Znane cytaty

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Theodore Roosevelt

Robert Brault

Learned Hand

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Arthur Wellesley

Natalie Goldberg

Robert Oppenheimer

William McFee

Nedra Carroll

Pat Robertson

Mark Twain

Neal A. Maxwell

Henry Timrod

Blaise Pascal

William Shakespeare

Robert Greenleaf

Cicero

Alfred North Whitehead

Frances Willard

Ronald Reagan

Michael Cibenko

Horace Mann

Ecclesiastes

Simon Cameron

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

Walt Stack

Hanna Gray

Henry David Thoreau

Bishop Vincent

Mary Wilson Little

Graham Greene

Mary Daly

Epistle of Paul

Baruch Spinoza

M. Grundler

Frances Watkins Harper

Swedish Proverb

Henery Miller

H. Mumford Jones

Peter Kunkel

Cytaty

Leonardo Da Vinci

Italian engineer, painter, & sculptor (1452 - 1519)

As a well-spent day brings happy sleep, so a life well used brings a happy death.


As a well-spent day brings happy sleep, so life well used brings happy death.


As a well-spent day brings happy sleep, so life well used brings happy death.


Blinding ignorance does mislead us.
O! Wretched mortals, open your eyes!


Experience does not ever err. It is only your judgment that errs in promising itself results which are not caused by your experiments.


Intellectual passion dries out sensuality.


Iron rusts from disue; stagnant water loses its purity and in cold weather becomes frozen; even so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.


Iron rusts from disuse; water loses its purity from stagnation and in cold weather becomes frozen; even so does inaction sap the vigors of the mind.


It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.


Patience serves as a protection against wrongs as clothes do against cold. For if you put on more clothes as the cold increases, it will have no power to hurt you. So in like manner you must grow in patience when you meet with great wrongs, and they will then be powerless to vex your mind.


Study without desire spoils the memory, and it retains nothing that it takes in.


The poet ranks far below the painter in the representation of visible things, and far below the musician in that of invisible things.


Those who become enamored of practices without science are like sailors who go aboard ship without a rudder and compass, for they are never certain where they will land.


When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return.


Whoever in discussion adduces authority uses not intellect but memory.


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