Merong Mahawangsa Quotes & Sayings
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Top Merong Mahawangsa Quotes

The republican is the only form of government which is not eternally at open or secret war with the rights of mankind. — Thomas Jefferson

Everybody who does anything for the public can be criticized. There's always someone who doesn't like it. — Imogen Cunningham

More and more people were being judged useless and were being flung to the margins of society, where they were destined to look back enviously at the few who still had reasons to be happy. He — Henning Mankell

Red is much nicer than blue. — Claire King

If the suffering of children goes to swell the sum of sufferings which was necessary to pay for truth, then I protest that the truth is not worth such a price. — Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Nature has a language of its own, or maybe those who have lived long in solitude read in it their own unconscious inner feelings and mysterious foreknowledge. — Alexandra David-Neel

Maybe I should write 'Tiger Who?' on my cap. — Vijay Singh

Words, rolling on. Sometimes the Harbinger of Death hears these words, words of house prices and commutes and the price of pasta and the new washing machine and the difficulty of finding a place to dry your wet clothes, and they make him indescribably sad.
Tonight, for some reason, as he listens to a story of a life still being built, and speaks of the ending of all things, he is not afraid, and this world, which seemed to be only ashes, begins again to give him an extraordinary joy. — Claire North

Every substance is as a world apart, independent of everything else except God. — Gottfried Leibniz

I know I screwed up my 'Godzilla.' — Dean Devlin

Perhaps every time anyone is praised it means that someone else somewhere is going to be ignored — Margaret Mahy

That's what music did. It made you feel.
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Music, her grandfather always told her, was language. A special language, a gift from the Muses, something all people are born understanding but few people can thoroughly translate. — Sara Zarr

Thus, Moltke believed that the higher the commander's position, the less prescriptive his orders should be to his subordinates. He argued that a large numbers of orders, or verbose orders, could confuse leaders on the commander's true intent. This problem could compound itself through every echelon of command making it difficult for a division, or even a brigade commander, to decipher the reason for the mission.[22] — Major Michael J. Gunther

To maintain your marriage brimming, with really like in the wedding cup, anytime you are incorrect, admit it each time you're proper, shut up. — Ogden Nash