Quotation Search
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- Try to say the very thing you really mean, the whole of it, nothing more or less or other than what you really mean. That is the whole are and joy of words.
- C. S. Lewis (1898 - 1963)
- The highest reward for a man's toil is not what he gets for it but what he becomes by it.
- John Ruskin (1819 - 1900)
- Nothing is really work unless you would rather be doing something else.
- James M. Barrie (1860 - 1937)
- I've found that worry and irritation vanish into thin air the moment I open my mind to the many blessings I possess.
- Dale Carnegie
- I'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth.
- Steve McQueen (1930 - 1980)
- The country only has charms for those not obliged to stay there.
- Edouard Manet (1832 - 1883)
- The history of man is a graveyard of great cultures that came to catastrophic ends because of their incapacity for planned, rational, voluntary reaction to challenge.
- Erich Fromm (1900 - 1980)
- Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.
- Alfred North Whitehead (1861 - 1947)
- With every civil right there has to be a corresponding civil obligation.
- Edison Haines
- A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has a university education he may steal the whole railroad.
- Theodore Roosevelt (1858 - 1919)
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