Famous Quotes & Sayings

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes & Sayings

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Top St Elizabeth Seton Quotes

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Emma Rose Kraus

When I was seven I believed in God so I told Him I was sorry about kicking my sister and to "please not condemn me to eternal suffering in the interminable fires of Perdition for my transgressions. — Emma Rose Kraus

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Charlie Jane Anders

You celebrated the small victories, and you dreamed of the big ones to come. — Charlie Jane Anders

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Elizabeth Ann Seton

Our Lord Himself I saw in this venerable Sacrament ... I felt as if my chains fell, as those of St. Peter at the touch of the Divine messenger. My God, what new scenes for my soul! — Elizabeth Ann Seton

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Don King

You can be the greatest guy in the world but if you ain't got no heart, you ain't gonna survive. — Don King

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Orville Wright

We estimated that we could make one of four cylinders with 4 inch bore and 4 inch stroke, weighing not over two hundred pounds, including all accessories. — Orville Wright

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Adam Kovacevic

Live simply so that others may simply live was marvelously observed by St. Elizabeth Seton . If this simple truth could only be programmed into the human DNA, imagine the possibilities. Until than, the education of the human heart is the answer and our only hope. — Adam Kovacevic

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Ice Cube

Everybody that wants to be successful should always be careful of what you wish for. A lot of artists and entertainers want to put the genie back in the bottle and wish they could go back to being what they were. — Ice Cube

St Elizabeth Seton Quotes By Emile Zola

The critics greeted this book with a churlish and horrified outcry. Certain virtuous people, in newspapers no less virtuous, made a grimace of disgust as they picked it up with the tongs to throw it into the fire. Even the minor literary reviews, the ones that retail nightly the tittle-tattle from alcoves and private rooms, held their noses and talked of filth and stench. I am not complaining about this reception; on the contrary I am delighted to observe that my colleagues have such maidenly susceptibilities. — Emile Zola