Melancholic Quotes
Collection of top 43 famous quotes about Melancholic
Melancholic Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Melancholic quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Jesus can transform our routine into meaningful service for Him.
— Our Daily Bread Ministries
Sometimes survival is the worst alternative there is
— Joanne Harris
Melancholic and fascinated, such is our general situation in an era of involuntary transparency.
— Jean Baudrillard
I am not sad, but I am melancholic. When you lose your mother at 20 and then your father soon after, melancholia is part of your life.
— Patricia Kaas
The infant was standing on a spot in someone else's story, during a moment of her own.
— Lemony Snicket
Art class was my thing, but not any other class.
— Dan Colen
On my fourteenth birthday when the sakura was in full bloom, the men came to kill us.
— Zoe Marriott
The whole life lies in the verb seeing.
— Pierre Teilhard De Chardin
All of this was mine, simply for agreeing to marry a man I did not love but who was, in the end, the only man who had ever asked.
— Melanie Benjamin
Often, the roles I'm offered in England are melancholic women who are filled with regret for the past, regret for their fading beauty.
— Kristin Scott Thomas
I think I am pretty much melancholic.
— Juliette Binoche
Like melancholic face of 'Radha' due to the absence of 'Krishna', that evening was gloomy.
— Mangalesh Joshi
I have such a love of good music that I find even melancholic music uplifting. Maybe I'm a rare breed.
— Anton Corbijn
Make preparations in advance ... you never have trouble if you are prepared for it.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Most artists never get a chance to be Picasso, but that doesn't mean you would stop painting.
— Teddy Thompson
In Physic, things of melancholic hue and quality are used against melancholy, sour against sour, salt to remove salt humors.
— John Milton
Music is at its best when it is pleasingly melancholic.
— Charles Haddon Spurgeon
If you wanted to be cheerful, or melancholic, or wistful , or thoughtful, or courteous, you simply had to act those things with every gesture.
— Patricia Highsmith
I want to assure you that working in transition period is an ungrateful job for any honest government.
— Robert Kocharian
Why is it that all men who have become outstanding in philosophy, statesmanship, poetry or the arts are melancholic,
— Joshua Wolf Shenk
Assad whistled a few notes of one of his native country's melancholic songs. It sounded as though he was whistling backwards
— Jussi Adler-Olsen
There was something melancholic about that symbol of their nation's promise of freedom, a bell with a chipped mouth and cleft body.
— E.A. Bucchianeri
You cannot sedate all the things you hate.
— Marilyn Manson
There is always something melancholic about the empty chairs.
— Mehmet Murat Ildan
Happy the land where the writers are sad, the merchants satisfied, the rich melancholic, and the populace content.
— Madame De Stael
There is always a melancholic silence before entering every New Year!
— Mehmet Murat Ildan
We sometimes emphasize the danger in a crisis without focusing on the opportunities that are there.
— Al Gore
Everything ultimately becomes the CEO's problem, no matter where it starts. I can see why some CEOs crack under the pressure.
— Yishan Wong
I think when you turn 50 you get a little melancholic in a way.
— Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu
That's what you really need is self-love. That's the answer to a lot of problems.
— Inc. Ozark Mountain Publishing
Ever since I released my first album, I've tried not to use minor chords as the main element in songs. The way I sing is too melancholic.
— Jose Gonzalez
My ideal community? Anywhere but here.
— Melina Marchetta
I'd like to think of my self as not melancholic at all, I think I'm a pretty cheerful person, really.
— Celeste Ng
I'm not really a happy person. It's a question of temperament. I have a tendency toward melancholy. You can feel quite happily melancholic.
— Michael Haneke
Why is it that all men who are outstanding in philosophy, poetry or the arts are melancholic?
— Aristotle.
A normal life? Now that's the real fairytale.
— Judith Graves