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Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes & Sayings

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Top Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Margaret Fuller

Union is only possible to those who are units. To be fit for relations in time, souls, whether of man or woman, must be able to do without them in the spirit. — Margaret Fuller

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Orhan Pamuk

When you love a city and have explored it frequently on foot, your body, not to mention your soul, gets to know the streets so well after a number of years that in a fit of melancholy, perhaps stirred by a light snow falling ever so sorrowfully, you'll discover your legs carrying you of their own accord toward one of your favourite promontories — Orhan Pamuk

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By David Jeremiah

Within seconds thoughts become words that slip off our tongue and into the world. Pausing before we speak may seem cumbersome, but it allows us to decide: Is this helpful? Does this need to be said now? What is the best way to say this? — David Jeremiah

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Gustave Flaubert

We swung between madness and suicide ... it was beautiful! — Gustave Flaubert

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Andrew Young

Profits should be for a purpose. Profits should be productive. You should make money for producing benefits that make the world a better place. Making money is a good thing when it is made in service to humanity or the democracy. — Andrew Young

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Jason Goodwin

They were always Albanians. You know what that means. Some Catholics, some Orthodox. And some, in time, were Muslims, too. But the first religion of the Albanian, as they say, is Albania. — Jason Goodwin

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Victoria Aveyard

You ask how much of it was me. Some. Enough. — Victoria Aveyard

Bygones Ally Mcbeal Quotes By Lyndon B. Johnson

Nothing is more despicable than the old age of a passionate man. When the vigour of youth fails him, and his amusements pall with frequent repetition, his occasional rage sinks by decay of strength into peevishness; that peevishness, for want of novelty and variety, becomes habitual; the world falls off from around him, and he is left, as Homer expresses it, to devour his own heart in solitude and contempt. — Lyndon B. Johnson