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Fortuitously Def Quotes & Sayings

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Top Fortuitously Def Quotes

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Walter Savage Landor

No good writer was ever long neglected; no great man overlooked by men equally great. Impatience is a proof of inferior strength, and a destroyer of what little there may be. — Walter Savage Landor

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Jane Austen

If one scheme of happiness fails, human nature turns to another; if the first calculation is wrong, we make a second better. — Jane Austen

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Anna Quindlen

One of the useful things about age is realizing conventional wisdom is often simply inertia with a candy coating of conformity. — Anna Quindlen

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Federico Tesio

A horse gallops with his lungs, perseveres with his heart, and wins with his character. — Federico Tesio

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Peter Matthiessen

Simplicity is the whole secret of well-being. — Peter Matthiessen

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Mark Doty

What did you think, that joy / was some slight thing? — Mark Doty

Fortuitously Def Quotes By John Mearsheimer

The ideal situation for any state is to experience sharp economic growth while its rivals' economies grow slowly or hardly at all. — John Mearsheimer

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Mark Helprin

We ate simply, we were healthy, and we were uninterested in those things that should be called possessions not because they are possessed but because they possess. Those ten years were the happiest of my life save the first ten, the years in which I had neither position nor success, and no one took notice of me. Those were the years of the parent holding the child in his arms, lifting him high in the air, and pulling him close. As I held my own son, when he was a baby, God was right there. — Mark Helprin

Fortuitously Def Quotes By Upton Sinclair

They had always been accustomed to eat a great deal of smoked sausage, and how could they know that what they bought in America was not the same - that its color was made by chemicals, and its smoky flavor by more chemicals, and that it was full of "potato flour" besides? Potato flour is the waste of potato after the starch and alcohol have been extracted; it has no more food value than so much wood, and as its use as a food adulterant is a penal offense in Europe, thousands of tons of it are shipped to America every year. It was amazing what quantities of food such as this were needed every day, by eleven hungry persons. A — Upton Sinclair