Woe Quotes
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This day's black fate on more days doth depend; This but begins the woe, others must end.
William Shakespeare -
I was not always a man of woe.
Walter Scott
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Woe and death to all who resist my will!
Wilhelm II -
Still paying, still to owe. Eternal woe!
John Milton -
To point at the moon a finger is needed, but woe to those who take the finger for the moon.
D. T. Suzuki -
Sainthood emerges when you can listen to someone's tale of woe and not respond with a description of your own.
Andrew Mason -
How quick the old woe follows a little bliss!
Petrarch -
For never was a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo.
William Shakespeare
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Next to dressing for a rout or ball, undressing is a woe.
Lord Byron -
Who would have listened to his tales of woe when his love was the flickering lamp over his own decaying tomb?
Faraaz Kazi -
Woe to the man who offends a small child!
Fyodor Dostoevsky -
Woe to the man who in the first moments of a love-affair does not believe that it will last forever! Woe to him who even in the arms of some mistress who has just yielded to him maintains an awareness of trouble to come and foresees that he may later tear himself away!
Benjamin Carson -
When we our betters see bearing our woes, We scarcely think our miseries our foes.
William Shakespeare -
Joy and woe are woven fine.
William Blake
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Headstrong liberty is lashed with woe.
William Shakespeare -
I often think we do not take this business of photography in a sufficiently serious spirit. Issuing a photograph is like marriage: you can only undo the mischief with infinite woe.
H. G. Wells -
Can I see another's woe, and not be in sorrow too? Can I see another's grief, and not seek for kind relief?
William Blake -
Look on the grave where thou must sleep Thy last, and strongest foe; It is endurance not to weep, If that repose seem woe.
Emily Bronte -
God's mills grind slow, But they grind woe.
William R. Alger -
Child of woe is wane and delicate... sensitive and on the quiet side, she loves the picnics and outings to the underground caverns... a solemn child, prim in dress and, on the whole, pretty lost... secretive and imaginative, poetic, seems underprivileged and given to occasional tantrums... has six toes on one foot.
Charles Addams
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Whatever mitigates the woes, or increases the happiness of others, is a just criterion of goodness; and whatever injures society at large, or any individual in it, is a criterion of iniquity.
Oliver Goldsmith -
These times of woe afford no time to woo.
William Shakespeare -
Accept these grateful tears...For thee they flow, for thee... That ever felt another's woe.
Homer -
And woe succeeds woe.
Homer