To know a truth well, one must have fought it out.
NOVALISVirtue is no empty echo.
More Uncategorized Quotes
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The origin of a modern party is anthropological: humans meet and share food to lower hostility between them and indicate friendship.
BARBARA WALTERS -
Only those who love with the heart can animate the love of others.
ABEL STEVENS -
When I’m playing the 1-guard, teams do a great job of just loading up and preparing for my drives and preparing for my three-point shots.
KYRIE IRVING -
I want to own my masters. That’s the main thing–owning all my music.
BRENT FAIYAZ -
Be honest with yourself. The world is not honest with you. The world loves hypocrisy. When you are honest with yourself you find the road to inner peace.
PARAMAHANSA YOGANANDA -
Shift your energy from protecting yourself from failure to squeezing the life out of life.
DANIELLE LAPORTE -
Fighting is pure chaos, and to be a good fighter you simply have to be prepared mentally and physically to handle that chaos.
B.J. PENN -
Modesty, that perennial flower planted instinctively in the human breast, blooms therein only as continence guards and virtue keeps.
AMOS BRONSON ALCOTT -
Patriotism is proud of a country’s virtues and eager to correct its deficiencies; it also acknowledges the legitimate patriotism of other countries, with their own specific virtues.
SYDNEY J. HARRIS -
For some people there is no comfort without pain. Thus; we define salvation through suffering. Hence, why we choose people who we know aren’t right for ourselves.
CATO THE YOUNGER -
My mother taught me beauty really lives in places like a smile.
WHITNEY HOUSTON -
Jest with your equals.
BION OF SMYRNA -
Even to admire otherwise than on the whole and where “I admire” is but a synonyme for “I remember, I liked it very much when I was reading it ,” is too much an effort, would be too disquieting an emotion!
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE -
In a crisis, don’t hide behind anything or anybody. They’re going to find you anyway.
BEAR BRYANT -
Philosophers say a great deal about what is absolutely necessary for science, and it is always, so far as one can see, rather naive, and probably wrong.
RICHARD FEYNMAN






