A Collection of Quotations InfoWeb Creation Copyright@InfoWeb-The Knowledge Hub Bargarh Orissa • Train up a child the way he should go and when he is.

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Transcript A Collection of Quotations InfoWeb Creation Copyright@InfoWeb-The Knowledge Hub Bargarh Orissa • Train up a child the way he should go and when he is.

A Collection of Quotations
InfoWeb Creation
Copyright@InfoWeb-The Knowledge Hub
Bargarh Orissa
• Train up a child the way he should go and
when he is old he will not depart from it.
Bible
• Justice is the Constant desire and effort to
render to everymanhis due –
Justician
• Never answer a letter while you are angry. –
Chinese Proverb
• Let no one be willing to speak ill of the absent
–
Propetius
• You will become as small as your controlling
desire or as great as your dominant aspiration
–
J.L.Allen
• Honour thy father and thy mother .
Exodus
• A man has no enemy worse than himself
Cicero
• Ability is of little account without
opportunity.
Napoleon
• To do injustice is more disgraceful than to
suffer it .
Plato
• Character is what you are in the dark.
D.L. Moody
• To strive to seek to find and not to yield.
Tennyson
• God loveth the clean.
The Koran
• Conscience is God’s presence in mind
Swedenbord
• The most importantthing for a nation is to
produce men and women, good and true.
Jawaharlal Nehru
• Let noble thoughts come to us from everyside
.
Rigveda
• The love of a mother is never exhausted, it
never changes it never dies.
– Washington Irving
• O Lord, lead me from untruth to truth, from
darkness to light , from death to immortality.
Upanishads
• True beauty consists of the purity of heart.
Gandhi
Mahatma
• A good heart is better than all the heads in
the world.
Lyttor
• To preserve in one’s duty and to be silent is
the best answer to calumny.
Washington
• I will not be traitor to God to please the
whole world.
Mahatma Gandhi
• If a boy is not lively or noisy, either his body
or his soul is sick, unless he is very rare
exception.
Don Bosco
• My rule was always to do the business of the
day in the day.
Wellesley
• Time goes, you say? Ah not I Alas, time stays
, We go.
A. Doleson
• What I seek I get not, what I get, I seek
not.
Rabindranath Tagore
• Democracy that became dictatorship of the
numerical majority is immortal .
Karl
• They are able because they think they are
able .
Virgil
• To accept good advice is but to increase one’s
own ability.
Goathe
• Trust not too much to an enchanting face.
Virgil
• At the hour of death what matter is what you
have done not what you plan to do.
Don Bosco
• Obey your conscience . Rabindranath Tagore
• There can be no worship without good action.
Guru Nanak
• What doth it profit a man if he gains the
whole world and suffer the loss of the own
soul?
The Bible
• All living is vain except to know Him and to
serve Him.
Guru Nanak
• Health is the greatest of all possessions a
pale cobbler is better than a sick king.
Bickerstaff
• Strength does not come from physical
capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.
Gandhi
Mahatma
• Next to acquiring good friends the best
acquisition is that of good books .
Golton
• The more judgement a man has the slower he
will be to condemn.
Maurier
• Do thy duty, that is best; have un’o the Lord
the rest.
Longfellow
• Respect for the opinion of others is one of
the clearest signs of a truly educated man.
O’Brien
• If everyone would see to his own reformation
how easily we might reform a nation. Pope
• Watever advice you give be short. Horace
• Well arranged time is the surest mark of a
well arranged mind.
Pitman
• “Impossible “ I can’t ,should not exist in the
vocabulary of a diligent student.
Anon
• No race will prosper till lit learns that there
is as much dignity in telling a field as in
writing a poem.
B.T.Washington
• Live your whole attention to whatever you are
doing, and think nothing unworthy of care
consideration.
Confucius
• Friendship multiplies joys an divide griefs.
H.G. Bohn
• For dust thou art and unto dust shall thou
return.
The Bible.
• No one is exempt from talking nonsense. The
misfortune is to do it solemnly.
Montaigne
• We must beat the iron while it is hot; but we
may polish it on leisure.
• Manner make the man.
Dryded
Daniel Defoe
• God is our refuge and our strongfold.
The Psalms
• Genius is one persent inspiration and ninety
nine percent perspiration.
Thomas A Edison
• An angry man opens his mouth and shuts his
eyes.
Cato
• To give the poor is to open a bank account in
heaven .
Bosco
Don
• Where you can’t remove an obstacle plough
round it .
Lincoln
• Meet success like a gentleman and disaster
like a man .
Lord Birkenhead
• I hate to see things done big halves. It be right, do it
badly if it be wrong leave it undone.
Gilpin
• Better mend one fault in your self than a hundred in
your neighbour .
Wlbert Aubbard
• One of the greatest lessons of life is to learn not to
do what one like but to like what one does.
H Black
• Adversity is the crucible in which friendship is
tested.
Gandhiji
• The temple of our purest thought is silence.
S J Hale
• The final test of a gentleman is his respect for those
who can be of no service to him.
Anan
• Our greatest glory is not in every falling but
in rising very time we fall.
Confucius
• Hell is full of the talented but heaven of the
energetic.
Fultin F Sheen
• Remember there can be no happiness for
anyone unless it is to be won for all. J.C.Bose
• Be calm in arguing for fierceness makes error
a fault and truth discourtesy.
Herbert
• Ability is of little account without
opportunity.
Napoleon
• I think god for my handicaps for through
them I have found myself my work and my
God
Helen Keller
• Gratitude is a lively sense of future favours.
Sir Robert Walpole
• Every man is a volume if you knew how to read
him.
Canning
• Character is not ready made but is created
bit by bit and day by day.
Edna Lyall
• Be great in act as you have been in thought.Suit the
action to the word and the word to the action.
Shakespeare
• You will become as small as your controlling desire
or as great as your dominant aspiration.
J.L Allen
• All great art is the expression of man’s delight in
God’s work not his own.
Tuskin
• A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he
thinks that he becomes.
Mahatma Gandhi
• The greatest remedy for anger is delay .
Seneca
• Jealousy is all the fun you think they had.
Erica Jong
• Those who profess to favour freedom and yet
depreciate agitation are men who want rain
without thunder and lightening.
Fredrick Douglass
Learn a new language and get a new soul. Czeck
Proverb
• Never close your lips to those to whom you
hape opened your heart. Charles Dickens
• The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no
cure for curiosity.
Ellen Parr
• The only way to keep your health is to eat
what your don’t want , drienk what you don’t
like and do what you’d rather not.
Mark Twain
• Friendship is love without his wings. Lord
Byron
• I am not denying woman are foolish; God
Almighty made them to match the men .
George Eliot
• It’s always easy to tell your station in life
sooner or later, someone tells you where to
get off.
Herb Daniels
• Wit the technique it has dynamite will never learn to
sculpt.
Sofocles
• With is the salt of conversation not the food.
William Hazlitt
• The only thing most people do better than anyone else
is read their own handwriting.
J.A
• IN Politics there is only one way, the other.
Sofoclets
• If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Then give
up . theres no use in being a damn fool about it.
W.C .Fields
• Nobody has any other right than that of doing ones
duty .
Augusta Comte
• The cinema has no boundary, it is a ribbon of dream .
Oreon Welles
• Flattery is all right if you don’t inhale.
Adlai Stevenson
We are in bondage to the law in order that we may be
free.
Cicero
• People who make music together cannot be enemies
atleast not while the music lasts.
Paul Hindsmith
• Our experience is composed rather of illusion lost
thatn of wisdom acquired.
Joseph Rouz
• Culture is one thing and varnish another
Ralph Waldo Emerson
• When I play with my cat who knows if I am not more
of a pastime to her than she is to me.
Montaigne
• There is a vast difference between putting your nose
in other peoples business and putting your heart in
other peoples problems.
Phoenix Central
• Every new opinion, at its starting, is precisely in a
minority of one.
Thomas Carlyle
• There is no record on human history of a happy
philosopher.
H.L.Menckess
• It is your interest that is at stake when your next
neighbours wall is ablaze.
Horace
B. Franklin
• Education begins with life.
• Though patience be a tired mare yet she will plod.
Shakespeare
• I don’t like money but it quites my nerve.
Joe Louis
• Between friends there is no need of justice.
Aristotle
• What is morally wrong can be politically right.
William Gladstone
• Man is born free and everywhere he is in chains.
Rousseau
• Freedom demands respect for the freedom of others.
James Branch Cabell
• There are no faster or firmer friendships than those
between people who love the same books.
Irving Stone
• The age of the centuries is the youth of the world.
Francis Bacon
• Progress is the law of life man is not man as yet.
Robert Browning
• Prophecy is the most gratuitous form of error
George Eliot
• Trial by jury itself instead of being a security to
persons who are accused, will be delusion, a mockery
and a snare. Thomas Lord Denman
• Show me the metaphor and I shall show you the man.
Keats
• Party is the madness of the many for the gain of a
few.
Pope
• Though patients die, the doctors paid. Llicenced to
kill, he gains a place for what another amounts the
gallows.
Willliam Broome
• To be seventy years young is sometimes more
cheerful and hopeful thatn to be fourty years old.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
• There are only tow ways of getting on in the world, by
ones own industry or by the stupiodity of others.
LA Bruyere
• If wer are to abolish the death penalty , I should
like to see the first ste taken by our friends the
murderers.
Alphonso Karr
• Death is for many of us the gate of hell; but we are
inside on the way out, not outside on the way in.
Bernard Shaw
• We haave just enough religion to make us hate but
not enough to make us love one another-
Jonathan Swift
• Discontent is the first step on the progress of a ma
or nation.
Oscar Wilde
• The best of men cannot suspend their fate. The good
die early and the bad die late.
Daniel Defoe
• Language is the dress of thought.
Samuel Johnson
• Whitewashed, he quits te politicians trife at ease
in mind, with pockets filled for life.
J.R.Lowell
• Heaven has no range like love to hatred turned
nor hell a fury like a woman scorned.
William Congreve
• Coward is one who is a perilous emergency thinks
with his legs.
Ambrose Bierce
• Bad times hav a scientific value These are
occasions a good learner will not miss. Emerson
• Beneath the rule of me entirely great the pen is
mightier thant the sword.
Edward George
• The hopeful man sees success where others see
fortune, sunshine where others see shadows and
storm.
O.S. Mardex
• Error is the discipline through which we advance .
William E Channing
• It is the end that crowns us, not the fight-
Robert Herrick
• Thus our democracy was from an early period, the
most aristocratic and our aristocracy the most
democratic in the world.
Thomas Babington Macaulay
• Business today consists in persuading crowds.
Gerald Stanley Lee
• Mr Morgan buys his partners, I grow my own.
Andrew Carnegie
• I shot a rocket in the air it fell to earth, I know
not where for so swiftly it flew the sight could
not fellow it in its flight- Longfellow
• I would rather be the first man here rather than
the second at Rome.
Julius Ceaser
• And famished people must be slowly nurst and fed
by spoonfuls else they always burst.
Byron
• And each upon his rivals glared, with fast
advanced and lsde half bared .
Scott
• A national debt, if it is not excessive will be to us
a national blessing.
Alexander Hamilton
• No man has a night to fix the boundary of the
march of a nation; no man has a right to say to his
country .thus far shall thou go and no further.
Charles Stewart Parnell
• An oppressive government is more to be feared
than a tiger.
Confucius
• There can be no church in which the demon will
not have chapel .
Cardinal Paleotti
• He who is firmly seatd in authority soon learns to
think security and not progress, the highest
lesson of statecraft.
J.R.Lowell
• And they will best succeed who best can
pay.Those who would gain the votes of British
tribes, must add to force of merit, force of
bribes.
Charles Churchill
• The commander of the forces of a large state
may be carried off, but the will of even a common
man cannot be taken fro him.
Confucius
• Do you know the only thing that gives me pleasure,
It’s to see my dividends coming in.
John D Rockefeller
• It is easier to appear worthy of a position one
does not held than of the office one fills.
LA Rochefoucaulo
• Histories are more full of examples of the
fidelity of dogs than friends.
Pope
• Votes should be weighed, not counted.
Schiller
• Give me a level long enough and a fulerum
strong enough and single handed. I can
move the world.
Archimedes
• It is better to withheld a deserved rebuke
than to administer it ungraciously.
St. Franci De Sales
• He that cometh in print because he would
be known is like the fool that cometh into
the market because he would be seen. Lyly
• Trust not the physician, his antidates are poison,
and he slays , more than the rob.
Shakespeare
• I hav nothing to offer but blood , toil , tears and
sweat.
Winston Churchill
• Man is by nature a political animal. Lord Acton
• I came, I saw, I conquered.
Julius Caesar
• A thing of beauty is a joy forever. John Keats
• England expects every man to do his duty.
Admiral Nelson
• Truth and non-violence are my God.
Mahatma Gandhi
• Jai Jawan Jai Kisan .
Lal Bahadur Shastri
• Swaraj is my birthright and i will have it.
Bal Gangadhar Tilak
• It is melancholy true that even great men
have their poor relations. Charles Dickens
• A an may be very sincere in good principles
without good practice.
Dr.Samuel Johnson
• The good governor should have a broken
leg and keep at home.
Cervantes
• And famished people must be slowly nurst
and fed by spoonfuls else they always
burst.
Byron
• Business today consists in persuading
crowds.
Byron
• Might and right govern everything in this
world might till right is ready.
Joubert
• We are always getting ready to live, but
nevre living.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
• When people contend for their liberty they
seldom get anything by their victory but new
masters.
Lord Halifax
• I shot a rocket in the air it fell to earth, I know
not where fare so swiftly it flew, the sight could
not follow it in its flight.
Longfellow
• The commander of forces of a larg state may be
carried off, but the will of even a common man
cannot be taken from him.
Conficius
• No matter how good the idea of the other fellow
may be there is always better one!
Col. W.R. Nelson
• Tradidtion is one of the most cherished and most
dangerous possession of human race.
S.M.Furnas
• Hatred does not cease by hatred ; but only b love
this is the eternal rule.
Buddha
• Be slow of tongue and quick of eye. Cervantes
• Faith without good work is dead .
Bible
• Custom without reason is but ancient error.
Thomas Fuller
• There is no knowledge that is not power.
Emerson
• A lifetime of happiness! No man alive can bear it;
it would be hell on earth.
Oscar Wilde
• What if we still ride on we two with life forever
old yet new.
Robert Browning
• Genius is fostered by industry.
• Silence is the perfectest herald of joy.
Cicero
Shakespeare
• A wod uttered from a pure heart never goes in
vain.
Mahatma Gandhi
• Lover is ever the beginning of knowledge as fire is
of light.
Carlyle
• It is easy to be good when that which prevents it
is far off.
Quid
• Honest fame awaits the truly good.
• A nice man is a man of nasty ideas.
Lucan
Swift
• It is too easy to go over to majority.
• Everything unnatural is immortal.
Seneca
Napoleon
• The better a man is, less ready is he to
suspect dishonesty I others.
Cicero
• The ultimate result of shielding men from the
effects of folly is to fill the world with fools.
Cardinal Spellmay
• Our song is the voice of desire that haunts our
dreams
Robert Bridges
• Mere parsimony is not enough .Expense and great
expenx may be essential part of true economy.
Edmund Burke
• There is no sin except stupidity. Oscar Wilde
• The most useless day of all is that in which we
have not laughed.
S.N. Champfort
• They who cannot perform great things themselves
yet have a satisfaction in doing justice to those
who can.
Horace Walpole
• In plucking the fruit memory on runs the risk of
spoiling itsbloom.
Joseph Conrad
• The beauty of the world has two edges, one of
laughter, one of anguish, cutting the heart
asunder.
Virginia Woof
• Humorous is emotional chaos recollected in
tranquility.
James Thurber
• No man is useless while he has a friend.
R.L.Stevenson
• Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others
cannot keep it from themselves.
• Things do not change: we change.
J.M.Barrie
H.D. Thoreau
• Education has produced a vast population able to
read but unable to distinguished what is worth
reading.
G.M. Trevelgar
• The paths of glory lead but to the grave.
Thomas Gray
• The man who never alters his opinions is like
standing water and breeds reptiles of the mind.
William Blake
• Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools
and the beacons of wise man.
Thomas Henry Huxley
• The full area of ignorance is not mapped. We are
at present only exploring its finger.
J.D.Bernal
• The weak have one weapon, the errors of those
who think they are wrong.
Georges Bidault
• There are more things in heaven and earth,
Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Shakespeare
• Error of opinion may be tolerated whre reason is
left free to combat it.
Thomas Jefferson
• Public life is a situation of power and energy. He
trespasses against his duty who sleeps upon his
watch, as well as he who goes over to the enemy.
Edmund Burke
• We have too many people who live without
working, and we have altogether too many people
who work without living.
Charles R Brown
• Even when laws have een writeen down, they ought
not always remain unaltered.
Aristotle
• Perfect I call thy plan: Thanks that I was a man!
Robert Browning
• There are two things to aim at in life – first to
get what you want and, after that to enjoy it.
Only the wisest of mankind achieve the second.
Loga Pearsall Smith
• Priests are more necessary to religion than
politicians to patriotism.
John Haynes Holmes
• The finest plans have always been spoilt by the
littleness of them tat should carry them out.
Bertolt Brecht
• When a man assumes a public trust, he should
consider himself as public property.
Thomas Jefferson
• The secret of success in life is known only to
those who have not succeeded.
John Churton Colhins
• Politics has got so expensive that it takes lots of
money to even get best with.
Will Rogers
• Tere are tow tragedies in life. One is to lose your
heart’s desire. The other is to gain it.
G.B.Shaw
• The glory of great men must always be measured
by the means they have used to obtain it.
Francois La Rochefoucault
• One of the best ways of persuading others is with
your ears-by listening to them .
Dean Rusk
• Those who do not complain are never pitied.
Jane Austen
• Fortune is like the market where many times, if
you can stay a little, the price will fall.
Francis Bacon
• Nobody can describe a fool to the life, without
much patient self- inspection.
Frank Moore Colby
• Doing easily what others find difficult is talent,
doing what is impossible for talent is genius.
Henri.
Frederic Amiel
• You can’t change people but you can channel them
your way.
Hal Stabbins
• The secret of success in life is known only to
those who have not succeeded.
John Churton Collins
• Nothing can harm a good man, either in life or
after death.
Socrates
• Man’s mind stretched by a new idea can neve go
back to its original dimensions.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
• When a man lives in submission to any authority, it
means he is paying the price of personal freedom.
Mahatma Gandhi
• There is no duty we so much underrate as the
duty of being happy.
R.L.Stevenson
• True luck consists not in holding the best of cards
at the table. Luckiest is he who knows just when
to rise and go home.
John Hay
• In baiting a mouse trap wit cheese, always leave
room for the mouse.
H.H.Munro Saki
• It is only shallow people who do not judge by
appearance.
Oscar Wilde
• The whole history of civilization is strewn with
creeds and institutions which were invaluable at
first sight and deadly afterwords.
Walter Bagehot
• It is ideas not vested interests which are
dangerous for good or evil.
John Maynard Keynes
• Harmony makes small things grow, lack of it makes
great things decay.
Sallust
• Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps; for
he is the only animal that is struck with the
difference between what things are and what
they ought to be.
William Hazlitt
• Bravity is the soul of wit.
•
•
•
•
Shakespeare
Every man has his price.
Sir Robert Walpole
Better bend than break.
Scottish Proverb
Society is built upon trust.
Scouth
Confession is the first step to repentence.
Edmund Gayton
• Every slip is not a fall.
Thomas Fuller
• Fear always springs from ignorance.
Emerson
• No legacy is so rich as honesty.
Shakespeare
• Honour lies in honest toil.
Grover Cleveland
• Leisure with dignity.
Cicero
• The family is more sacred than the state.
Pope Pius
• Liberty’s in every blow! Let us do or die. Burns
• The richest mind need not libraries.
• The cheerful loser is a winner.
A.B.Alcott
Elbert Hubbard
• Love, that reason of all unreasonable
actions.
Dryden
• Luck for the fools and chance for the ugly.
Berthelson
• Sanity is a madness put to good uses.
George Santayana
• Man is a piece of the universe made alive.
Emerson
• Like cure likes.
Hahnemann
• Let us eat and be merry.
Lucke XV
• The dreadful dead of dark midnight.
Shakespeare
• Fire tries gold, misery tries brave men.
Seneca
• Merit or demerit lies in the motive.
Mahatma Gandhi
• A modest man never talks of himself.
LA Bruyere
• Music is the speech of angels.
Carlyle
• Necessity is the mother of invention.
Anon
Pope
• Order is Heaven’s first law.
• The voice of the people is the voice of
God.
Alouin
• The will of the people is the best law.
Ulysses S.Grant
• Philosophy is the highest music.
Plato
• A poet is born not made.
Anon