Over 40,000 Famous Quotes Sorted By Topic and Author
Famous Quotes
Think no vice so small that you may commit it, and no virtue so small that you may over look it.
Topic: Advice
Author: Confucius
The odds of hitting your target go up dramatically when you aim at it.
Topic: Inspirational
Author: Mal Pancoast
Progress cannot be organized.
Topic: Society
Author: Ludwig Von Mises
Loquacity storms the ear, but modesty takes the heart. -Thomas Fuller.
Topic: Heart Quotes
Author: Thomas Fuller
Continuing a Lenten series on prayer: When a man has had so much benefit from the gospel, as to know his own misery, his want of a redeemer, who he is, and how is he to be found; there everything seems to be done, both to awaken and direct his prayer, and make it a true praying in and by the Spirit. For when the heart really pants and longs after God, its prayer is a praying, as moved and animated by the Spirit of God; it is the breath or inspiration of God, stirring, moving and opening itself in the heart. For though the early nature, our old man, can oblige or accustom himself to take heavenly words at certain times into his mouth, yet this is a certain truth, that nothing ever did, or can have the least desire or tendency to ascend to heaven, but that which came down from heaven; and therefore nothing in the heart can pray, aspire, and long after God, but the Spirit of God moving and stirring in it.
Topic: Christianity
Author: William Law
This isn't right, this isn't even wrong.
Topic: Physics Technology
Author: Wolfgang Pauli
Maturity is the capacity to endure uncertainty.
Topic: Inspirational
Author: John Huston Finley
But Satan now is wiser than of yore, And tempts by making rich, not making poor.
Topic: Temptation
Author: Alexander Pope
The biggest mischief in the past century has been perpetrated by Rousseau with his doctrine of the goodness of human nature. The mob and the intellectuals derived from it the vision of a Golden Age which would arrive without fail once the noble human race could act according to its whims.
Topic: Society
Author: Jakob Burckhardt
Why are the umpires, the only two people on the field who aren't going to get grass stains on their knees, the only ones allowed to wear dark trousers.
Topic: Umpire
Author: Katharine Whitehorn
Roots is not just a saga of my family. It is the symbolic saga of a people.
Topic: Men and Women
Author: Alex Haley
Feast of the Birth of John the Baptist "Thou shalt not" is the beginning of wisdom. But the end of wisdom, the new law, is, "Thou shalt." To be Christian is to be old? Not a bit of it. To be Christian is to be reborn, and free, and unafraid, and immortally young.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Joy Davidman
The cure for anything is salt water -- sweat, tears, or the sea.
Topic: Water
Author: Isak Dinesen
Victorious living does not mean freedom from temptation, nor does it mean freedom from mistakes. We are personalities in the making, limited, and grappling with things too high for us. Obviously we, at very best, will make many mistakes, but these mistakes need not be sins. Our actions are the results of our intentions and our intelligence. Our intentions may be very good, but, because the intelligence is limited, the action may turn out to be a mistake -- a mistake, but not necessarily a sin, for sin comes out of a wrong intention. And therefore the action carries a sense of incompleteness and frustration, but not of guilt. Victorious living does not mean perfect living in the sense of living without flaw, but it does mean adequate living, and that can be consistent with many mistakes.
Topic: Christianity
Author: E Stanley Jones
Commemoration of Clement, Bishop of Rome, Martyr, c.100 We say, and we say openly, and while ye torture us, mangled and gory we cry out, "We worship God through Christ!" Believe Him a man: it is through Him and in Him that God willeth Himself to be known and worshipped.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Tertullian
In strategy the longest way round is often the shortest way there- a direct approach to the object exhausts the attacker and hardens the resistance by compression, whereas an indirect approach loosens the defender's hold by upsetting his balance.
Topic: Society
Author: B H Liddell Hart
Who knows but that hereafter some traveller like myself will sit down upon the banks of the Seine, the Thames, or the Zuyder Zee, where now, in the tumult of enjoyment, the heart and the eyes are too slow to take in the multitude of sensations? Who knows but he will sit down solitary amid silent ruins, and weep a people inurned and their greatness changed into an empty name?
Topic: Ruin
Author: Constantin Francois De