1
2
3
5
8
12
20
33
52
83
133
213
340
543
867
1384
2208
3346
3522
5443
5619
6757
7581
8098
8239
8240
8241
8242
8243
8422
8625
8752
8832
8882
8913
8932
8945
8953
8957
8960
8962
8963
8964
8965
▲
▼
| Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
| a6536c8 | I've grown certain that the root of all fear is that we've been forced to deny who we are. | Frances Moore Lappé | ||
| e0473f1 | Oh to be my verse an answering gleam from higher radiance caught | Frances Ridley Havergal | ||
| 3dbe526 | Doubt indulged soon becomes doubt realized. | Frances Ridley Havergal | ||
| 69bae0e | CONCLUSIONS | Francesco Balilla Pratella | ||
| e542da6 | You distribute for scale and you replicate for availability. | Francesco Cesarini | ||
| f99fab4 | The monuments of wit survive the monuments of power. | Francis Bacon | ||
| a0f6882 | Lucid intervals and happy pauses. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 0785fd0 | Riches are a good handmaid, but the worst mistress. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 66c56c7 | Death is a friend of ours; and he that is not ready to entertain him is not at home. | Francis Bacon | ||
| a146415 | Time, which is the author of authors. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 1e0384f | The sun, which passeth through pollutions and itself remains as pure as before. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 931f971 | Sacred and inspired divinity, the sabaoth and port of all men's labours and peregrinations. | Francis Bacon | ||
| b9dee6d | Cleanness of body was ever deemed to proceed from a due reverence to God. | Francis Bacon | ||
| d50b0eb | States as great engines move slowly. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 753cf4e | They are ill discoverers that think there is no land, when they can see nothing but sea. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 116007f | Silence is the virtue of a fool. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 0811e59 | But the best demonstration by far is experience, if it go not beyond the actual experiment. | Francis Bacon | ||
| f0adcef | Truth will sooner come out from error than from confusion. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 91e8b3f | Hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 8f710e8 | Sir Henry Wotton used to say that critics are like brushers of noblemen's clothes. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 598e2bf | Cato said the best way to keep good acts in memory was to refresh them with new. | Francis Bacon | ||
| adb567e | The world's a bubble, and the life of man Less than a span. | Francis Bacon | ||
| ed74b71 | Who then to frail mortality shall trust But limns the water, or but writes in dust. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 61e76ac | What then remains but that we still should cry Not to be born, or, being born, to die? | Francis Bacon | ||
| e3293e8 | Books must follow sciences, and not sciences books. | Francis Bacon | ||
| 43707c1 | She's private to herself and best of knowledgeWhom she'll make so happy as to sigh for. | Francis Beaumont | ||
| a9bbf24 | It's hard to discover that you're hated. | Francis George | ||
| 5e07e6f | Wisdom denotes the pursuing of the best Ends by the best Means. | Francis Hutcheson (philosopher) | ||
| 03df206 | Feminism liberated women from the natural dignity of their sex and turned them into inferior men. | Francis Parker Yockey | ||
| 3b75092 | Alliance does not mean love, any more than war means hate. | Francis Parker Yockey | ||
| 5450c56 | Versailles was a gulf into which the labor of France poured its earnings; and it was never full. | Francis Parkman | ||
| 764984d | No man is born unto himself alone;Who lives unto himself, he lives to none. | Francis Quarles | ||
| 51e0dc5 | The way to bliss lies not on beds of down,And he that has no cross deserves no crown. | Francis Quarles | ||
| d41ce0f | Shine Son of glory, and my sinnes are goneLike twinkling Starres before the rising Sunne. | Francis Quarles | ||
| 81ab513 | Even such is man, whose glory lendsHis life a blaze or two, and ends. | Francis Quarles | ||
| ef51dc7 | He that loves thee, He that keepsAnd guards thee, never slumbers, never sleeps. | Francis Quarles | ||
| 7e9932e | Thou art my life, my way, my light | Francis Quarles | ||
| 128a405 | The world's an Inn; and I her guest. | Francis Quarles | ||
| c26cd89 | We spend our midday sweat, our midnight oil;We tire the night in thought, the day in toil. | Francis Quarles | ||
| a1116fd | Be wisely worldly, be not worldly wise. | Francis Quarles | ||
| d75ca62 | The road to resolution lies by doubt:The next way home's the farthest way about. | Francis Quarles | ||
| 52c7cbd | It is the lot of man but once to die. | Francis Quarles | ||
| a1b95b9 | Anger, when it is long in coming, is the stronger when it comes, and the longer kept. | Francis Quarles | ||
| 1be677d | Look for me in the nurseries of Heaven. | Francis Thompson |