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"There is no such thing as an underestimate of average intelligence."
By Henry Adams
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"The reward of a thing well done is to have done it."
By Ralph Waldo Emerson
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"The only limits are those of vision."
By James Broughton
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"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than saying a drunken man is happier than a sober man."
By George Bernard Shaw
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"The man who follows the crowd will get no farther than the crowd. A man who walks alone is likely to get places no one has ever been before."
By Alan Ashley-Pitt
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"There is no death. Only a change of worlds."
By Chief Seattle
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"The worst thing you can do for those you love is the things they could and should do themselves."
By Abraham Lincoln
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"To avoid criticism, do nothing, say nothing and be nothing."
By Elbert Hubbard
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"There is a time for departure even when there is no certain place to go."
By Tennessee Williams
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"There are tones of voices that mean more than words."
By Robert Frost
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"The conception of two people living together for twenty-five years without having a cross word suggests a lack of spirit only to be admired in sheep."
By Alan Patrick Herbert
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"Truth is more of a stranger than fiction."
By Mark Twain
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"There is no moral precept that does not have something inconvenient about it."
By Denis Diderot
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"The average, healthy, well-adjusted adult gets up at seven-thirty in the morning feeling just plain terrible."
By Jean Kerr
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"The movies are the only business where you can go out front and applaud yourself."
By Will Rogers
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"Trying to determine what is going on in the world by reading newspapers is like trying to tell the time by watching the second hand of a clock."
By Ben Hecht
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"This is the devilish thing about foreign affairs: they are foreign and will not always conform to our whim."
By James Reston, New York Times, June 12 1968
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"There are more fools in the world than there are people."
By Heinrich Heine
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"There is only one thing a philosopher can be relied upon to do, and that is to contradict other philosophers."
By William James
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"To err is dysfunctional, to forgive co-dependent."
By Berton Averre
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Home
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Gordon B. Hinkley, Speech given in October 2001
Lorne Bloch
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson, ?Journal, 1860
Somerset Maugham, The New York Times Book Review, September 30, 1984
Unknown
W. Somerset Maugham
"A Canticle for Leibowitz"
"Aqualung" - Jethro Tull
"Malcom X" ( 1964), The Atobiograghy of Malcom X
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(Anon.)
(St. Luke 2:1)
--Aristotle