Nolumus Leges Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Nolumus Leges with everyone.
Top Nolumus Leges Quotes

Expand your inner circle to include those who can challenge your thinking and escalate you to unreached heights of success. — Simon T. Bailey

I remember my choir teacher in high school told me, 'When in doubt, sing loud.' I'm a terrible singer, but I always auditioned for the musicals, and would get cast in them because I really would just put it all out there. That was really good advice, and I think it works for everything, not just acting. — Judy Greer

If I can not dance, I want no part in your revolution. — Emma Goldman

One can decide that the principal role of knowledge is as an indispensable element in the functioning of society, and act in accordance with that decision, only if one has already decided that society is a giant machine. — Jean-Francois Lyotard

If you wish Pythocles to have pleasure for ever, do not add to his pleasures, but subtract from his desires; — Seneca.

How could I describe our relationship even to myself without either disparaging it or insulting it with the tawdry decoration of sentimentality? — Olaf Stapledon

Arsenal's width comes from wide areas — Jamie Redknapp

That was because when I was little I didn't understand about other people having minds. — Mark Haddon

To be filled with God is a great thing, to be filled with the fullness of God is still greater; to be filled with all the fullness of God is greatest of all. — Adam Clarke

Make a decision today that, from now on, you are going to eliminate all the "if only's" from your life. — Brian Tracy

Anyone thought it was possible to spread justice and make everyone equal in this world, they were highly delusional. The world was like clockwork. In order for the bigger wheels to survive, the smaller wheels had to work harder in their merry go round. They just had to be promised big things that weren't going to happen. Case solved. — Cameron Jace

Some of Mr. Gregory's poems have merely appeared in The New Yorker ; others are New Yorker poems: the inclusive topicality, the informed and casual smartness, the flat fashionable irony, meaningless because it proceeds from a frame of reference whose amorphous superiority is the most definite thing about it they are the trademark not simply of a magazine but of a class. — Randall Jarrell