Prthag Quotes & Sayings
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Top Prthag Quotes

Nobody will ever tell you who praised you but everybody would like to be the first to tell you who criticized you. — Amit Abraham

Indecisive? Ask Yourself the Question: Does It Add Value To My Life and Makes Me Happy? — Marieke Stoop

Love's language starts, stops, starts;
the right words flowing or clotting in the heart. — Carol Ann Duffy

With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds. . .' President Lincoln. Sam — Michael Grant

Do not underestimate the determination of a quiet man. — Iain Duncan Smith

I see life as both a gift and a responsibility. My responsibility is to use what God has given me to help His people in need. — Millard Fuller

The interference of foreigners upon any pretense whatever, in the dissensions of fellow citizens, must be as inevitably fatal to the liberties of the state, as the admission of strangers to arbitrate upon the domestic differences of man and wife is destructive to the happiness of a private family. . . . 22 — Phyllis Lee Levin

We're not thought of in terms of color because we are entertainers. We are there to entertain you not because we are black, white, pink, or green or gay or straight or because we are Catholic or Protestant. — Eartha Kitt

Memories are all the same at their core; it's just us trying to keep each other alive, the best parts anyway. — Caroline Kepnes

I've made some great mistakes in my life, but, you know, they were honest mistakes. — Henry Rollins

In the world of the Machiguenga, sadness could be equated with anger, and anger was a perilous emotion, by which a foreigner could lose his life. — Tahir Shah

There is scarcely any great author in European literature, old or new, who has not distinguished himself in his treatment of the supernatural. In English literature, I believe there is no exception from the time of the Anglo-Saxon poets to Shakespeare, and from Shakespeare to our own day. And this introduces us to the consideration of a general and remarkable fact, a fact that I do not remember to have seen in any books, but which is of very great philosophical importance: there is something ghostly in all great art, whether of literature, music, sculpture, or architecture. It touches something within us that relates to infinity — Lafcadio Hearn