T Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with T. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“There is rust in my mouth,the stain of an old kiss.”
Source: 45 Mercy Street
“There is sadness and confusion in our hearts / And the world prepares to fight / as it tears itself apart, it isn't fair”
“There is sadness and then there is happiness. Happiness does not normally make its prescence felt. You have to go deep and feel the true happiness inside your own heart. Happiness can be our solitude, our loineliness, or a few good friends. You must find your happiness and protect your happiness!”
“There is sadness and then there is happiness. Happiness does not normally make its prescence felt. You have to go deep and feel the true happiness inside your own heart. Happiness can be our solitude, our loneliness, or a few good friends. You must find your happiness and protect your happiness!”
“There is sadness and then there is happiness. Happiness does not normally make its presence felt. You have to go deep and feel happiness inside your heart. Happiness can be our solitude, our loneliness, or a few good friends. You must find your happiness and protect your happiness!”
“There is sadness of when you're watching someone enjoy something that you think is substandard. The ineffable sadness when someone is happy and something is not as good as it should be.”
“There is safety in numbers.”
“There is safety in reserve, but no attraction. One cannot love a reserved person.”
Source: Emma
“There is salvation - happiness and virtue - in beauty. I would define beauty in this context as a kind of richness, complexity, mystery, diversity, otherness, and unexpectedness - something that comes from the outside.”
“There is salvation for sinners.”
“There is salvation for the sinner.”
“There is salvation for the sinner, call on the name of the Saviour, the LORD Jesus Christ.”
“There is salvation only for the brave.”
“There is San Diego - this retirement village, with its prim petticoat, that doesn't want to get too near the water. San Diego worries about all the turds washing up on the lovely, pristine beaches of La Jolla. San Diego wishes Mexico would have fewer babies. And San Diego, like the rest of America, is growing middle-aged.”
“There is satiety in all things, in sleep, and love-making, in the loveliness of singing and the innocent dance.”
Source: The Iliad of Homer
“There is satisfaction," he said to Dalinar, "in creating a list of things you can actually accomplish, then removing them one at a time.”
Source: Oathbringer
“There is satisfaction in seeing one's household prosper; in being both bountiful and provident.”
Source: Sixpence in Her Shoe
“There is satisfaction in serving.”
Source: The Mountain of Ignorance
“There is scarce a cave, an isolated rock, a lone pine tree or a pile of stones without supporting folklore.”
Source: Journey Through Europe
“There is scarce a king in a hundred who would not, if he could, follow the example of Pharoah - get first all the people's money, then all their lands, and then make them and their children servants forever.”
Source: Memoirs of the life and writings of Benjamin Franklin ...
“There is scarce any one invention, which this nation has produced in our age, but it has some way or other been set forward by his assistance. ... He is indeed a man born for the good of mankind, and for the honour of his country. ... So I may thank God, that Dr. Wilkins was an Englishman, for wherever he had lived, there had been the chief seat of generous knowledge and true philosophy.”
“There is scarce any passion so heartily decried by moralists and satirists, as AMBITION; and yet, methinks, ambition is not a vice but in a vicious mind: in a virtuous mind it is a virtue, and will be found to take its color from the character in which it is mixed. Ambition is a desire of superiority; and a man may become superior, either by making others less or himself greater.”
“There is scarcely a crime before me that is not directly or indirectly caused by strong drink.”
“There is scarcely a man who is not conscious of the benefits which his own mind has received from the performance of single acts of benevolence. How strange that so few of us try a course of the same medicine!”
Source: Life and Books: Or, Records of Thought and Reading
“There is scarcely a page of the Bible on which an open mind does not perceive a contradiction, an unlikely story, an obvious error, an historical impossibility of one sort or another.”
“There is scarcely a single joy or sorrow within the experience of our fellow-creatures which we have not tasted; yet the belief, in the good and beautiful has never forsaken us. It has been medicine to us in sickness, richness in poverty, and the best part of all that ever delighted us in health and success.”
Source: Leigh Hunt's London Journal
“There is scarcely a technical issue for which you cannot find expert witnesses of differing opinions.”
“There is scarcely a town or school in Russia from which boys have not run away to the war. Hundreds of girls have gone off in boys' clothes and tried to pass themselves off as boys and enlist as volunteers, and several have got through, since the medical examination is only a negligible formality required in one place, forgotten in another.”
Source: Russia in 1916
“There is scarcely an aspect of the American character to which humor is not related, few which in some sense it has not governed. ... It is a lawless element, full of surprises.”
“There is scarcely an instance of a man who has made a fortune by speculation and kept it”
Source: The Andrew Carnegie reader
“There is scarcely an occurrence in nature which, happening at a certain time, is not looked upon by some persons as a prognosticator either of good or evil. The latter are in the greatest number, so much more ingenious are we in tormenting ourselves than in discovering reasons for enjoyment in the things that surround us.”
Source: Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
“THERE is scarcely any inquiry more curious, or, from its importance, more worthy of attention, than that which traces the causes which practically check the progress of wealth in different countries, and stop it, or make it proceed very slowly, while the power of production remains comparatively undiminished, or at least would furnish the means of a great and abundant increase of produce and population.”
“There is scarcely any man sufficiently clever to appreciate all the evil he does.”
“There is scarcely any passion without struggle.”
Source: The Myth of Sisyphus: And Other Essays
“There is scarcely any popular tenet more erroneous than that which holds that when time is slow, life is dull.”
Source: Sybil: or, the two nations
“There is scarcely any writer who has not celebrated the happiness of rural privacy, and delighted himself and his reader with the melody of birds, the whisper of groves, and the murmur of rivulets.”
Source: The Rambler: A Periodical Paper, Published in 1750, 1751, 1752
“There is scarcely anything more important in the government of men than the exact - I will ever say pedantic - observance of the regular forms by which the guilt or innocence of accused persons is determined.”
Source: My African Journey
“There is scarcely anything so dull and meaningless as Bible doctrine taught for its own sake. Truth divorced from life is not truth in its Biblical sense, but something else and something less.”
“There is scarcely anything that drags a person down like debt.”
Source: The Art of Money Getting + The Humbugs of the World (2 Unabridged Classics)
“There is scarcely anything that is right that we cannot hope to accomplish by labor and perseverance. But the first must be earnest and the second unremitting.”
“There is scarcely room for doubt that something in the psychological relation of a mother-in-law to a son-in-law breeds hostility between them and makes it hard for them to live together. But the fact that in civilized societies mothers-in-law are such a favourite subject for jokes seems to me to suggest that the emotional relation involved includes sharply contrasted components. I believe, that is, that this relation is in fact an 'ambivalent' one, composed of conflicting affectionate and hostile impulses.”
Source: Totem and Taboo
“There is science, logic, reason; there is thought verified by experience. And then there is California.”
Source: A Voice Crying in the Wilderness
“There is scientific evidence that demonstrates there is some impact from human activities. However I don't think the evidence is conclusive.”
“There is secrecy and betrayal but that's more part and parcel of the kind of anguish that the people go through. And maybe that's modes of survival, rather than modes of consciousness.”
“There is seed time and harvest, choose to sow at the right time so as to have a bountiful harvest.”
“There is seemingly no biological benefit to acting with conscience; if there were, only moral individuals would survive and procreate. Sadly, we know that's not true. The benefit of conscience is that you won't suffer guilt (private) or shame (public), and that by your own self-imposed definition, you are a moral human, a special kind of animal who takes unique pride in elevating him/herself above the termites.”
Source: How Could You Do That?!: Abdication of Character, Courage, Consci
“There is seemingly so little love shared in this world, it is not surprising that we ask, "Where have all the lovers gone?" Since love is the most vital energy for good that is within our power to utilize, it is puzzling why we so seldom do so. Love is just a useless, abstract idea until we put it into action...unless we are always actively living in love, we are not utilizing the greatest gift we have been given and which we, in turn, have to offer.”
“There is seldom a difficulty with religion where there is friendship.”
Source: The Secret Scripture
“There is seldom just one cockroach in the kitchen. You know, you turn on the light and, all of sudden, they all start scurrying around.”
“There is sense in hoping for recognition in a distant future only when we take it for granted that mankind will remain essentially unchanged, and that whatever is great is not for one age only but will be looked upon as great for all time.”
Source: Human, All-Too-Human: Parts One and Two