If I remain true to what's in my heart, that's all the success I need.
They say men and women can't be friends, but that's not true.
True oneness is found in quiet meditation with nature.
The true forgiver will always look into your eyes.
Grass-fed cattle are leaner. But it's not true that they are less flavorful.
Dreams that do come true can be as unsettling as those that don't.
'True Blood' fans are very friendly, so everybody's been very friendly and positive.
Your bestfriend, at angryness, is your real and true mirror.
The eyes are the true reflection of a man's age and sensibilities.
False eloquence is exaggeration; true eloquence is emphasis.
The only true source of politeness is consideration.
In a false quarrel there is no true valor.
Those who realize their folly are not true fools.
It's true, I've become one of those grumpy older women.
Combine the extremes, and you will have the true center.
Those ancients who in poetry presented the golden age, who sang its happy state, perhaps, in their Parnassus, dreamt this place. Here, mankind's root was innocent; and here were every fruit and never-ending spring; these streams--the nectar of which ...
And this is what being an artist means, being a poet? To sacrifice yourself for your art, sacrifice your heart for your art, because it’s only through something broken that something beautiful can grow.
Her shift in thinking was clearly conflicted. It must have been difficult to disavow something for which she had a deep love and in which she had been immersed so much of her life.
Rather than majoring in frivolities, women should be educated in useful subjects and 'be furnished with a stock of ideas, and principles, and qualifications, and habits, ready to be applied and appropriated…' - Hannah More
Our language now has become quick-moving (in syllables), and may be very supple and nimble, but is rather thin in sound and in sense too often diffuse and vague. the language of our forefathers, especially in verse, was slow, not very nimble, but ver...
In England, coffeehouses were dubbed penny-universities, because for the admission price of one cent, a person could sit and be edified all day long by scholars, merchants, travelers, community leaders, gossips, and poets.