
Top 15 Teste Quotes
#1. Dies iral, dies illa
Solvet Saeclum in Favilla
Teste David cum Silylla
That Day of Wrath, that day of burning
Seer and Sibly speak concerning
All the world to ashes turning
George Smith
#2. A son could bear with great complacency, the death of his father, while the loss of his inheritance might drive him to despair.
[Lat., Gli huomini dimenticano piu teste la morte del padre, che la perdita del patrimonie.]
Niccolo Machiavelli
#3. Remove them." Stuck in masks - for nearly fifty years. I would have gone mad, would have peeled my skin off my face. "You didn't have a mask as a beast - and neither did your friend." "The blight is cruel like that." Either live as a beast, or live with the mask. "What - what sort of sickness is it?
Sarah J. Maas
#4. Only those who overflow with love will build the happy and enlightened world of the future.
Fethullah Gulen
#5. Fiat has a lot going for it in terms of design, technology and efficiency.
Peter Schmidt
#6. Liberty is a need felt by a small class of people whom nature has endowed with nobler minds than the mass of men; ... Consequently, it may be repressed with impunity. Equality, on the other hand, pleases the masses.
Napoleon Bonaparte
#7. A world without a kind young man who wished to help a servant girl read the Bible, who smiled often, and who bandaged a servant's blistered hands would have been a sadder world.
Melanie Dickerson
#8. The prime of life is that fleeting time between green and over-ripe.
Cullen Hightower
#9. Picking up the pieces of a broken relationship is like gathering up shards of glass with bear hands and eyes closed.
Michael Faudet
#11. In the battle between the heart and the mind, winners always listen to their hearts
Rameez Raja
#12. there were lovely things in the world, lovely that didn't endure, and the lovelier for that... Nothing endures.
Lewis Grassic Gibbon
#13. All Moanday, Tearday, Wailsday, Thumpsday, Frightday, Shatterday.
James Joyce
#15. At fifteen one is first beginning to realize that everything isn't money and power in this world, and is casting about for joys that do not turn to dross in one's hands.
Robert Benchley
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top