William E. Gladstone Quotes
To be engaged in opposing wrong affords...but a slender guarantee for being right.
William E. Gladstone
Quotes to Explore
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I longed to break out of the system and do different roles.
Leslie Caron
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My old man was a musician - that's what he did for a living. And like most fathers, occasionally he'd let me visit where he worked. So I started going to his recording studio, and I really dug it.
Darrell Lance Abbott
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The genius idea of industrialism was the concept of the Model T: In exchange for something cheap and well-made, we'd forgo unique, lovely design.
Clive Thompson
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It's fantastic to be known as a company that responds quickly to users, shares great resources and friendly banter with them over Twitter, and forges relationships on Pinterest, Facebook, and every other social media site out there.
Kathryn Minshew
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My greatest fear is failure.
Chris Zylka
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A revolution will only be achieved when the ordinary people of the world, us, the working class, get up off our knees and take back what is rightfully ours.
James Connolly
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While the arm is strong to strike and heave, Let soul and arm give shape that will abide...
George Eliot
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In the event that my illness worsens, I want to have a guarantee that I can die in a dignified manner. Nowhere in the bible does it say that a person has to stick it out to the decreed end. No one tells us what "decreed" means.
Hans Kung
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There is no peace like the peace of those whose minds are possessed with full assurance that they have known God, and God has known them, and that this relationship guarantees God’s favor to them in life, through death and on for ever.
J. I. Packer
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Possession of a secret is no guarantee of its truth.
Rita Mae Brown
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Hard work pays off in the future but requires discomfort now. Laziness pays off now but guarantees discomfort in the future.
Hal Elrod
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The State which we have founded must possess the four cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, discipline and justice ... Justice is the principle which has in fact been followed throughout, the principle of one man one job, of minding one s own business , in the sense of doing the job for which one is naturally fitted and not interfering with other people.
Plato