Old Object Quotes
Collection of top 21 famous quotes about Old Object
Old Object Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Old Object quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
A gentleman sitting in spectacles before an old ledger, and writing down pitiful remembrances of his own condition, is a quaint and ridiculous object.
— William Makepeace Thackeray
It doesn't matter matter how many yards you ran for last year. You've got to do it again.
— Priest Holmes
Arbitrary power is the natural object of temptation to a prince, as wine and women to a young fellow, or a bribe to a judge, or avarice to old age ...
— Jonathan Swift
I have always held the old-fashioned opinion that the primary object of work of fiction should be to tell a story.
— Wilkie Collins
My parents were huge fans of westerns, European cinema, and horror in particular. They wouldn't just show me kids' films.
— Hideo Kojima
I started my first business at 14!
— Terry McAuliffe
Moving on is something everybody has to do. Once you do that then everything will become more clear to you and life.
— Chasidy Merlos
I don't think you can write - at least not well - if you don't love stories, love the written word.
— Nora Roberts
You have trust in what you think. If you splinter yourself and try to please everyone, you can't.
— Annie Leibovitz
An old man at school is a contemptible and ridiculous object.
— Seneca The Younger
I am not a cat man, but a dog man, and all felines can tell this at a glance - a sharp, vindictive glance.
— James Thurber
— James Thurber
Animals of all classes, old and young, shrink with instinctive fear from any strange object approaching them.
— William Henry Hudson
It is an old psychological axiom that constant exposure to the object of fear immunizes against the fear.
— Maxwell Maltz
I thoroughly object to getting old. If you could let me be 16 again, I'd give you everything I've got and everything I'll ever have.
— Felix Dennis
Generosity needs no logrolling.
— Toba Beta
Exposure to a two-year-old boy was probably the best possible object lesson in the dangers of motherhood,
— Diana Gabaldon