Quotes by Miscellaneous Appearances are deceiving. Aesop miscellaneous deceiving appearance Loyalty in a free society depends upon the toleration of disloyalty. Alan Barth depends miscellaneous loyalty True eloquence forgoes eloquence. Andre Gide eloquence miscellaneous I feel very strongly that change is good because it stirs up the system. Ann Richards change-is-good miscellaneous feels The limitations are limitless. Beck miscellaneous limitation limitless In America, they do not inquire of a stranger, "What is he?" but, "What can he do?" Benjamin Franklin miscellaneous stranger america Some books we read, tho' few there are that hit the happy point where wisdom joins with wit. Benjamin Franklin miscellaneous wit book Can anything be constant in a world which is eternally changing? Benjamin Franklin miscellaneous constant world First the grub, then the morals. Bertolt Brecht miscellaneous moral firsts And you pretend it doesn't bother you, When you just want to explode. Bob Seger miscellaneous bother want While knowledge is orderly and cumulative, information is random and miscellaneous. Daniel J. Boorstin miscellaneous information knowledge You have to be deviant if you're going to do anything new. David Lee deviants miscellaneous ifs Whatever come we have to meet it. Eleanor Roosevelt miscellaneous This living in a democracy is a problem, isn't it? Eleanor Roosevelt miscellaneous democracy problem It takes more strength of character to withstand good fortune than bad. Francois de La Rochefoucauld miscellaneous fortune character We should scarcely desire things ardently if we were perfectly acquainted with what we desire. Francois de La Rochefoucauld miscellaneous should desire Rather perish than hate and fear, and twice rather perish than make oneself hated and feared — this must some day become the highest maxim for every single commonwealth. Friedrich Nietzsche maxims miscellaneous hate Improvements are invented only by those who can feel that something is not good. Friedrich Nietzsche miscellaneous improvement feels We understand nature by resisting it. Gaston Bachelard resisting miscellaneous A civil guest Will no more talk all, than eat all the feast. George Herbert miscellaneous guests conversation 123»