Related Quotes
kings repose rise worship
Kings are like stars, - they rise and set, they have - The worship of the world, but no repose Percy Bysshe Shelley
kings
I'd rather be called King than other things I've been called. Richard Petty
kings should-have expectations
People look at me like I should have been like Malcolm X or Martin Luther King or Rosa Parks. I should have seen life like that and stay out of trouble, and don't do this and don't do that. But it's hard to live up to some people's expectations. Rodney King
kings expecting
King Shrewd is expecting me, rather he isn't expecting me, and that is precisely why I must go to him now. Robin Hobb
kings hatred conquer
A conquering king will banish from his breast hatred towards one whom he no longer fears. Vittorio Alfieri
kings real pride
Thou knowest not the endless artifices of a court. Invented crimes are often there alleged; but real ones, and those especially, which may offend his pride, are oftentimes not to a king divulged. Vittorio Alfieri
kings mean home
Stephen King says that if you forget an idea, then it can't have been any good. He means he, not you. You are not Stephen King. Do not attempt to emulate Stephen King at home. Warren Ellis
kings liberty fundamentals
That the king can do no wrong is a necessary and fundamental principle of the English constitution. William Blackstone
kings children men
Man has ruled this world as a stumbling demented child king, long enough. And as his empire crumbles, my precious black widow shall rise as his most fitting successor. Vincent Price
modesty virtue policy
Modesty is policy, no less than virtue. William Gilmore Simms
modesty judgment candor
If modesty and candor are necessary to an author in his judgment of his own works, no less are they in his reader. Sarah Fielding
modesty virtue thrive
Modesty is a virtue that can never thrive in public. John Adams
modesty reason conventions
The convention missionaries call "modesty" has no standard, and cannot have one, because it is opposed to nature and reason and is therefore an artificiality and subject to anybody's whim - anybody's diseased caprice. Mark Twain
modesty easy difficult
It is easy for a somebody to be modest, but it is difficult to be modest when one is a nobody. Jules Renard
modest political prompt social strike success work
The modest success of the strike should prompt everyone to work for more collaboration between the country's political and social forces. Roberto Maroni
modesty false-modesty
False modesty is better than none. Vilhjalmur Stefansson
modesty seduction modest
A modest demeanor arouses thoughts of seduction. Mason Cooley
modesty blind outrage
Be a constant outrage to modesty There is nothing to fear: modesty is exercised only among the blind. Jean Cocteau