Unrecognised Provident Quotes & Sayings
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Top Unrecognised Provident Quotes

I'm waging war, love. And the only way to win this kind of war is to make you want to lose. — Lisa Kleypas

No, Satan would be a schlub next to this guy. This guy is like Satan's fashion consultant. — Rick Riordan

More than honor, more than life, I love thee." What do you say when a man whose entire existence had been his honor offers to give it up for you? You say the only thing you can.
More than any crown or throne or title, I love thee," I said. "more than any power in faerie, I love thee. — Laurell K. Hamilton

God mark thee to His grace! Thou was the prettiest babe that e'er I nursed. And might I live to see thee married once, I have my wish. — William Shakespeare

Cremation has become the most popular form of burial in the United States ... People used to want a big, thick granite stone, their names carved into with a chisel. I was here dammit! Cremation is like you're trying to cover up a crime. Burn the body. Scatter the ashes around. As far as anyone's concerned this whole thing never happened. — Jerry Seinfeld

Tales; Kim had heard them all, several times over. They were nothing he hadn't heard before when Onghwe had set up his Circus in other cities. He started to walk toward — Neal Stephenson

If one's sense of self is obtained through the eyes of another it is always subject to being lost. — Brenda Shoshanna

What makes a writer successful is not money or fame (though both are nice) ... it's that in being true to her or himself, the words were able to connect to a reader's heart. — Miyoko Hikiji

Prayer is primarily for loving and worshiping God. If you would seek first His kingdom and just fellowship with Him, you'd find your needs already provided. — Andrew Wommack

The only way people will have the trust to give their all to their job is if they feel like their contribution is recognized and valued. — Mark Pincus

I am not suggesting that every one in ancient Egypt was altruistic, any more than are all the people in modern England. But I do say that the country was permeated with joy and fearlessness so far as its religious ideas were concerned, and that every one who by any stretch of courtesy could be described as a religious man was occupied not with thoughts of his personal salvation, but with the desire to be a useful agent of the divine Power. — Charles W. Leadbeater