
Top 20 Shakespeare Horatio Quotes
#2. The most common communication mistakes? Relating too much information, with not enough time devoted to connecting the dots.
John Medina
#3. Enthusiasm is a volcano on whose top never grows the grass of hesitation.
Khalil Gibran
#5. With vision only, you get no follow-through. With enforcers only, the vision is realized but leaves a lot of wreckage.
Colin Powell
#6. Give yourself something to work toward
constantly.
Mary Kay Ash
#7. There's plenty for me to do. There are more albums. I'll record as long as I can and as long as my voice works as well as it does now and for as long as people want to hear me.
Tom Jones
#8. Few of us can accurately gauge how we will feel tomorrow or next week. That's why when you go to the supermarket on an empty stomach, you'll buy too much, and if you shop after a big meal, you'll buy too little.
Daniel Gilbert
#9. Eventually you will go into samadhi. Samadhi is a very advanced meditation. You dissolve into the clear light of eternity again and again.
Frederick Lenz
#11. Thrift, thrift, Horatio! The funeral bak'd meats did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables.
William Shakespeare
#12. I found that Steve's passion for wildlife and willingness to lay his life on the line so exciting. What you have in our academic arena is a lot of people who are brilliant at what they do-and boring as the day is long.
Terri Irwin
#14. My body is the fruit of spirits' play.
Vanna Bonta
#15. I have an extended family of close friends, guy and girls.
Hannah Simone
#16. Ooo," said Alexia, fascinated, "it shrinks back down again. The books didn't detail that occurrence."
The earl laughed. "You must show me these books of yours.
Gail Carriger
#17. You can't concentrate on doing anything if you are thinking, What's gonna happen if it doesn't go right?
Malcolm Gladwell
#19. O good Horatio, what a wounded name,
Things standing thus unknown, shall live behind me!
If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart
Absent thee from felicity awhile,
And in this harsh world draw thy breath in pain,
To tell my story ...
O, I die, Horatio;
William Shakespeare
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