Famous Quotes & Sayings

Wealth Magazine Quotes & Sayings

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Top Wealth Magazine Quotes

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Pope John Paul II

From this moment on, live the Eucharist fully; be persons for whom the Holy Mass, Communion, and Eucharistic adoration are the center and summit of their whole life. — Pope John Paul II

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Zadie Smith

It seems to me," said Magid finally, as the moon became clearer than the sun, "that you have tried to love a man as if he were an island and you were shipwrecked and you could mark the land with an X. It seems to me it is too late in the day for all that. — Zadie Smith

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Peter R. Orszag

Something that's unsustainable, like a dysfunctional relationship, can go on longer than you expect, and then end faster and messier than you think. — Peter R. Orszag

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Vironika Tugaleva

Kindness that turns to bitterness when it is not appreciated was never kindness at all. — Vironika Tugaleva

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Rachel Carson

Some, perhaps, would fall by the way. Some, old or sick, would drop out of the caravan and creep away into a solitary place to die; others would be picked off by gunners, defying the law for the fancied pleasure of stopping in full flight a brave and fiercely burning life; still others, perhaps, would fall in exhaustion into the sea ... In them burned one more the fever of migration, consuming with its fires all other desires and passions. — Rachel Carson

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Maurice Sendak

I don't write for children. I write and someone says it's for children. — Maurice Sendak

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Shari Arison

For most of my life, I have received messages - images and worded communications, sometimes even in an ancient language - that came to me from above. — Shari Arison

Wealth Magazine Quotes By David McCullough

It was in fact during the month of May 1889 that Carnegie was finishing up a magazine article to become known as "The Gospel of Wealth," in which he said, and much to the consternation of his Pittsburgh associates, "The man who dies thus rich dies disgraced." The gist of the article was that the rich, like the poor, would always be with us. The present system had its inequities, certainly, and many of them were disgraceful. But the system was a good deal better than any other so far. The thing for the rich man to do was to divide his life into two parts. The first part should be for acquisition, the second for distribution. At — David McCullough

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Bangambiki Habyarimana

He is wise who thinks of the consequences when anger rises in him — Bangambiki Habyarimana

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Dante Salvatierra

The dog dies, the end — Dante Salvatierra

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Paul Feig

'Constitutional' is just a real pip of a word. Positively rolls off the tongue. In fact, it's downright fun to say. 'Con-stit-too-shun-al.' It's the verbal equivalent of skipping down the street with an ice cream cone in your hand. It's like a semantic bag of Lays potato chips. You simply can't just say it once. — Paul Feig

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Thomas F. Shubnell

You can't overdose on friends, only enemies. — Thomas F. Shubnell

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Nicola Yoon

This is where I would've taken Daniel. I would've told him to write poetry about space rocks and impact craters. The sheer number of actions and reactions it's taken to form our solar system, our galaxy, our universe, is astonishing. The number of things that had to go exactly right is overwhelming.

Compared to that, what is falling in love? A series of small coincidences that we say means everything because we want to believe that our tiny lives matter on a galactic scale. But falling in love doesn't even begin to compare to the formation of the universe.

It's not even close — Nicola Yoon

Wealth Magazine Quotes By Molly Guptill Manning

Americans purchased about 25 percent more books in 1943 than they did in 1942. The new paperback format was a hit, as Americans craved simple pleasures in times of peril. This increase in book buying was indicative of an expanded market of book buyers. As Time magazine observed, by 1943, "book-reading and book-buying reached outside the narrow quarters of the intellectuals and became the business of the whole vast literate population of the U.S." No longer were books linked to wealth and status: they had become a universal pastime and a fitting symbol of democracy. — Molly Guptill Manning