
Top 16 Mingled Yarn Quotes
#1. The web of our Life is of mingled Yarn.
John Keats
#2. Web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together.
Kate Perry
#3. The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together: our virtues would be proud,if our faults whipped them not; and our crimes would despair, if they were not cherished by our virtues.
William Shakespeare
#4. At the same, we need to remain sensitive to the reality that we are still an African society in which the majority of the people and communities live under severe deprivations and afflictions that are no fault of theirs.
Ibrahim Babangida
#5. The Church as a divine society possess an internal principle of life which is capable of assimilating the most diverse materials and imprinting her own image upon them.
Christopher Dawson
#6. Unconditional love is most beautiful in any culture, in any society.
Debasish Mridha
#7. It is in the moment when we are thinking most clearly that we are closest to madness.
Pablo De Santis
#8. How many times do we lose an occasion for soul work by leaping ahead to final solutions without pausing to savor the undertones? We are a radically bottom-line society, eager to act and to end tension, and thus we lose opportunities to know ourselves for our motives and our secrets.
Thomas Moore
#9. I have given my love to what is worthy of love. Is that not the kingdom and the unperishing spring?
Ursula K. Le Guin
#10. Survivors are so often re-victimized by a system that demands they prove their purity and innocence.
Lena Dunham
#11. That's what I love about our music - it'll never be a hit because you can't dance to it.
Adam Jones
#13. I think, as an actress, whether you want to or not, whether you're ready for it or not, people are going to look at what you're doing, and they are going to look up to you, and it's not even really about you; it's who you portray on the screen.
Rita Volk
#15. But out-of-hand anger ruins many lives. More, I believe, than schizophrenia, more than alcohol, more than AIDS. Maybe even more than depression.
Martin E.P. Seligman
#16. Because he treats the world as rather empty and ignores the interrelatedness of all things (so stupefying to thought and action), administrative man can make decisions with relatively simple rules of thumb that do not make impossible demands upon his capacity for thought.
Herbert Simon
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