Great Quotations And Sayings
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“Love is a canvas furnished by nature and embroidered by imagination.”
– Voltaire
“I am free of all prejudice. I hate everyone equally. ”
– W.C. Fields
“You only have to do a very few things right in your life so long as you don’t do too many things wrong.”
– Warren Buffett
“100% of the shots you don’t take don’t go in.”
– Wayne Gretzky
“Everything is funny as long as it is happening to somebody else.”
– WIll Rogers
“You’ll find as you grow older that you weren’t born such a great while ago after all. The time shortens up.”
– William Dean Howells
“We read to know that we are not alone.”
– William Nicholson
“Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.”
– Winston Churchill
“Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened. ”
– Winston Churchill
“I’m not afraid of death; I just don’t want to be there when it happens.”
– Woody Allen
“You can have everything in life that you want if you just give enough other people what they want.”
– Zig Ziglar
“You plus God equals enough.”
– Zig Ziglar
“If we could sell our experiences for what they cost us, we’d all be millionaires. ”
– Abigail Van Buren
“And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years. ”
– Abraham Lincoln
“No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. ”
– Aesop
“If you haven’t got any charity in your heart, you have the worst kind of heart trouble. ”
– Bob Hope
“Have a heart that never hardens, a temper that never tires, a touch that never hurts. ”
– Charles Dickens
“How you spend your time is more important than how you spend your money. Money mistakes can be corrected, but time is gone forever.”
– David Norris
“We gain strength, and courage, and confidence by each experience in which we really stop to look fear in the face … we must do that which we think we cannot. ”
– Eleanor Roosevelt
“When you cease to make a contribution, you begin to die. ”
– Eleanor Roosevelt
“One of the oldest human needs is having someone wonder where you are when you don’t come home at night. ”
– Margaret Mead
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