Mingled Quotes
Collection of top 68 famous quotes about Mingled
Mingled Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Mingled quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Busy work brings after ease; Ease brings sport and sport brings rest; For young and old, of all degrees, The mingled lot is best.
— Joanna Baillie
How mingled and imperfect are all our sublunary joys!
— James Joyce
The cream and hot butter mingled and overflowed separating each glucose bead of caviar from its fellows, capping it in white and gold.
— Evelyn Waugh
While time lasts there will always be a future, and that future will hold both good and evil, since the world is made to that mingled pattern.
— Dorothy L. Sayers
Too many peoples have traveled back and forth, and too many legends and tales have mingled.
— George R R Martin
Prayer is powerful, but if our prayers are aimless, meaningless, and mingled with doubt, they will be of little hope to us.
— Billy Graham
Frustration mingled with despair in my
heart. — Laura Howard
heart. — Laura Howard
Unfortunately, Feng Shui has mingled with superstition. Luckily, it's easy to expose myths. Don't think 'things', think 'energy'.
— Stefan Emunds
The country is lyric, the town dramatic. When mingled, they make the most perfect musical drama.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
There were so many things mingled in his expression
yearning, disappointment, and yes, love. — Claire Cross
yearning, disappointment, and yes, love. — Claire Cross
Unknowing, let us sleep. Chest against chest,
Our breathing mingled, hand in hand without dreams. — Yves Bonnefoy
Our breathing mingled, hand in hand without dreams. — Yves Bonnefoy
The moment of finding a fellow-creature is often as full of mingled doubt and exultation, as the moment of finding an idea.
— George Eliot
There are moments of mingled sorrow and tenderness, which hallow the caresses of affection.
— Washington Irving
grievances of the lowest classes mingled with
— Howard Zinn
He gave me a look of mingled anticipation, curiosity, and compassion, like a cat with a captive bird in its claws.
— Walter Moers
I never mingled with men, but I came home less of a man than I went out.
— Johannes Tauler
Like a French poem is life; being only perfect in structure when with the masculine rhymes mingled the feminine are.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
spiritual life is not a life of laws and precepts but a life of participation, affection and love, a life mingled and mixing with God.
— James Bryan Smith
The mingled incentives which lead to action are often too subtle and lie too deep for us to analyze.
— Johann Kaspar Lavater
Rumor ran in the slum streets of Trelayne like sewage in the gutters, mingled and colorful in its contents, but mostly shit.
— Richard K. Morgan
Eternity. It is the sea mingled with the sun.
— Arthur Rimbaud
An oppressive odor of decay now mingled with the stench of mold and seemed to clutch at the very breath in their lungs.
— Kaoru Kurimoto
Drama is anticipation mingled with uncertainty.
— Andrew Stanton
Soft flesh mingled with defiant will to create one frustratingly perfect woman.
— Michelle M. Pillow
I saw two clouds at morning Tinged by the rising sun, And in the dawn they floated on And mingled into one.
— John Gardiner Calkins Brainard
More than a hygienic method of disposing of the dead, cremation enabled lovers and comrades to be mingled together for eternity:
— Catharine Arnold
Great happiness, and mingled therefor with bitter sorrow. It is not by enthusiasm but by tactics that we defeat a foe.
— Georg Ebers
The pit of a theatre is the one place where the tears of virtuous and wicked men alike are mingled.
— Denis Diderot
I have sped by land and sea, and mingled with much people, but never yet could find a spot unsunned by human kindness.
— Martin Farquhar Tupper
Existence is of little interest save on days when the dust of realities is mingled with magic sand.
— Marcel Proust
My father was always so mingled with rage at his life.
— Doris Lessing
And light is mingled with the gloom, And joy with grief; Divinest compensations come, Through thorns of judgment mercies bloom In sweet relief.
— John Greenleaf Whittier
Prayer is the song of the heart. It reaches the ear of God even if it is mingled with the cry and the tumult of a thousand men.
— Khalil Gibran
He who has mingled in the fray of duty that the brave endure, must have made foes. If you have none, small is the work that you have done.
— Charles Mackay
Most companies don't want their data co-mingled with other customers. Small companies will tolerate it.
— Larry Ellison
Respect was mingled with surprise, And the stern joy which warriors feel In foemen worthy of their steel.
— Walter Scott
Fear has given birth to extreme parenting. It looks like love, but it is love mingled with fear.
— Edward T. Welch
The scholars of Ireland seem not to have the least conception of style, but run on in a flat phraseology, often mingled with barbarous terms.
— Jonathan Swift
It is a strange thing to read a letter after the writer is dead - a bitter-sweet thing, in which pain and comfort are strangely mingled.
— Lucy Maud Montgomery
All cultures have been mingled forever.
— V.S. Naipaul
He mingled idleness and idealism so that he could not separate them.
— W. Somerset Maugham
Applause, mingled with boos and hisses, is about all that the average voter is able or willing to contribute to public life.
— Elmer Davis
All panegyrics are mingled with an infusion of poppy.
— Jonathan Swift
I would say that, of course, it is wrong to objectify women. But at the same time, entertainment should not be inter-mingled with commodification.
— Malaika Arora Khan
I come from a background of experimental music which mingled real sounds together with musical sounds.
— Ennio Morricone
The web of our Life is of mingled Yarn.
— John Keats
The tempests of youth are mingled with days of brilliant sunshine.
— Luc De Clapiers
God Almighty Himself must have been hilarious when human beings so mingled iron and water and fire as to make a railroad train!
— Kurt Vonnegut
Love's not love When it is mingled with regards that stand Aloof from th' entire point.
— William Shakespeare
Mountains interposed Make enemies of nations, who had else Like kindred drops been mingled into one.
— William Cowper
A wave is never found alone, but is mingled with the other waves.
— Leonardo Da Vinci