Related Quotes
All quotes about:
faults wallets
Every one has his faults: but we do not see the wallet on our own backs. Catullus
faults ill
I winna blaw about mysel, as ill I like my faults to tell Robert H. Connelly
faults bears
Who'd bear to hear the Gracchi chide sedition? Juvenal
faults french-writer half observing
If we had no faults of our own, we should not take half so much satisfaction in observing those of other people. Francois VI Duc de La Rochefoucauld
faults want copies
To copy faults is want of sense. Charles Churchill
faults reason observing
It is a fatal fault to reason whilst observing, though so necessary beforehand and so useful afterwards. Charles Darwin
faults none people stand
None of us can stand other people having the same faults as ourselves. Oscar Wilde
faults friend looks none
One who looks for a friend without faults will have none Hasidic Proverb
faults melancholy misfortunes
A tendancy to melancholy...let it be observed, is a misfortune, not a fault. Abraham Lincoln
melancholy men others
Melancholy men are of all others the most witty. Aristotle
melancholy stool
Have you a stool there to be melancholy upon? Ben Jonson
melancholy deaf realism
One and the same thing can at the same time be good, bad, and indifferent, e.g., music is good to the melancholy, bad to those who mourn, and neither good nor bad to the deaf. Baruch Spinoza
melancholy
I fell in love with melancholy Edgar Allan Poe
melancholy
There is a life and there is a death, and there are beauty and melancholy between. Albert Camus
melancholy type persons
I am a melancholy type of person. Alexander McQueen
melancholy brooding
It's a brooding melancholy that haunts me. David Guterson
melancholy midst popular reduced spectator stem torrent
If one has not influence to stem the torrent of popular delusion he is reduced to the melancholy part of a spectator in the midst of the ruin. James L. Petigru
melancholy century whole
But the eighteenth century, on the whole, loathed melancholy. George Saintsbury
misfortunes
Misfortunes never come singly. Anne Frank
misfortunes
Misfortune was my god. Arthur Rimbaud
misfortunes
Our greatest misfortunes come to us from ourselves. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
misfortunes
Everybody has their days of misfortune. Louisa May Alcott
misfortunes
When Misfortune is asleep, let no one wake her. John Dryden
misfortunes
By speaking of our misfortunes we often relieve them. [Fr., A raconter ses maux souvent on les soulage.] Pierre Corneille