Top 16 Walter Schirra Quotes
#1. Ask , and it shall be given until you. That is no vain or untried promise, Ruth!
Elizabeth Gaskell
#2. Woe, destruction, ruin, and decay; the worst is death and death will have his day.
William Shakespeare
#3. Whatever we do or fail to do will influence the course of history.
Arthur Henderson
#4. Maybe we've already accepted that this is how we'll live and this is how we'll come to die.
Krista Ritchie
#5. Shakespeare teaches you how to act. You come out of this process as a better actor. It's just the nature of the words he writes.
Condola Rashad
#6. Prisons do not disappear problems, they disappear human beings ...
Angela Davis
#7. I'm a struggling writer, I'm struggling to convince people I'm a writer.
Tom Conrad
#9. One skill that separates good from almost-good runners is an ability to concentrate for an entire race, whether it is a mile or a marathon.
Kara Goucher
#10. You don't raise heroes, you raise sons. And if you treat them like sons, they'll turn out to be heroes, even if it's just in your own eyes.
Walter M. Schirra, Sr.
#11. You don't know what love is, until you've learned the meaning of the blues, until you've loved a love you've had to lose.
Chet Baker
#12. The propensity of man, is to invent history, that he may promote his own destiny...
Rev. Joaquin R. Larriba
Joaquin R. Larriba
#13. Whatever comes from God is impossible for a man to turn back.
Herodotus
#14. Only if you bring together the experience of the concrete struggles conducted by the real masses in the three sectors of the world (which are also called the three sectors of world revolution), then you have an overall, correct view of world reality.
Ernest Mandel
#15. You should have seen the things they were giving babies instead of milk. I remember seeing them put salt-pork gravy in milk bottles and putting a nipple on, and the baby sucking this salt-pork gravy. A real blue baby, dying of starvation. In house after house, I saw that sort of thing.
Studs Terkel
#16. Enduring happiness was only possible with equanimity. As long as our happiness depended on circumstances, it would be as fleeting and unreliable as the events themselves.
David Michie
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