Gentless Quotes & Sayings
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Top Gentless Quotes
There is no good in anything until it is finished. — Genghis Khan
The Vega Gull is peacock blue with silver wings, more splendid than any bird I've known, and somehow mine to fly. She's called The Messenger, and has been designed and built with great care and skill to do what should be impossible - cross an ocean in one brave launch, thirty-six hundred miles of black chop and nothingness - and to take me with her. It — Paula McLain
You can't help the poor by being one of them. — Abraham Lincoln
It is strange how loud little sounds become when you are in the dark and doing something wrong. — Richard Llewellyn
My will is free and connected to my Spirit. When I exercise my free will, I am calm, at peace and serene. — Kasi Kaye Iliopoulos
May God give you overflowing grace for every good work. — Lailah Gifty Akita
Until you have answered the question "Who am I" you will not be capable of living your own life — Sunday Adelaja
I had an excellent repast - the best repast possible - which consisted simply of boiled eggs and bread and butter. It was the quality of these simple ingredients that made the occasion memorable. The eggs were so good that I am ashamed to say how many of them I consumed ... It might seem that an egg which has succeeded in being fresh has done all that can be reasonably expected of it. — Henry James
I was headed for the fantastic lights. No doubt about it. Could it be that I was being deceived? Not likely. I don't think I had enough imagination to be deceived; had no false hope, either. I'd come from a long ways off and had started from a long ways down. But now destiny was about to manifest itself. I felt like it was looking right at me and nobody else. — Bob Dylan
He was a windbag. He made a great many orations, and I imagine he did a very good job, but he was still a windbag — Harry Truman
A full and powerful soul not only copes with painful even terrible losses, deprivations, robberies, insults; it emerges from such hells with a greater fullness and powerfulness, and most essential of all with a new increase in the bliss-Fulness of love.
I believe that he who has divined something of the most basic conditions for his growth in love will understand what Dante meant when he wrote over the gate of his inferno: 'I, too, was created by eternal love. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The bowed frame of an old man is the settlement in the architecture of life. Nature had formed him for sadness. — Victor Hugo
