T Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with T. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“Those years are a dark smear across my memory. Everything feels blurry and hollow. Plague drains not only victims but whole cities of life. It freezes trade, decays parishes, forbids lovemaking, turns childrearing into a dance with death. Most of all, it steals time. Days boarded up in sick houses or clean, pass in a swirl of flat gray. Plague time is different. It stretches and looms.”
Source: A Dowry of Blood
“Those years between drama school and getting onto the stand-up circuit were pretty lean.”
“Those years of anger weren’t just directed inward and towards others, I was also angry with God. As a kid, when I sang songs in the children’s choir and memorized verses in bible study, I was told there was a God who loved and protected us. He was a jealous God and could be angered, yes, but He always showed grace and mercy towards His people. I must not have been one of His people. He never protected me. As a matter of fact, I remember crying and pleading to God to make it stop when I was in DC being raped at five years old. I thought he heard my prayers when I moved to New Jersey. But when the abuse became worse and more frequent, it was easy for me to conclude God’s protection didn’t apply to me.”
Source: From Ivy League To Stripper Life: 10 Lessons Learned
“Those years on the golf course as a caddie, boy, those people were something. They were vulgar, some were alcoholics, racist, they were very difficult people to deal with. A lot of them didn't have a sense of humor.”
“Those years, months, weeks, days, and hours, that are not filled up with God, with Christ, with grace, and with duty, will certainly be filled up with vanity and folly. The neglect of one day, of one duty, of one hour, would undo us, if we had not an Advocate with the Father.”
Source: The privie key of heaven; or Twenty arguments for closet-prayer, in a select discourse
“Those yesterdreams were just a cruel and foolish game we used to play, yester-me, yester-you, yesterday.”
“Those you admire also have problems they're daily confronted with.”
“Those you cannot teach to fly, teach to fall faster.”
Source: The Portable Nietzsche
“Those you fear are mere mortals, deep inside they tremble as you do and would ask for your assistance if it were not for their pride”
Source: The Great Pearl of Wisdom
“Those you have followed passionately, gladly, zealously have made you feel like somebody. It wasn't merely because they had the job or the power -- they somehow made you feel terrific to be around them.”
“Those you love will not drown or burn. They will fly away.' ...'Now we both have people we love who are like birds. They have flown far from anything in this world that can hurt them. They're flying away still.”
“Those young ones who want to try military jihad are facing a triple issue. First of all, they are missing the point when it comes to understanding what there is at stake from a political viewpoint. How come so many of them are going to Syria and so few to Palestine, even though, when it comes to symbolism, Palestine definitively wins.Then, it is essential to understand that it is not a religious matter. Finally, let's not forget about the recruiters behind their screens. Those ones are quite skillful and well-supported financially.”
“Those, and those only, can expect to be taught by God, who are ready and willing to do as they are taught... Those who go up to the house of the Lord with an expectation that He will teach them His ways, must go with a humble resolution that they will walk in His paths.”
Source: Experiencing God’s Presence
“Those, however, who saw that one cannot attain wisdom and perennial intellectual life, unless it be given through the gift of grace, and that the goodness of the Almighty God is so great that He hears those who invoke His name, and they gain salvation, became humble, acknowledging that they are ignorant, and directed their life as the life of one desiring eternal wisdom. And that is the life of the virtuous, who proceed in the desire for the other life, which is commended by the saints.”
“Those, that with haste will make a mighty fire,
Begin it with weak straws.”
Source: The Works of William Shakspeare...: Collated Verbatim with the Most Authentic Copies, and Revised, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators
“Those, who are strongly wedded to what I shall call 'the classical theory', will fluctuate, I expect, between a belief that I am quite wrong and a belief that I am saying nothing new. It is for others to determine if either of these or the third alternative is right.”
Source: General Theory Of Employment , Interest And Money
“Those... who find delight in freedom from attachment in the renunciation of clinging, free from the inflow of thoughts, they are like shining lights, having reached final liberation in the world.”
“Those...who insist that there are some moral limits that they will not violate, are forever surprising themselves.”
Source: The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood
“Thoth's beak! You are impossibley stubborn." "Yeah, it's a gift.”
“Thoth, Hermes, the stylus,
the palette, the pen, the quill endure,
though our books are a floor
of smouldering ash under our feet.”
Source: Collected Poems 1912-1944
“Thou and I are but the blind instruments of some irresistible fatality, that hurries us along, like goodly vessels driving before the storm, which are dashed against each other, and so perish.”
Source: The waverly novels
“Thou and I are too wise to woo peaceably.”
Source: Much Ado About Nothing
“Thou are the armourer of my heart—”
Source: Antony and Cleopatra
“Thou art a boil, a plague sore, an embossed carbuncle in my corrupted blood.”
Source: King Lear
“Thou art a Castilian King urinal!”
Source: Prefaces. The tempest. The two gentlemen of Verona. The merry wives of Windsor.- v.2. Measure for measure. Comedy of errors. Much ado about nothing. Love's labour lost.- v.3. Midsummer night's dream. Merchant of Venice. As you like it. Taming the shrew.- v.4. All's well that ends well. Twelfth night. Winter's tale. Macbeth.- v.5 King John. King Richrd II. King Henry IV, parts I-II.- v.6. King Henry V. King Henry VI, parts I-III.- v.7 King Richard III. King Henry VIII. Coriolanus.- v.8. Julius Cæ
“Thou art a cat, and a rat, and a coward.”
Source: The History of the Most Ingenious Knight Don Quixote de la Mancha,1
“Thou art a dear companion to me. Thy melancholy is to me as some shady wood in summer, where I may dance if I will, and that is often, or be sad if I will, and that is in these days oftener than I would.”
Source: The worm Ouroboros
“Thou art a dreaming thing, A fever of thyself.”
Source: Complete Poems
“Thou art a little soul bearing about a corpse.”
Source: Stoic Six Pack: Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, Golden Sayings, Fragments and Discourses of Epictetus, Letters from a Stoic and The Enchiridion
“Thou art a man God is no more Thy own humanity Learn to adore”
Source: Blake: The Complete Poems
“Thou art a peanut.”
Source: Flight
“Thou art a retailer of phrases, and dost deal in remnants of remnants.”
Source: British Theatre: Bonduca
“Thou art a slave, whom fortune's tender arm
With favour never clasp'd; but bred a dog.”
Source: The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare: Cymbeline. Timon of Athens
“Thou art a soul in bliss; but I am bound Upon a wheel of fire; that mine own tears Do scald like molten lead.”
“Thou art a very ragged Wart.”
Source: The family Shakspeare
“Thou art a woman,
And that is saying the best and worst of thee.”
Source: Festus: a poem
“Thou art all the comfort,
The Gods will diet me with.”
“Thou art an elm, my husband, I a vine,
Whose weakness, married to thy stronger state,
Makes me with thy strength to communicate.”
Source: The works of William Shakespeare
“Thou art an elm, my husband, I a vine.”
Source: The works of William Shakespeare
“Thou art an heyre to fayre lying, that is nothing, if thou be disinherited of learning, for better were it to thee to inherite righteousnesse then riches, and far more seemly were if for thee to haue thy Studie full of bookes, then thy pursse full of mony.”
“Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art, As those whose beauties proudly make them cruel; For well thou know'st to my dear doting heart Thou art the fairest and most precious jewel.”
Source: The Pictorial edition of the works of Shakspere, ed. by C. Knight. [8 vols., including a vol. entitled William Shakspere, by C. Knight].
“Thou art as wise as thou art beautiful”
Source: Dramatic Works of William Shakespeare
“Thou art beaten that thou mayest be better.”
Source: The Whole Works of John Bunyan ...: Reprinted from the Author's Own Editions
“Thou art beautiful because God created thee, but thou art a slave to sin... wickedness has made you ugly.”
“Thou art blind to the danger of marrying a woman who feels and acts out the principle of equal rights.”
“Thou art coming to a King, large petitions with thee bring, for His grace and power are such none can ever ask too much.”
Source: Olney Hymns: In Three Parts
“Thou art figured blind, and yet we borrow our best sight from thee.”
“Thou art god, I am god. All that groks is god.”
“Thou art gone from my gaze like a beautiful dream,
And I seek thee in vain by the meadow and stream.”
“Thou art guilty to ye foundations,thee shalt kiss burn in hell..”