Famous Quotes & Sayings

Patience Rewarded Quotes & Sayings

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Top Patience Rewarded Quotes

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Randy Pausch

Your patience will be both appreciated and rewarded — Randy Pausch

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Alton Brown

Your patience will be rewarded. — Alton Brown

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Ayn Rand

Patience is always rewarded and romance is always round the corner! — Ayn Rand

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Alfred Stieglitz

My picture, Fifth Avenue, Winter is the result of a three hours' stand during a fierce snow-storm on February 22nd 1893, awaiting the proper moment. My patience was duly rewarded. Of course, the result contained an element of chance, as I might have stood there for hours without succeeding in getting the desired pictures. — Alfred Stieglitz

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Walter Bradford Cannon

Chance throws peculiar conditions in everyone's way. If we apply intelligence, patience and special vision, we are rewarded with new creative breakthroughs. — Walter Bradford Cannon

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Todd Borg

I'd learned long ago that patience was often rewarded. Certainly, impatience rarely was. — Todd Borg

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Franz Bardon

It is not advisable to hasten development, because everything needs time. Patience, perseverance and tenacity are fundamental conditions of the development. The pains taken in one's development will be amply rewarded. — Franz Bardon

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Friedrich Nietzsche

In the end we are always rewarded for our good will, our patience, fair-mindedness, and gentleness with what is strange. — Friedrich Nietzsche

Patience Rewarded Quotes By Chris Hedges

The rebel, dismissed as impractical and zealous, is chronically misunderstood. Those cursed with timidity, fear, or blindness and those who are slaves to opportunism call for moderation and patience. They distort the language of religion, spirituality, compromise, generosity, and compassion to justify cooperation with systems of power that are bent on our destruction. The rebel is deaf to these critiques. The rebel hears only his or her inner voice, which demands steadfast defiance. Self-promotion, positions of influence, the adulation of the public, and the awards and prominent positions that come with bowing before authority mean nothing to the rebel, who understands that virtue is not rewarded. The rebel expects nothing and gets nothing. But for the rebel, to refuse to struggle, to refuse to rebel, is to commit spiritual and moral suicide. — Chris Hedges