Quotes & Sayings About Women's Rights In The 1920s
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Women's Rights In The 1920s with everyone.
Top Women's Rights In The 1920s Quotes
Among our Potawatomi people, women are the Keepers of Water. We carry the sacred water to ceremonies and act on its behalf. "Women have a natural bond with water, because we are both life bearers," my sister said. "We carry our babies in internal ponds and they come forth into the world on a wave of water. It is our responsibility to safeguard the water for all our relations. — Robin Wall Kimmerer
This Side of Paradise — F Scott Fitzgerald
Women are as roses, whose fair flower, being once displayed, doth fall that very hour. — William Shakespeare
That's always the way when you discover something new; everyone thinks you're crazy. — Evelyn E. Smith
What the Commission is seeking cuts the heart out of the strategic rationale of our deal. — Jack Welch
I am always doing things I can't do, that's how I get to do them. — Pablo Picasso
I'm in, especially if there's a bad guy. Do I get to hurt a bad guy? — Darren Alexander
What she wouldn't have given for her father to see her - to see his baby girl who used to count the stars now sending men to travel among them. Joshua Coleman knew as if from second sight that Katherine, his brilliant, charismatic, inquisitive youngest child - a black girl from rural West Virginia, born at a time when the odds were more likely that she would die before age thirty-five than even finish high school - would somehow, someday, unite her story with the great epic of America. And — Margot Lee Shetterly
When you are studying jazz, the best thing to do is listen to records or listen to live music. It isn't as though you go to a teacher. You just listen as much as you can and absorb everything. — Carla Bley
He knows of our anguish, and He is there for us. Like the Good Samaritan in His parable, when He finds us wounded at the wayside, He binds up our wounds and cares for us (see Luke 10:34). Brothers and sisters, the healing power of His Atonement is for you, for us, for all. — Sheri L. Dew
To believe in a God means to see that the facts of the world are not the end of the matter. — Ludwig Wittgenstein