)
    Elie Wiesel
    Rumanian-born American Writer (1928 - 2016)
    - +
     0
  • Lydia M. Child None speak of the bravery, the might, or the intellect of Jesus; but the devil is always imagined as a being of acute intellect, political cunning, and the fiercest courage. These universal and instinctive tendencies of the human mind reveal much.
    Lydia M. Child
    American Abolitionist, Writer, Editor (1802 - 1880)
    - +
     0
  • Edward Young None think the great unhappy, but the great.
    Edward Young
    British poet (1683 - 1765)
    - +
     0
  • John Milton Nor aught availed him now to have built in heaven high towers; nor did he scrape by all his engines, but was headlong sent with his industrious crew to build in hell.
    John Milton
    English poet, polemicist and man of letters (1608 - 1674)
    - +
     0
All us—but famous quotes and sayings you will always find on greatest-quotations.com (page 239)