George Frederick Handel Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about George Frederick Handel with everyone.
Top George Frederick Handel Quotes

If thou art of elephant-strength or of lion-claw, still peace is, in my opinion, better than strife. — Saadi

the first signs of emerging problems are at around the seventh grade, when they are almost 13 — Anonymous

When hot dogs like Mr. D'Amato or the Republican apologist Roger Ailes say that Whitewater is worse than Watergate, it's because they're suffering from a disease. It's called bull-imia, and it's the regurgitation of patent hyperbole. — Anna Quindlen

A meeting between two people who complete each other, who are made for each other, borders already, in my opinion, on a miracle. — Adolf Hitler

Mysteries are fine things, but the written word should be preserved, intact, and free of extraneous error. — Sandra Staas

People think you are an orphan when you are a child, and don't believe that old people can feel that they are orphans. — Agnes Varda

Love is like a Rubix Cube, there are countless numbers of wrong twists and turns, but when you get it right, it looks perfect no matter what way you look at it. — Brian Cramer

Every hero becomes a bore at last. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

Mugged by my own mother. — Rick Riordan

That, indeed, the Home Front is something of a fiction and lie, designed, not too subtly, to draw them apart, to subvert love in favor of work, abstraction, required pain, bitter death. — Thomas Pynchon

What if God's 'NO,' is really a gift? His way to protect us from what we cannot see, provide something better than we can imagine, or be part of the process of growing us closer to Him. — Lysa TerKeurst

Well, does it make sense to you?"
He said, "It doesn't have to, it's something that happens. It's like seeing a person you never saw before - you could be passing on the street - and you look at each other..."
Karen was nodding. "You make eye contact without meaning to."
"And for a few moments," Foley said, "there's a kind of recognition. You look at each other and you know something."
"That no one else knows," Karen said. "You see it in their eyes."
"And the next moment the person's gone," Foley said, "and it's too late to do anything about it, but you remember it because it was right there and you let it go, and you think, What if I had stopped and said something? It might happen only a few times in your life."
"Or once," Karen said. — Elmore Leonard