Top 15 Funny December Birthday Quotes
#1. That part of a work of one author found in another is not of itself piracy, or sufficient to support an action; a man may adopt part of the work of another; he may so make use of another's labors for the promotion of science and the benefit of the public.
Edward Law, 1st Earl Of Ellenborough
#2. The story was such that I couldn't make a graceful ending and then make a graceful new beginning. I could have, but I didn't want to. So, it isn't the most graceful way of writing a story. This new story is, I think, is pretty good stuff. I'm pleased with it anyway.
Jack Vance
#3. When we love deeply, love makes us do things we wouldn't otherwise do.
Craig Groeschel
#4. My theory is children don't do what you tell them to do, they do what you do. You have to always do the right thing because they follow you.
Boman Irani
#5. In France a lot of songs were ruined by their associations with commercials. But so far no Apple commercial has ruined a song for me.
Thomas Mars
#6. And dread came back like a hoot from a bully on the street outside.
Norman Mailer
#7. The Masonic fraternity tramples upon our rights, defeats the administration of justice, and bids defiance to every government which it cannot control.
Millard Fillmore
#8. I now know that criticism is part of the price paid for leaping past mediocrity.
Andy Andrews
#9. Where anti-Semitism persists, the well being of all our people is at risk.
Paul Sarbanes
#10. But there's also an upside-down sort of happiness, a black happiness, that comes from doing evil to others.
Amos Oz
#11. I think I loved him even more when I found his Rammstein CD.
V.L. Locey
#12. The poor don't know that their function in life is to exercise our generosity.
Jean-Paul Sartre
#13. I have an unsatisfied desire to shoot well with a bow.
J.R.R. Tolkien
#14. How sad it is that we give up on people who are just like us.
Fred Rogers
#15. The salient mystery of Dark Ages sets the stage for mass amnesia. People living in vigorous cultures typically treasure those cultures and resist any threat to them. How and why can a people so totally discard a formerly vital culture that it becomes vitally lost.
Jane Jacobs