N Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with N. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“None but those who have loved can be supposed to understand the oratory of the eye, the mute eloquence of a look, or the conversational powers of the face. Love's sweetest meanings are unspoken; the full heart knows no rhetoric of words, and resorts to the pantomime of sighs and glances.”
Source: Intuitions and Summaries of Thought
“None but those who have traveled, can appreciate the delight experienced from recalling in this way the interesting points of an interesting journey, and fighting, as it were, their battles over again.”
“None but those who work are entitled to eat.”
Source: Aesop's Fables - Complete Collection
“None but trees are the innocent as they take the blow mildly.”
“None can be free who is a slave to, and ruled by, his passions.”
“None can be pleased without praise, and few can be praised without falsehood.”
Source: The Rambler
“None can be so true to your secret as yourself.”
“none can be Tyrants but Cowards.”
Source: A Serious Proposal to the Ladies
“None can be your rival unless you let them, Wittenbrand. Do you call me rival? Is it not you, then, who has made me so?”
Source: Dance With The Sword
“None can believe how powerful prayer is, and what it is able to effect, but those who have learned it by experience.”
Source: The table talk or familiar discourse of Martin Luther, tr. by W. Hazlitt
“None can choose their fates," said the king in a grave voice. "They can only choose how they shall tread the path laid before their feet.”
Source: Daughter of Kings
“None can comprehend eternity but the eternal God. Eternity is an ocean, whereof we shall never see the shore; it is a deep, where we can find no bottom; a labyrinth from whence we cannot extricate ourselves and where we shall never lose the door.”
Source: Human Nature in Its Fourfold State: Of Primitive Integrity, Entire Depravation, Begun Recovery, and Consummate Happiness Or Misery, in the Parents of Mankind in Paradise, the Unregenerate, the Regenerate, All Mankind in the Future State, in Several Practical Discourses
“None can cure their harms by wailing them.”
Source: The Shakespearian Dictionary, Forming a General Index to All the Popular Expressions, and Most Striking Passages in the Works of Shakespeare, from a Few Words to Fifty Or More Lines ... By T. Dolby
“None can destroy iron, but its own rust can! Likewise none can destroy a person, but its own mindset can!”
“None can do a man so much harm as he doeth himself.”
“None can ever fail with hard work and none can ever succeed without hard work”
“None can hold fortune still and make it last.”
Source: Euripides IV: Helen, The Phoenician Women, Orestes
“None Can Kill Me So Easily, I Have To Live Thousands And Thousands Of Families.”
“None can know their election but by their conformity to the image of Christ; for all that are chosen are chosen to sanctification.”
“None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license.”
“None can narrate two unparalleled line except the handprints of a genius”
“None can predict one's real nature when everything goes in a perfect way.”
Source: My Quest For Happy Life
“NONE CAN SATISFY Your SEX EXCEPT YOU”
“None can save us, accept the Saviour.”
“None can sense more deeply than you artists, ingenious creators of beauty that you are, something of the pathos with which God at the dawn of creation looked upon the work of his hands.”
Source: Letter to Artists
“None can teach admirably if not loving his task.”
Source: Table-talk
“None comes into the world with a saddle on his back, neither any booted and spurred to ride him.”
“None could be the most perfect.
If indeed any, it is only perfect.”
Source: My Ancestor Was an Ancient Astronaut
“None could guess my confusion, my host of deluded illusions and elusive delusions! A mantle of marble hiding a crumbling core of sandstone. See how they stare at me, wondering, all wondering, at my secret wellspring of wisdom...' Let's kill him,' Crokus muttered, 'if only to put him out of our misery.”
“None dare challenge me when i say i am an Afrikan.”
Source: Africa: the time has come : selected speeches
“None deserve praise for being good who have not the spirit to be bad: goodness, for the most part, is nothing but indolence or weakness of will.”
“None deserves liberty who is not ready to give liberty”
Source: The Complete Works of the Swami Vivekananda, Comprising All His Lectures, Addresses and Discourses Delivered in Europe, America and India: All His Writings in Prose and Poetry, Together with Translations of Those Written in Bengali and Sanskrit; Reports of His Interviews and His Replies to the Various Addresses of Welcome; His Sayings and Epistles,--private and Public--original and Translated; with an Index; Carefully Revised & Edited
“None despise fame more heartily than those who have no possible claim to it.”
“None fills the void like the company of a true friend.”
“None get to God but through trouble.”
“None Goes To The Temple To Worship The Stone But God.”
“None grieve so ostentatiously as those who rejoice most in heart.
[Lat., Nulla jactantius moerent quam qui maxime laetantur.]”
“NONE HAS FAILED IN THEIR LIFE TRUSTING ME AND NONE HAS SUCCEEDED IN THEIR LIFE DISTRUSTING ME, I AM THE JUSTICE”
“None has more frequent conversations with a disagreeable self than the man of pleasure; his enthusiasms are but few and transient; his appetites, like angry creditors, are continually making fruitless demands for what he is unable to pay; and the greater his former pleasures, the more strong his regret, the more impatient his expectations. A life of pleasure is, therefore, the most unpleasing life.”
“None in this age will amass wealth except those having five traits ofcharacter. High hopes; abnormal greediness; excessive miserliness, lack of fearing Allaah; and forgetfulness of the coming world.”
“None is a fool always, everyone sometimes.”
“None is borne Master.”
Source: The Complete Works of George Herbert: Prose
“None is offended but by himselfe.”
Source: The Complete Works of George Herbert: Prose
“None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and unbelieving; none is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth over.”
Source: Tupper's complete poetical works: containing
“None is so blind as he who sees too much.”
Source: Five Somewhat Historical Plays
“None is so deaf as the one who falls in love up to his ears.”
“None is so perfect that he does not need at times the advice of others.”
Source: The Art of Worldly Wisdom
“None is so wise, but the foole overtakes him.”
Source: The Complete Works of George Herbert: Prose
“None knew thee but to love thee.”
“None know how often the hand of God is seen in a wilderness but them that rove it for a man's life.”