Next Quotes
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Next Quotes
Source: Delphi Complete Works of William Makepeace Thackeray (Illustrated)
“After his blood, that which a man can next give out of himself is a tear.”
Source: The stone-mason of Saint Point: a village tale. Translated from the French
Source: THE SAYINGS OF CONFUCIUS
Source: The Odes, Satyrs, and Epistles of Horace: Done Into English
“The next best thing to being witty one's self, is to be able to be able to quote another's wit.”
Source: Intuitions and Summaries of Thought
“Next to faith in God, is faith in labor.”
Source: Intuitions and Summaries of Thought
“The knowledge of one generation is the ignorance of the next.”
Source: A few days in Athens: being the translation of a Greek manuscript discovered in Herculaneum
Source: Concord Days
“Gardening is certainly the next amusement to reading.”
Source: The Letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
“Fame! it is the flower of a day, that dies when the next sun rises.”
Source: Wisdom, Wit and Pathos of Ouida
Source: Literature and life, lects
Source: The Complete Novels of George Macdonald (Illustrated): The Princess and the Goblin, The Princess and Curdie, Phantastes, At the Back of the North Wind, Lilith, David Elginbrod, Malcolm, Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood, Wilfrid Cumbermede and many more
Source: Sir Gibbie
Source: Among my Books, etc
“Taste is the next gift to genius.”
Source: Conversations on Some of the Old Poets
“If you would be a leader of men, you must lead your own generation, not the next.”
Source: Woodrow Wilson: the essential political writings
Source: The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison: The Spectator. The Guardian. The Lover. The present state of the war, and the necessity of augmentation, considered. The late trial and conviction of Count Tariff. The Whig-examiner. The Freeholder
“A bore: one who knows as well as you do what he is going to say next.”
Source: Aperçus: The Aphorisms of Mignon McLaughlin
Source: Wit and Wisdom of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle: Being a Treasury of Thousands of Glorious, Inspiring and Imperishable Thoughts, Views and Observations of the Three Great Greek Philosophers, Classified Under about Four Hundred Subjects for Comparative Study
Source: Laws
Source: A Change of Perspective
Source: Franklin's Way to Wealth and Penn's Maxims
Source: The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser: With a Memoir
“That which is the wonder of one age is the commonplace of the next.”
Source: Little house in the Ozarks: a Laura Ingalls Wilder sampler : the rediscovered writings
Source: The Rest of My Life
Source: War within and without: diaries and letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1939-1944
“Isn't the fear of pain next brother to pain itself?”
Source: A Diary Without Dates