Lynd Quotes
Collection of top 39 famous quotes about Lynd
Lynd Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Lynd quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Any of us can achieve virtue, if by virtue we merely mean the avoidance of the vices that do not attract us.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Most human beings are quite likeable if you do not see too much of them.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
A boy in love is not mainly a calf but a poet.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
A cat is only technically an animal, being divine.
— Robert Lynd
[History is] the story of the magnificent rear-guard action fought during several thousand years by dogma against curiosity.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Friendship will not stand the strain of very much good advice for very long.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Mystery lies over the sea. Every ship is bound for Thule.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
Friendship is not going to stand the pressure of greatly great guidance for quite extensive.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Darling, the bath's absolutely right. Will you marry me?'
She snorted. 'You need a slave, not a wife. — Ian Fleming
She snorted. 'You need a slave, not a wife. — Ian Fleming
The telephone is the greatest nuisance among conveniences, the greatest convenience among nuisances.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Cut quarrels out of literature, and you will have very little history or drama or fiction or epic poetry left.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
We forget that Socrates was famed for wisdom not because he was omniscient but because he realized at the age of seventy that he still knew nothing.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
The belief in the possibility of a short decisive war appears to be one of the most ancient and dangerous of human illusions.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
Every man of genius is considerably helped by being dead.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
One of the greatest joys known to man is to take a flight into ignorance in search of knowledge.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
It is a glorious thing to be indifferent to suffering, but only to one's own suffering.
— Robert Lynd
We cannot get happiness by striving after it, and yet with an effort we can impart it.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
Most human beings are quite likable if you don't see too much of them.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
Most of us can remember a time when a birthday - especially if it was one's own - brightened the world as if a second sun has risen.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
This is woman's great benevolence, that she will become a martyr for beauty, so that the world may have pleasure.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
It is the custom when praising a Russian writer to do so at the expense of all other Russian writers.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
No man is uninteresting when his hat is blown off and he has to scuttle after it down the street.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
Most of us believe in trying to make other people happy only if they can be happy in ways which we approve.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Almost any game with any ball is a good game.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
It is in games that many men discover their paradise.
— Robert Wilson Lynd
The days on which one has been the most inquisitive are among the days on which one has been happiest.
— Robert Lynd
There is nothing that makes us feel so good as the idea that someone else is an evildoer.
— Robert Lynd
No human being believes that any other human being has a right to be in bed when he himself is up.
— Robert Lynd
Most remarks that are worth making are commonplace remarks. The things that makes them worth saying is that we really mean them.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
Knowledge is power only if man knows what facts not to bother with.
— Robert Staughton Lynd
It is almost impossible to remember how tragic a place the world is when one is playing golf.
— Robert Wilson Lynd