Related Quotes
costs fact homes liable lost matter passing pay people property
I don't think passing on the suppression costs would be done just as a deterrent. The fact of the matter is many people have lost their property and homes and someone has to pay for that. Under the law, someone is liable for it. Terence McElroy
money lucky easier
Money makes your life easier. If you're lucky to have it, you're lucky. Robert De Niro
money investment dependent
We are all dependent upon the investment of capital. William Howard Taft
money glory saving-money
Liking money like I like it, is nothing less than mysticism. Money is a glory. Salvador Dali
money
Money is the necessity that frees us from necessity. W. H. Auden
money book confession
Literary confessors are contemptible, like beggars who exhibit their sores for money, but not so contemptible as the public that buys their books. W. H. Auden
money lying names
Stamps God's own name upon a lie just made, To turn a penny in the way of trade. William Cowper
money loses just-one
Everything you gather is just one that you can lose. Robert Hunter
money successful men
I don't care how rich and successful a man is. He's nothing without an education. Rodney Dangerfield
money people secret
The secret of the difficulties of those people who make a great deal of money, and yet are always in want of it, is this-they throw it away as soon as they get it on the first whim or extravagance that strikes them, and have nothing left to meet ordinary expenses or discharge old debts. William Hazlitt
tickets theory shows
A work in which there are theories is like an object which still has the ticket that shows its price. Marcel Proust
together littles common
Also minimalism is a term that all of us who share so little in common and who are lumped together as minimalists are not terribly happy with. Ann Beattie
together paper conventions
The business being thus closed . . . dined together and took a cordial leave of each other After which I returned to my lodgings, did some business with and received the papers from the secretary of the Convention, and retired to meditate on the momentous work which had been executed. George Washington