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“Break what must be broken, once for all, that's all, and take the suffering on oneself.”
―
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
,
Crime and Punishment
topic:
suffering
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“In truth, it is not want, but rather abundance, that creates avarice.”
―
Michel de Montaigne
,
The Essays of Michel de Montaigne
“I may hope, therefore, that my chance of escaping serious errors is as good as that of anyone else, who might have been persuaded to undertake the somewhat perilous enterprise in which I find myself engaged.”
―
Thomas Henry Huxley
,
The Advance of Science in the Last Half-Century
“Fun is at the core of the way I like to do business and it has been key to everything I’ve done from the outset. More than any other element, fun is the secret of Virgin’s success.”
―
Richard Branson
,
Losing My Virginity
“It is a hard thing to leave any deeply routined life, even if you hate it.”
―
John Steinbeck
,
East of Eden
“And some that smile have in their hearts, I fear, millions of mischiefs.”
―
William Shakespeare
,
Julius Caesar
“I also became a poet and for one year lived in a paradise of my own creation; I imagined that I also might obtain a niche in the temple where the names of Homer and Shakespeare are consecrated.”
―
Mary Shelley
,
Frankenstein
“Under the new conditions of perfect comfort and security, that restless energy, that with us is strength, would become weakness.”
―
H. G. Wells
,
The Time Machine
“Your memory is a monster; you forget—it doesn't. It simply files things away. It keeps things for you, or hides things from you—and summons them to your recall with a will of its own. You think you have a memory; but it has you!”
―
John Irving
,
A Prayer for Owen Meany
“The production of nitrogen for plant food in peace and explosives in war is more and more important.”
―
Calvin Coolidge
,
State of the Union Address
“It is again a strong proof of men knowing most things before birth, that when mere children they grasp innumerable facts with such speed as to show that they are not then taking them in for the first time, but remembering and recalling them.”
―
Marcus Tullius Cicero
,
On Old Age
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