Quotes

Quotes

Quotes to inspire and reflect

Samuel Johnson
Samuel Johnson
Advertisements are now so numerous that they are very negligently perused, and it is therefore become necessary to gain attention by magnificence of promises, and by eloquences sometimes sublime and sometimes pathetic.
6
Sófocles
Sófocles
One’s own escape from troubles makes one glad; / but bringing friends to trouble is hard grief.
7
Sófocles
Sófocles
It is a painful thing / To look at your own trouble and know / That you yourself and no one else has made it.
8
Sêneca
Sêneca
Light troubles speak; the weighty are struck dumb.
9
Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope
I never knew any man in my life who could not bear another’s misfortunes perfectly like a Christian.
10
Ogden Nash
Ogden Nash
The only incurable troubles of the rich are the troubles that money can’t cure, / Which is a kind of trouble that is even more troublesome if you are poor.
23
W. Somerset Maugham
W. Somerset Maugham
The world is quickly bored by the recital of misfortune, and willingly avoids the sight of distress.
7
Montaigne
Montaigne
The oldest and best known evil was ever more supportable than one that was new and untried.
7
Samuel Johnson
Samuel Johnson
If a man talks of his misfortunes there is something in them that is not disagreeable to him; for where there is nothing but pure misery there never is any recourse to the mention of it.
4
Heráclito
Heráclito
Greater dooms win greater destinies.
13
Eurípides
Eurípides
Disaster appears, to crush / one man now, but afterward another.
8
Eurípides
Eurípides
Ignorance of one’s misfortunes is clear gain.
9
Lawrence Durrell
Lawrence Durrell
The memory of man is as old as misfortune.
21
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Every calamity is a spur and valuable hint.
6
Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
He deposes Doom / Who hath suffered him—.
7
Lawrence Durrell
Lawrence Durrell
They say that if you get bored enough with calamity you can learn to laugh.
19
Edmund Burke
Edmund Burke
Public calamity is a mighty leveller.
13
Samuel Butler
Samuel Butler
Adversity, if a man is set down to it by degrees, is more supportable with equanimity by most people than any great prosperity arrived at in a single lifetime.
6
Arthur Bloch
Arthur Bloch
When working on a project, if you put away a tool that you’re certain you’re finished with, you will need it instantly.
10
Robert Browning
Robert Browning
Welcome each rebuff/That turns earth’s smoothness rough, / Each sting that bids nor sit nor stand but go!
17
Arthur Bloch
Arthur Bloch
If there is a possibility of several things going wrong, the one that will cause the most damage will be the one to go wrong.
9
Aristóteles
Aristóteles
The beauty of the soul shines out when a man bears with composure one heavy mischance after another, not because he does not feel them, but because he is a man of high and heroic temper.
6
Ésquilo
Ésquilo
Misfortune / wandering the same track lights now upon one / and now upon another.
9
Pietro Aretino
Pietro Aretino
A high heart ought to bear calamities and not flee them, since in bearing them appears the grandeur of the mind and in fleeing them the cowardice of the heart.
16
Bertrand Russell
Bertrand Russell
A life without adventure is likely to be unsatisfying, but a life in which adventure is allowed to take whatever form it will is sure to be short.
9
Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf
If we didn’t live venturously, plucking the wild goat by the beard, and trembling over precipices, we should never be depressed, I’ve no doubt; but already should be faded, fatalistic and aged.
13
Thomas Fuller
Thomas Fuller
He that has one eye is a prince among those that have none.
7
John Stuart Mill
John Stuart Mill
The concessions of the privileged to the unprivileged are seldom brought about by any better motive than the power of the unprivileged to extort them.
13
Henry Kissinger
Henry Kissinger
The capacity to admire others is not my most fully developed trait.
14
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Every advantage has its tax.
9
Max Beerbohm
Max Beerbohm
Admiration involves a glorious obliquity of vision.
8
Joseph Addison
Joseph Addison
Admiration is a very short-lived passion that immediately decays upon growing familiar with its object, unless it be still fed with fresh discoveries, and kept alive by a new perpetual succession of miracles rising up to its view.
17
Adlai Stevenson
Adlai Stevenson
Bad administration, to be sure, can destroy good policy; but good administration can never save bad policy.
19
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
An administration, like a machine, does not create. It carries on.
7
T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot
It is not necessarily those lands which are the most fertile or most favoured in climate that seem to me the happiest, but those in which a long struggle of adaptation between man and his environment has brought out the best qualities of both.
10
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley
All conditioning aims at that: making people like their inescapable social destiny.
21
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare
O, it offends me to the soul to hear a robustious periwig-pated fellow tear a passion to tatters, to very rags, to split the ears of the groundlings.
5
Orson Welles
Orson Welles
Every actor in his heart believes everything bad that’s printed about him.
12
W. Somerset Maugham
W. Somerset Maugham
By the time an actor knows how to act any sort of part he is often too old to act any but a few.
9
Samuel Johnson
Samuel Johnson
Players, Sir! I look on them as no better than creatures set upon tables and joint stools to make faces and produce laughter, like dancing dogs.
6
Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde
Let me say to you now that to do nothing at all is the most difficult thing in the world, the most difficult and the most intellectual.
10
James Thurber
James Thurber
Where most of us end up there is no knowing, but the hellbent get where they are going.
12
Sêneca
Sêneca
Every one has time if he likes. Business runs after nobody: people cling to it of their own free will and think that to be busy is a proof of happiness.
7
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare
Better to be eaten to death with a rust than to be scoured to nothing with perpetual motion.
8
Arthur Schopenhauer
Arthur Schopenhauer
Men need some kind of external activity, because they are inactive within.
14
Blaise Pascal
Blaise Pascal
Our nature consists in motion; complete rest is death.
9
Elbert Hubbard
Elbert Hubbard
If you want work well done, select a busy man: the other kind has no time.
7
Dorothy Parker
Dorothy Parker
Travel, trouble, music, art, / A kiss, a frock, a , rhyme,— / I never said they feed my heart, / But still, they pass my time.
9