²é¿´ÎÄÕ |
¡ÌOne may subdue a thousand men in a battle, but he who conquers himself is the greatest victor.¡ª¡ªJ. Nehru
¡ÌSaying well is good, but doing well is better.¡ª¡ªS. Clarke
¡ÌThe best preparation for good work tomorrow is to do good work today.¡ª¡ªE. Hubbard
¡ÌGood order is the foundation of all things.¡ª¡ªE. Burke
¡ÌSuch a man is happy when he sets great goals for himself and struggles to achieve them.¡ª¡ªM. I. Kalinin
¡ÌGreat works are performed not by strength but by perseverance.¡ª¡ªS. Johnson
¡ÌWhere there is life, there is hope.¡ª¡ªM. T. Cicero
¡ÌIf you have great talents, industry will prove them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency.¡ª¡ªJ. Reynolds
¡ÌIf you would go up high, then use your own legs! Do not let yourselves carried aloft; do not seat yourselves on other people¡¯s backs and heads.¡ª¡ªF. W. Nietzsche
¡ÌI will clutch at the throat of destiny, which forces me to yield myself up to him. His purpose is in vain. Life is so pleasant that I want to live it out.¡ª¡ªL. van Beethoven
¡ÌThe cure for anything is salt water¡ªsweat, tears, or the sea.¡ª¡ªI. Dinesen
¡ÌWhat is gone and past help should be past grief.¡ª¡ªW. Shakespeare
¡ÌShould you be unable to keep up efforts, you may say to yourself: I am very tired. But never admit defeat in your mind by saying: I cannot.¡ª¡ªAnonymous
¡ÌFollow one aim without halt and that¡¯s the secret of success.¡ª¡ªA. Pavlova
¡ÌBefore everything else, getting ready is the secret of success.¡ª¡ªH. Ford
¡ÌHe who hesitates is lost.¡ª¡ªT. A. Edison
¡ÌIn everything one must consider the end.¡ª¡ªJ. de
¡ÌTo really understand a man we must judge him in misfortune.¡ª¡ªNapoleon
¡ÌA man can fail many times, but he is not a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.¡ª¡ªJ. Burroughs
¡ÌNo man living are more worthy to be trusted than those who toil up from poverty.¡ª¡ªR. W. Emerson
¡ÌLife is thickly sown with thorns, and I know no other remedy than to pass quickly through them. The longer we dwell on misfortunes, the greater is their power to harm us.¡ª¡ªVoltaire
¡ÌThere is only one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.¡ª¡ªNapoleon
¡ÌIt is often safer to be in chains than to be free.¡ª¡ªF. Kafka
¡ÌIn a just cause the weak overcome the strong.¡ª¡ªSophocles
¡ÌPrejudice is the child of ignorance.¡ª¡ªW. Hazlitt
¡ÌThere are charms made only for distant admiration.¡ª¡ªS. Johnson
¡ÌThe landscape belongs to the man who looks at it.¡ª¡ªR. W. Emerson
¡ÌMan can climb to the highest summits, but he cannot dwell there long.¡ª¡ªG. Bernard Shaw
¡ÌLearning is to the studious, and riches to the careful, as well as power to the bold, and heaven to the virtuous.¡ª¡ªB. Franklin |

