Beveridge Quotes
Collection of top 36 famous quotes about Beveridge
Beveridge Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Beveridge quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I lost myself in the burden of trying to be your savior.
— Alexandria Hampton
Let us proportion our alms to our ability, lest we provoke God to proportion His blessings to our alms.
— William Beveridge
The human mind likes a strange idea as little as the body likes a strange protein and resists it with a similar energy.
— William Beveridge
A cockle-fish may as soon crowd the ocean into its narrow shell, as vain man ever comprehend the decrees of God!
— William Beveridge
Apart from the desire to produce beautiful things, the leading passion of my life has been and is hatred of modern civilization.
— William Morris
Whether you know it or not, each and every day your life is touched by the effects of psychopathy on our world.
— Andrew M. Lobaczewski
We are the choices we make.
— Patrick Ness
Facts and ideas are dead in themselves and it is the imagination that gives life to them.
— Sean Patrick
What we wear is the shell of who we are.
— Audrey Tautou
The Philippines are ours forever. They are not capable of self- government. How could they be? They are not a self-governing race.
— Albert J. Beveridge
Unemployment is like a headache or a high temperature - unpleasant and exhausting but not carrying in itself any explanation of its cause.
— William Beveridge
Faith in oneself unlocks those hidden powers that all of us have, but that so few of us use.
— Albert J. Beveridge
For the most part, I don't think I'm any different than anybody else.
— Curtis Granderson
He takes another bite of the hairy fruit and marvels how the bullet from his Winchester did to her head what his teeth did to her kiwi.
— Laurence Beveridge
There are some duties we owe even to those who have wronged us. There is, after all, a limit to retribution and punishment.
— Marcus Tullius Cicero
The object of government in peace and in war is not the glory of rulers or of races, but the happiness of common man.
— William Beveridge
I have spent most of my life most happily making plans for others to carry out.
— William Beveridge
Scratch a pessimist and you will often find a defender of privilege.
— William Beveridge
The trouble in modern democracy is that men do not approach to leadership until they have lost the de e to lead anyone.
— William Beveridge
There is a very important distinction between a critical attitude of mind (or critical faculty) and a sceptical attitude.
— William Beveridge
PROMETHEUS: 'Oh, it is easy for the one who stands outside the prison-wall of pain to exhort and teach the one who suffers
— Aeschylus
No proper life could be made from the pursuit of blinding pleasure followed by limp exhaustion.
— Julie Anne Long
No one believes an hypothesis except its originator but everyone believes an experiment except the experimenter.
— William Beveridge
Ignorance is an evil weed, which dictators may cultivate among their dupes, but which no democracy can afford among its citizens.
— William Beveridge
Many discoveries must have been stillborn or smothered at birth. We know only those which survived.
— William Ian Beardmore Beveridge
It is not altogether wrong to say that there is no such thing as a bad photograph - only less interesting, less relevant, less mysterious ones.
— Susan Sontag
If the way of heaven be narrow, it is not long; and if the gate be straight, it opens into endless life.
— William Beveridge
I think the quality of something like the Beveridge, for instance, will have a life of its own.
— Neville Marriner
Paradoxical as it may at first appear, the fact is that, as W. H. George has said, scientific research is an art, not a science.
— William Ian Beardmore Beveridge
Those who can't do, teach!
— Woody Allen
Faith in one's self unlocks those hidden powers that all of us have, but that few of us use.
— Albert J. Beveridge
Scratch a pessimist and you find often a defender of privilege.
— William Beveridge
The state is or can be master of money, but in a free society it is master of very little else.
— William Beveridge