Quotes 1421 till 1440 of 1572.
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Well, your premise is correct, that we have to first guard against those who have an affiliation with terrorists and a connection, and so we have watch lists and systems that can make that connection.
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Well, youth is the period of assumed personalities and disguises. It is the time of the sincerely insincere.
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Well-ordered self-love is right and natural.
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Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech.
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Well: what we gain by science is, after all, sadness, as the Preacher saith. The more we know of the laws and nature of the Universe the more ghastly a business we perceive it all to be - and the non-necessity of it.
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Wellesley's president, Nannerl Overholser Keohane, approved a broad rule with a specific application: The senior thesis of every Wellesley alumna is available in the college archives for anyone to read - except for those written by either a 'president or first lady of the United States.'
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What a woman says to her avid lover should be written in wind and running water.
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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.
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What I claim is to live to the full the contradiction of my time, which may well make sarcasm the condition of truth.
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What is conceived well is expressed clearly.
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What is forgiven is usually well remembered.
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What is read twice is usually remembered more than what is once written.
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What is the poem, after it is written? That is the question. Not where it came from or why.
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What is the single most important quality in a tennis champion? I would have to say desire, staying in there and winning matches when you are not playing that well.
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What kind of moron would go to work for half the amount of money, when they could sit at home and collect what's written in a contract?
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What matters is not how well you can avoid trouble, but how you cope with trouble when it comes.
The Book of Illusions (2009) 32 -
What our eyes behold may well be the text of life but one's meditations on the text and the disclosures of these meditations are no less a part of the structure of reality.
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What played to what had been a relative weakness for us-this was exploding overseas as well, and we had to scramble to mount some reach and get into places and be competitive on the ground.
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What right have you to take the word wealth, which originally meant ''well-being,'' and degrade and narrow it by confining it to certain sorts of material objects measured by money.
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What should I have known or written had I been a quiet, mercantile politician or a lord in waiting? A man must travel, and turmoil, or there is no existence.
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