Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1369 of 2182 |
Every dog has its day, but the nights belong to the pussycats.
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1370 of 2182 |
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired
signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not
fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not
spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the
genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not
a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it
is humanity hanging on a cross of iron.
-- Dwight Eisenhower, 1953
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1371 of 2182 |
Every little picofarad has a nanohenry all its own.
-- Don Vonada
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1372 of 2182 |
Every love's the love before
In a duller dress.
-- Dorothy Parker, "Summary"
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1373 of 2182 |
Every man is apt to form his notions of things difficult to be apprehended,
or less familiar, from their analogy to things which are more familiar.
Thus, if a man bred to the seafaring life, and accustomed to think and talk
only of matters relating to navigation, enters into discourse upon any other
subject; it is well known, that the language and the notions proper to his
own profession are infused into every subject, and all things are measured
by the rules of navigation: and if he should take it into his head to
philosophize concerning the faculties of the mind, it cannot be doubted,
but he would draw his notions from the fabric of the ship, and would find
in the mind, sails, masts, rudder, and compass.
-- Thomas Reid, "An Inquiry into the Human Mind", 1764
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1374 of 2182 |
Every man is as God made him, ay, and often worse.
-- Miguel de Cervantes
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1375 of 2182 |
Every man takes the limits of his own field
of vision for the limits of the world.
-- Schopenhauer
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1376 of 2182 |
Every man thinks God is on his side. The rich
and powerful know that he is.
-- Jean Anouilh, "The Lark"
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1377 of 2182 |
Every man who has reached even his intellectual teens begins to suspect
that life is no farce; that it is not genteel comedy even; that it flowers
and fructifies on the contrary out of the profoundest tragic depths of the
essential death in which its subject's roots are plunged. The natural
inheritance of everyone who is capable of spiritual life is an unsubdued
forest where the wolf howls and the obscene bird of night chatters.
-- Henry James Sr., writing to his sons Henry and William
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Freebsd Fortunes 3: 1378 of 2182 |
Every man who is high up likes to think that he has done
it all himself, and the wife smiles and lets it go at that.
-- Barrie
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