Lord Byron
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The heart will break, but broken live on.
Quote by Lord Byron
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Lord Byron Quotes
This is the patent age of new inventions for killing bodies, and for saving souls. All propagated with the best intentions.
Friendship may, and often does, grow into love, but love never subsides into friendship.
As long as I retain my feeling and my passion for Nature, I can partly soften or subdue my other passions and resist or endure those of others.
I have great hopes that we shall love each other all our lives as much as if we had never married at all.
I am about to be married, and am of course in all the misery of a man in pursuit of happiness.
Be thou the rainbow in the storms of life. The evening beam that smiles the clouds away, and tints tomorrow with prophetic ray.
But what is Hope? Nothing but the paint on the face of Existence the least touch of truth rubs it off, and then we see what a hollow-cheeked harlot we have got hold of.
Sorrow is knowledge, those that know the most must mourn the deepest, the tree of knowledge is not the tree of life.
Truth is always strange, stranger than fiction.
Then stirs the feeling infinite, so felt In solitude, where we are least alone.
Best Quotes
Parenting is one of the hardest jobs on earth.
Wealth is not without its advantages and the case to the contrary, although it has often been made, has never proved widely persuasive.
Old hands soil, it seems, whatever they caress, but they too have their beauty when they are joined in prayer. Young hands were made for caresses and the sheathing of love. It is a pity to make them join too soon.
He who keeps his cool best wins.
All men are equal before fish.
Speak the truth, do not yield to anger give, if thou art asked for little by these three steps thou wilt go near the gods.
No work or love will flourish out of guilt, fear, or hollowness of heart, just as no valid plans for the future can be made by those who have no capacity for living now.
There is nothing that so much gratifies an ill tongue as when it finds an angry heart.
Studies perfect nature and are perfected still by experience.
The result justifies the deed.
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