Related Quotes
mystery sometimes justification
Jorge Luis Borges I have sometimes suspected that the only thing that holds no mystery is happiness, because it is its own justification.
mystery
Eric Bana I like the unknown. I like mystery.
mystery people run
Jeff Vogt It's still a mystery for a lot of people what he will do or who will actually run the government.
mystery wonderful
Judith Kilpatrick It was just a wonderful mystery in many respects.
mystery reason said
Ben Sherwood There's a reason for everything, you said, and though it's a mystery to me now, I know it won't always be so.
mystery sincere thee
Thomas a Kempis Faith is required of thee, and a sincere life, not loftiness of intellect, nor deepness in the mysteries of God.
mystery
Sharon Olds A family is a mystery.
mystery buyers should
John Kenneth Galbraith Of all the mysteries of the stock exchange there is none so impenetrable as why there should be a buyer for everyone who seeks to sell.
sincere pretentious ifs
John Hodgman You are only pretentious if you are not sincere.
sincere substitutes ardent
Charles Dickens There is no substitute for thoroughgoing, ardent, and sincere earnestness.
sincere loses
Charles M. Schulz How can we lose when we're so sincere?
sincerely
Augusten Burroughs but I am not here ironically; I am here sincerely.
sincere honorable ten
Confucius In a district of ten families, there must be someone as honorable and sincere as I, but none as fond of learning.
sincerely invited
Alice Walker Peace will come wherever it is sincerely invited.
sincere candor evermore
Robert Herrick Things are evermore sincere; / Candor here, and lustre there / Delighting.
sincere pretension
Richard Brinsley Sheridan For in religion as in friendship, they who profess most are ever the least sincere.
sincere charming raised
Stephen Sondheim I was raised to be charming, not sincere.
thee manhood
Richard Francis Burton Do what thy manhood bids thee do.
thee
Charles Dickens Can I unmoved see thee dying/ On a log,/ Expiring frog!
thee present-time thyself
Marcus Aurelius Consider thyself to be dead, and to have completed thy life up to the present time; and live according to nature the remainder which is allowed thee.
thee release satisfied
Marcus Aurelius Depart then satisfied, for he also who releases thee is satisfied.
thee endure command
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Whatever necessity lays upon thee, endure; whatever she commands, do.
thee authorship pondering
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Whatever hath been written shall remain, Nor be erased nor written o'er again; The unwritten only still belongs to thee: Take heed, and ponder well what that shall be.
thee god-provides goods
John Dryden Take the goods the gods provide thee.
thee wells wounds
William Shakespeare So well thy words become thee as thy wounds;
thee ifs
Elizabeth Barrett Browning If I leave all for thee, wilt thou exchange And be all to me?