Walt Whitman Quotes
Old age: The estuary that enlarges and spreads itself grandly as it pours into the Great Sea.
Walt Whitman
Quotes to Explore
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Christian Louboutin, I love you, but honey, please! But when you have this much weight, you've got to give us a little platform. Sorry! The shoes are stunning though. An ounce of pain, it's worth it.
Octavia Spencer
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I live in one of Judy Garland's houses. As a fan, I never much liked Judy Garland, but living here, I feel like I have come to know her. People have given me a few of her possessions, and my neighbors have told me things that I wish I didn't know.
Taylor Negron
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Music is a very big part of my preparation as an actor.
Hailee Steinfeld
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Jesu, Jesu, the mad days that I have spent! And to see how
many of my old acquaintance are dead!
William Shakespeare
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You have, like the external world, your own phenomena inside.
Saul Bellow
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I am trying to send directions out and keep control of state government for the final month.
Scott McCallum
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Oh, I may be devout, but I am human all the same.
Moliere
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I think there has to be a recognition that, you know, there's so much at stake now, I mean, the business has changed so much and decisions are made so quickly, in nano seconds basically.
Hillary Clinton
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The wonderful thing about modern medicine is that so many of these complaints that used to signify old age and decline can be coped with.
Ian Mckellen
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Old age has its pleasures, which, though different, are not less than the pleasures of youth.
W. Somerset Maugham
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The crucial task of old age is balance: keeping just well enough, just brave enough, just gay and interested and starkly honest enough to remain a sentient human being.
Florida Scott-Maxwell
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Forty is the old age of youth; fifty the youth of old age.
Victor Hugo
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No lie ever reaches old age.
Sophocles
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I try to get them to remember that they're not just athletes, but student-athletes.
Earl Campbell
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We are the masters of our fate, the captains of our souls, because we have the power to control our thoughts.
Napoleon Hill
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I started out in life as a poet, I was only writing poetry all through my 20s, it wasn't until I was about 30 that I got serious about writing prose. While I was writing poems, I would often divert myself by reading detective novels, I liked them.
Paul Auster
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I too acknowledge the all-out omnipotence of early culture and nature; hereby we have either a doddered dwarf-bush, or a high-towering, wide-shadowing tree! either a sick yellow cabbage, or an edible luxuriant green one. Of a truth, it is the duty of all men, especially of all philosophers, to note down with accuracy the characteristic circumstances of their education,--what furthered, what hindered, what in any way modified it.
Thomas Carlyle
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Old age: The estuary that enlarges and spreads itself grandly as it pours into the Great Sea.
Walt Whitman