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Struggled In Vain Quotes & Sayings

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Top Struggled In Vain Quotes

Struggled In Vain Quotes By James C. Uwandu

The degree you need to work for GOD and to be qualify for HIS kingdom is Water and the HOLY SPIRIT Baptism — James C. Uwandu

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Max Tundra

Someone explained parallax error to me, and I thought Ah, with a cheap camera, it would be pretty easy to behead someone. — Max Tundra

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Zadie Smith

He was bookish, she was not; he was theoretical, she political. She called a rose a rose. He called it an accumulation of cultural and biological constructions circulating around the mutually attracting binary poles of nature/artifice. — Zadie Smith

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Francesca Lia Block

Weetzie could see him
it was a man, a little man in a turban, with a jewel in his nose, harem pants, and curly-toed slippers.
"Lanky Lizards!" Weetzie exclaimed.
"Greetings," said the man in an odd voice, a rich, dark purr.
"Oh, shit!" Weetzie said.
"I beg your pardon? Is that your wish? — Francesca Lia Block

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Lisa Unger

I write for the same reason I read: to find out what's going to happen. — Lisa Unger

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Malcolm McDowell

You can't hold back. You can't think of the subtleties of playing. You just have to get out and really bare it all, and hopefully you don't fall off the plank. And if you do, hey, pick yourself up, dust yourself down, and start all over again. — Malcolm McDowell

Struggled In Vain Quotes By William Carlos Williams

My surface is myself.
Under which
to witness, youth is
buried. Roots?
Everybody has roots. — William Carlos Williams

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Charles Bukowski

I believe that to be the world's greatest living
writer
there must be something
terribly wrong with you.
I don't even want to be the world's greatest
dead writer.
just being dead would be fair
enough. — Charles Bukowski

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Jane Austen

I have struggled in vain and I can bear it no longer. These past months have been a torment. I love you. Most ardently. — Jane Austen

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Carl Jung

Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain. — Carl Jung

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Jane Austen

In vain I have struggled. It will not do. My feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love you." Elizabeth's astonishment was beyond expression. — Jane Austen

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Kanye West

I am not a fan of books. — Kanye West

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Philip Roth

And was that not bound to happen? Eventually, must not the truth prevail? Oh, it had not been in vain then that she had sacrificed and struggled! Oh yes, of course! if you know you are in the right, if you do not weaken or falter, if despite everything thrown up against you, despite every hardship, every pain, you oppose what you know in your heart is wrong; if you harden yourself against the opinions of others, if you are willing to endure the loneliness of pursuing what is good in a world indifferent to good; if you struggle with every fiber of your body, even as others scorn you, hate you and fear you; if you push on and on and on, no matter how great the agony, how terrible the strain - then one day the truth will finally be known - — Philip Roth

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Jane Austen

In vain have I struggled. It will not do. My feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love you. — Jane Austen

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Linda W. Yezak

I keep my feet candy-coated because I never know when one or both of them will wind up in my mouth. — Linda W. Yezak

Struggled In Vain Quotes By Azar Nafisi

The insistence in Darcy's voice is a symptom of his passion for Elizabeth; it emerges even in their most mundane interactions. We can trace the development of Darcy's feelings for Elizabeth in the tone of his voice. This reaches its climax in the scene in which he proposes to her. His negative persistence, beginning his speech with 'In vain have I struggled. It will not do,' becomes almost violent, in part because the novel itself is so restrained and Darcy is the most restrained of all the characters.
Now, please listen carefully to that 'you.' Darcy seldom if ever addresses Elizabeth by her name, but he has a special way of saying 'you' when he addresses her a few times that makes the impersonal pronoun a term of ultimate intimacy. One should appreciate such nuances in a culture such as ours, where everyone is encouraged to demonstrate in the most exaggerated manner his love for the Imam and yet forbidden from any public articulation of private feelings, especially love. — Azar Nafisi