• Yale is a crucible in American life for the accommodation of intellectual achievement, of wisdom, of refinement, with the democratic ideals of openness, of social justice and of equal opportunity. by Benno C. Schmidt, Jr.
  • Yale's greatness carries an urgent need to guard against the fall of excellence into exclusivity, of refinement into preciousness, of elegance into class and convention. by Benno C. Schmidt, Jr.
  • Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. by Bible
  • Yearning is not only a good way to go crazy but also a pretty good place to hide out from hard truth. by Claude T Bissell
  • Years and sins are always more than owned. by Italian Proverb
  • Years later, people look back upon their darkest day and say -- as Churchill said of London's war years -- 'This was our finest hour.' In a tough spot right now You may be on the very edge of winning by Guy Lynch
  • Years wrinkle the skin, but to give up enthusiasm wrinkles the soul. by Samuel Ullman
  • Yes'm, old friends is always best, 'less you can catch a new one that's fit to make an old one out of. by Sarah Orne Jewett
  • Yes, Love indeed is light from heaven A spark of that immortal fire With angels shared, by Allah given To lift from earth our low desire. by George Gordon Byron
  • Yes, risk-taking is inherently failure-prone. Otherwise, it would be called sure-thing taking. by Tim McMahon
  • Yes, we are all different. Different customs, different foods, different mannerisms, different languages, but not so different that we cannot get along with one another. If we will disagree without being disagreeable. by J. Martin Kohe
  • Yes, we have to divide up our time like that, between our politics and our equations. But to me our equations are far more important, for politics are only a matter of present concern. A mathematical equation stands forever. by Albert Einstein
  • Yes, we love peace, but we are not willing to take wounds for it, as we are for war. by John Andrew Holmes
  • Yes, you can be a dreamer and a doer too, if you will remove one word from your vocabulary impossible. by Dr. Robert Schuller
  • Yesterday I was a dog. Today I'm a dog. Tomorrow I'll probably still be a dog. Sigh There's so little hope for advancement. by Charles M. Schulz
  • Yesterday is a canceled check tomorrow is a promissory note today is the only cash you have -- so spend it wisely. by Kay Lyons
  • Yesterday is a dream, tomorrow but a vision. But today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness, and every tomorrow a vision of hope. Look well, therefore to this day. by Sanskrit Proverb
  • Yesterday is but today's memory, and tomorrow is today's dream. by Kahlil Gibran
  • Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or to lose. by Lyndon B. Johnson
  • Yesterday we obeyed kings and bent our necks before emperors. But today we kneel only to truth, follow only beauty, and obey only love. by Kahlil Gibran
  • Yesterday's failures are today's seeds That must be diligently planted to be able to abundantly harvest Tomorrow's success. by Unknown
  • Yesterday's the past and tomorrow's the future. Today is a gift - which is why they call it the present. by Bill Keane
  • Yesterday, December seventh, 1941, a date which will live in infamy, the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan. by Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Yet after brick and steel and stone are gone, and flesh and blood are dust, the dream lives on. by Anderson H. Scruggs
  • Yet ah why should they know their fateSince sorrow never comes too late,And happiness too swiftly flies.Thought would destroy their paradise.No more where ignorance is bliss,'Tis folly to be wise. by Thomas Gray
  • Yet do I fear thy nature It is too full o' the milk of human kindness. by William Shakespeare
  • Yet each man kills the thing he loves,By each let this be heard,Some do it with a bitter look,Some with a flattering word,The koward does it with a kiss,The brave man with a sword by Oscar Wilde
  • Yield not to evils, but attack all the more boldly. by Virgil
  • You (God) have not only commanded continence, that is, from what things we are to restrain our love, but also justice, that is, on what we are to bestow our love. by Saint Augustine
  • You add insult to injury. by Anonymous
  • You always admire what you really don't understand. by Roosevelt, Eleanor
  • You always pass failure on the way to success. by Mickey Rooney
  • You always smile but in your eyes your sorrow shows. by William Peter Horn
  • You and I do not see things as they are. We see things as we are. by Herb Cohen
  • You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness. If we fail, at least let our children and our children's children say of us we justified our brief moment here. We did all that could be done. by Ronald Reagan
  • You are a child of the Universe, no less than the moon and the stars you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the Universe is unfolding as it should. by Max Ehrmann
  • You are a king by your own fireside, as much as any monarch in his throne. by Miguel de Cervantes
  • You are amazing. You are a shooting star. I will follow you forever no distance is too far. Never take for granted your abilty to fly. At times stop and rest, but quickly get back up before your dreams pass you by. by Eric Pio
  • You are built not to shrink down to less but to blossom into more. by Oprah Winfrey
  • You are forgiven for your happiness and your successes only if you generously consent to share them. by William Blake
  • You are forgiven for your happiness and your successes only if you generously consent to share them. by Albert Camus
  • You are going to let the fear of poverty govern your life and your reward will be that you will eat, but you will not live. by George Bernard Shaw
  • You are in the process of being indoctrinated. We have not yet evolved a system of education that is not a system of indoctrination. We are sorry, but it is the best we can do. What you are being taught here is an amalgam of current prejudice and the choices of this particular culture. The slightest look at history will show how impermanent these must be. You are being taught by people who have been able to accomodate themselves to a regime of thought laid down by their predecessors. It is a self-perpetuating system. Those of you who are more robust and individual than others, will be encouraged to leave and find ways of educating yourself-educating your own judgement. Those that stay must remember, always and all the time, that they are being moulded and patterned to fit into the narrow and particular needs of this society. by Doris Lessing
  • You are looking as fresh as paint. by F. E. Smedley
  • You are never dedicated to something you have complete confidence in. No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow. They know it is going to rise tomorrow. When people are fanatically dedicated to political or religious faiths or any other kinds of dogmas or goals, its always because these dogmas or goals are in doubt. by Robert M. Pirsig
  • You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it come true. You may have to work for it, however. by Richard Bach
  • You are not an artist,an artist creates. You do not write your own songs. End of debate. by Eric Pio
  • You are not here merely to make a living. You are here to enable the world to live more amply, with greater vision, and with a finer spirit of hope and achievement. You are here to enrich the world. You impoverish yourself if you forget this errand. by Woodrow Wilson
  • You are not likely to get anywhere in particular if you don't know where you want to go. by Percy H. Johnson
  • You are not superior just because you see the world in an odious light. by Vicomte de Chateaubriand
  • You are perhaps the most accomplished confidence man since Charles Ponzi. I'd say you were a carnival barker, but that wouldn't be fair to carnival barkers. to former Enron CEO Keny Lay by Peter Fitzgerald
  • You are right on target when you say that mad scientists have a total disregard for the wellbeing of others. We don't want to spread evil we just see no point in bothering to spread good. by Richard M. Mathews
  • You are so afraid of losing your moral sense that you are not willing to take it through anything more dangerous than a mud puddle. by Gertrude Stein
  • You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth. by Kahlil Gibran
  • You are the same today that you are going to be in five years from now except for two things the people with whom you associate and the books you read. by Charles Jones
  • You are today where your thoughts have brought you you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you. by James Allen
  • You are today where your thoughts have brought you you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you. by James Lane Allen
  • You are what your deep driving desire is As your deep driving desire is, so is your will As your will is so is your deed As your deed is so is your destiny. by Maitri Upanishads
  • You are young, my son, and, as the years go by, time will change and even reverse many of your present opinions. Refrain therefore awhile from setting yourself up as a judge of the highest matters. by Plato
  • You are... the lens in the beam. You can only receive, give, and possess the light as the lens does. by Dag Hammarskjld
  • You ask me why I do not write something....I think one's feelings waste themselves in words, they ought all to be distilled into actions and into actions which bring results. by Florence Nightingale
  • You become a champion by fighting one more round. When things are tough, you fight one more round. by James Corbett
  • You begin saving the world by saving one person at a time all else is grandiose romanticism or politics. by Charles Bukowski
  • You better live your best and act your best and think your best today, for today is the sure preparation for tomorrow and all the other tomorrows that follow. by Harriet Martineau
  • You bluffed me I don't like it when people bluff me. It makes me question my perception of reality. by Andrew Schneider
  • You call it madness, but I call it love. by Don Byas
  • You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose. by Mario M Cuomo
  • You can accomplish much if you don't care who gets the credit. by Ronald Reagan
  • You can always get the truth from a politician after he has turned seventy, or given up all hope of the Presidency. by Joe Moore
  • You can always pick up your needle and move to another groove. by Timothy Leary
  • You can always tell a real friend when you've made a fool of yourself he doesn't feel you've done a permanent job. by Laurence J. Peter
  • You can always tell youre in trouble when the good option involves a prosthetic leg. by Hugh Elliott
  • You can be a rank insider as well as a rank outsider. by Robert Frost
  • You can be confident and secure and know that you do a good job at what you do. But you don't know to be arrogant about it. by Ruben Studdard
  • You can be pleased with nothing when you are not pleased with yourself. by Mary Wortley Montagu
  • You can be young without money but you can't be old without it. by Tennessee Williams
  • You can build a throne with bayonets, but you can't sit on it for long. by Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin
  • You can clutch the past so tightly to your chest that it leaves your arms too full to embrace the present. by Jan Glidewell
  • You can complain because roses have thorns, or you can rejoice because thorns have roses. by Ziggy
  • You can cover a great deal of country in books. by Andrew Lang
  • You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation. by Plato
  • You can discover what your enemy fears most by observing the means he uses to frighten you. by Eric Hoffer
  • You can do very little with faith, but you can do nothing without it. by Samuel Butler
  • You can do what you think you can do and you cannot do what you think you cannot. by Ben Stein
  • You can do what you want to do, accomplish what you want to accomplish, attain any reasonable objective you may have in mind--not all of a sudden, perhaps not in one swift and sweeping act of achievement--but you can do it gradually, day by day and play by play, if you want to do it, if you work to do it, over a sufficiently long period of time. by William E. Holler
  • You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time. by Abraham Lincoln
  • You can fool too many of the people too much of the time. by James Grover Thurber
  • You can fool too many of the people too much of the time. by James Thurber
  • You can forget a lot of things, but you cannot forget a womans name and claim to love her. by Real Live Preacher
  • You can get a lot farther with a kind word and a gun than a kind word alone. by Al Capone
  • You can get everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want. by Zig Ziglar
  • You can give without loving, but you can never love without giving. by Robert Louis Stephenson
  • You can give without loving, but you cannot love without giving. by Carmichael
  • You can go a long way with a smile. You can go a lot farther with a smile and a gun. by Al Capone
  • You can have anything you want if you want it desperately enough. You must want it with an inner exuberance that erupts through the skin and joins the energy that created the world. by Sheila Graham
  • You can have anything you want--if you want it badly enough. You can be anything you want to be, do anything you set out to accomplish if you hold to that desire with singleness of purpose. by William Adams
  • You can have brilliant ideas, but if you can't get them across, your ideas won't get you anywhere. by Lee Iacocca
  • You can have it all. You just can't have it all at once. by Oprah Winfrey
  • You can kidnap me and force me to be your watchdog if you want to. But I'm telling you, I will bark at any sound I hear and it will drive you crazy. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You can kill a man but you can't kill an idea. by Medgar Evers
  • You can know the name of a bird in all the languages of the world, but when you're finished, you'll know absolutely nothing whatever about the bird... So let's look at the bird and see what it's doing -- that's what counts. I learned very early the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing something. by Richard Feynman
  • You can learn little from victory. You can learn everything from defeat. by Christy Mathewson
  • You can learn many things from children. How much patience you have, for instance. by Franklin P. Jones
  • You can learn many things from children. How much patience you have, for instance. by Franklin P. Adams
  • You can live a lifetime and, at the end of it, know more about other people than you know about yourself. by Beryl Markham
  • You can live to be a hundred if you give up all the things that make you want to live to be a hundred. by Woody Allen
  • You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you. by Dale Carnegie
  • You can make those promises with just as much passion the second time around. Such is the regenerative power of the human heart. by Marion Wink
  • You can never get all the facts from just one newspaper, and unless you have all the facts, you cannot make proper judgements about what is going on. by Harry S Truman
  • You can never get enough of what you don't need to make you happy. by Eric Hoffer
  • You can never learn less, you can only learn more. by Richard Buckminster Fuller
  • You can never plan the future by the past. by Edmund Burke
  • You can never step into the same river for new waters are always flowing on to you. by Heraclitus
  • You can never underestimate the stupidity of the general public. by Scott Adams
  • You can no more win a war than you can win an earthquake. by Jeannette Rankin
  • You can not write in the chimney with charcoal. by Assyrian Proverb
  • You can observe a lot just by watching. by Yogi Berra
  • You can observe a lot just by watching. by Lawrence Peter Berra
  • You can often measure a person by the size of his dream. by Dr. Robert Schuller
  • You can only be young once. But you can always be immature. by Dave Barry
  • You can only cure retail but you can prevent wholesale. by Brock Chisholm
  • You can only find truth with logic if you have already found it without it. by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
  • You can only flap your arms so much before gravity catches up to you. by J & A Foundation
  • You can only perceive real beauty in a person as they get older. by Anouk Aimee
  • You can only protect your liberties in this world by protecting the other man's freedom. You can only be free if I am free. by Clarence Darrow
  • You can outdistance that which is running after you, but not what is running inside you. by Rwandan Proverb
  • You can pray for someone even if you dont think God exists. by Real Live Preacher
  • You can pretend to be serious you can't pretend to be witty. by Sacha Guitry
  • You can put wings on a pig, but you don't make it an eagle. by William Jefferson Clinton
  • You can say any fool thing to a dog, and the dog will give you this look that says, My God, you're RIGHT I NEVER would've thought of that' by Dave Barry
  • You can search throughout the entire universe for someone who is more deserving of your love and affection than you are yourself, and that person is not to be found anywhere. you yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe deserve your love and affection. by Buddha
  • You can sort of be married, you can sort of be divorced, you can sort of be living together, but you can't sort of have a baby. by David Shire
  • You can stand tall without standing on someone. You can be a victor without having victims by Harriet Woods
  • You can swim all day in the Sea of Knowledge and still come out completely dry. Most people do. by Norman Juster
  • You can take all the sincerity in Hollywood, place it in the navel of a firefly and still have room enough for three caraway seeds and a producer's heart. by Fred Allen
  • You can take from every experience what it has to offer you. And you cannot be defeated if you just keep taking one breath followed by another. by Oprah Winfrey
  • You can talk to a fade but a hook won't listen. by Lee Trevino
  • You can teach a student a lesson for a day but if you can teach him to learn by creating curiosity, he will continue the learning process as long as he lives. by Clay P. Bedford
  • You can tell a lot about a fellow's character by his way of eating jellybeans. by Ronald Reagan
  • You can tell the character of every man when you see how he receives praise. by Seneca
  • You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements. by Norman Douglas
  • You can tell the ideas of a nation by it's advertisements. by Douglas South Wind
  • You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a man is wise by his questions. by Naguib, Mahfouz
  • You can turn painful situations around through laughter. If you can find humor in anything --even poverty--you can survive it. by Bill Cosby
  • You can't be truly rude until you understand good manners. by Rita Mae Brown
  • You can't build a reputation on what you're going to do. by Henry Ford
  • You can't change who you are, but you can surely make the best of it. And if you've got a thought, act on it. by Emma Bunton
  • You can't choose the ways in which you'll be tested. by Robert J. Sawyer
  • You can't compare me to my father. Our similarities are different. by Dale Berra
  • You can't crush ideas by suppressing them. You can only crush them by ignoring them. by Ursula K. LeGuin
  • You can't deny laughter when it comes, it plops down in your favorite chair and stays as long as it wants. by Stephen King
  • You can't depend on your judgment when your imagination is out of focus. by Wallace Stevens
  • You can't divorce religious belief and public service ... I've never detected any conflict between God's will and my political duty. If you violate one, you violate the other. by James Earl Jimmy Carter, Jr.
  • You can't do anything about the length of your life, but you can do something about its width and depth. by Evan Esar
  • You can't dodge your responsibilities by saying they don't exist by Douglas Noel Adams
  • You can't ever be really free if you admire somebody too much. by Tove Jansson
  • You can't find any true closeness in Hollywood, because everybody does the fake closeness so well. by Carrie Fisher
  • You can't force anyone to love you or lend you money. by Jewish Proverb
  • You can't have a better tomorrow if you are thinking about yesterday all the time. by Charles Franklin Kettering
  • You can't have a light without a dark to stick it in. by Arlo Guthrie
  • You can't have everything. Where would you put it by Steven Wright
  • You can't help someone get up a hill without getting closer to the top yourself. by Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf
  • You can't hit a home run unless you step up to the plate. You can't catch a fish unless you put your line in the water. You can't reach your goals if you don't try. by Kathy Seligman
  • You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time by Bob Moawad
  • You can't love anyone until you understand that you can't love everyone. by Real Live Preacher
  • You can't make someone love you, and while you try, you lose the people who really care. by Unknown
  • You can't make up anything anymore. The world itself is a satire. All you're doing is recording it. by Art Buchwald
  • You can't make war in the Middle East without Egypt and you can't make peace without Syria. by Robert Francis Kennedy
  • You can't put a Band-Aid on every boo-boo you've made some just need time to heal... by Christina Montano
  • You can't put the toothpaste back in the tube. by H.R. Haldeman
  • You can't reach your goals if you don't try. by Kathy Seligman
  • You can't really be strong until you see a funny side to things. by Ken Kesey
  • You can't say that civilization don't advance, however, for in every war they kill you in a new way. by Will Rogers
  • You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom. by Malcolm X
  • You can't stay mad at somebody who makes you laugh. by Jay Leno
  • You can't tell me that cowboys, when they're branding cattle, don't sort of 'accidentally' brand each other every once in a while. It's their way of letting off stress. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You can't trust a promise someone makes while they're drunk, in love, hungry, or running for office. by Joe Moore
  • You can't try to do things you simply must do them. by Ray Douglas Bradbury
  • You can't turn back the clock. But you can wind it up again. by Bonnie Prudden
  • You can't wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club. by Jack London
  • You can't wake a person who is pretending to be asleep. Navajo by American Indian Proverb
  • You can't win at everything, but you can laugh at everything. by Robert Killinger
  • You cannot acquire experience by making experiments. You cannot create experience. You must undergo it. by Albert Camus
  • You cannot be mad at somebody who makes you laugh - it's as simple as that. by Jay Leno
  • You cannot be really first-rate at your work if your work is all you are. by Anna Quindlen
  • You cannot believe in honor until you have achieved it. Better keep yourself clean and bright you are the window through which you must see the world. by Sir Walter Besant
  • You cannot conceive the many without the one. by Plato
  • You cannot control what happens to you, but you can control your attitude toward what happens to you, and in that, you will be mastering change rather than allowing it to master you. by Brian Tracy
  • You cannot depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus. by Mark Twain
  • You cannot do a kindness too soon, for you never know how soon it will be too late. by Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • You cannot dream yourself into a character you must hammer and forge yourself one. by James A. Froude
  • You cannot eat your cake and have your cake. by Miguel de Cervantes
  • You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow by evading it today. by Abraham Lincoln
  • You cannot fly like an eagle with the wings of a wren. by William Henry Hudson
  • You cannot go around and keep score. If you keep score on the good things and the bad things, you'll find out that you're a very miserable person. God gave man the ability to forget, which is one of the greatest attributes you have. Because if you remember everything that's happened to you, you generally remember that which is the most unfortunate. by Hubert Humphrey
  • You cannot have a proud and chivalrous spirit if your conduct is mean and paltry for whatever a man's actions are, such must be his spirit. by Demosthenes
  • You cannot hold back a good laugh any more than you can the tide. Both are forces of nature. by William Rotsler
  • You cannot live a perfect day without doing something for someone who will never be able to repay you. by John Wooden
  • You cannot make a man by standing a sheep on its hind legs. But by standing a flock of sheep in that position you can make a crowd of men. by Max Beerbohm
  • You cannot play with the animal in you without becoming wholly animal, play with falsehood without forfeiting your right to truth, play with cruelty without losing your sensitivity of mind. He who wants to keep his garden tidy doesn't reserve a patch for by Dag Hammarskjld
  • You cannot run away from a weakness you must sometimes fight it out or perish. And if that be so, why not now, and where you stand by Robert Louis Stephenson
  • You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist. by Golda Meir
  • You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist. by Indira Nehru Gandhi
  • You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist. by Indira Gandhi
  • You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war. by Albert Einstein
  • You cannot slander human nature it is worse than words can paint it. by Charles Haddon Spurgeon
  • You cannot teach a crab to walk straight. by Aristophenes
  • You cannot teach a man anything. you can only help him to find it for himself. by Galileo Galilei
  • You cannot truly listen to anyone and do anything else at the same time. by M Scott Peck
  • You could not step twice into the same river for other waters are ever flowing on to you. by Heraclitus
  • You couldn't be that good and not know it, somewhere in your secret heart, however much you'd been abused into affecting public humility. by Lois McMaster Bujold
  • You couldn't even prove the White House staff sane beyond a reasonable doubt. by Ed Meese
  • You cram these words into mine ears against the stomach of my sense. by William Shakespeare
  • You defeated me But you won't defeat me again Because you have grown all you can grow.... but I am still growing (about Mount Everest) by Sir Edmund Hillary
  • You desire to know the art of living, my friend It is contained in one phrase make use of suffering. by Henri Frdric Amiel
  • You despise books you whose lives are absorbed in the vanities of ambition, the pursuit of pleasure or indolence but remember that all the known world, excepting only savage nations, is governed by books. by Voltaire
  • You did touch me but didn't feel my pain. by B. J. Gupta
  • You didn't have to say it was gone. It was gone before it got outta here. It was gonna that fast. by Jerry Coleman
  • You do ill if you praise, but worse if you censure, what you do not understand. by Leonardo DaVinci
  • You do not destroy an idea by killing people you replace it with a better one. by Edward Keating
  • You do not need to leave your room. Remain sitting at your table and listen. Do not even listen, simply wait, be quiet still and solitary. The world will freely offer itself to you to be unmasked, it has no choice, it will roll in ecstasy at your feet. by Franz Kafka
  • You do the policy, I'll do the politics. by J Danforth Quayle
  • You don't always win your battles, but it's good to know you fought. by Lauren Bacall
  • You don't choose your family. They are God's gift to you, as you are to them. by Desmond Tutu
  • You don't get anything clean without getting something else dirty. by Cecil Baxter
  • You don't get harmony when everybody sings the same note. by Doug Floyd
  • You don't get to choose how you're going to die, or when. You can decide how you're going to live now. by Joan Baez
  • You don't have to be old in America to say of a world you lived in, 'That world is gone.' by Peggy Noonan
  • You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. by Ray Douglas Bradbury
  • You don't have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces - just good food from fresh ingredients. by Julia Child
  • You don't have to deserve your mother's love. You have to deserve your father's. by Robert Frost
  • You don't have to die heaven and hell are in this world too. by Japanese Proverb
  • You don't have to fear defeat if you believe it may reveal powers that you didn't know you possessed. by Napolean Hill
  • You don't have to hold a position in order to be a leader. by Anthony D'Angelo
  • You don't have to suffer to be a poet adolescence is enough suffering for anyone. by John Ciardi
  • You don't just stumble into the future. You create your own future. by Roger Smith
  • You don't love a woman because she is beautiful, but she is beautiful because you love her. by Anon.
  • You don't marry one person you marry three . the person you think they are, the person they are, and the person they are going to become as the result of being married to you. by Richard Needham
  • You don't merely give over your creativity to making a film-you give over your life In theatre, by contrast, you live these two rather strange lives simultaneously you have no option but to confront the mould on last night's washing-up. by Daniel Day Lewis
  • You don't need any brains to listen to music. by Luciano Pavarotti
  • You don't pay back your parents. You can't. The debt you owe them gets collected by your children, who hand it down in turn. It's a sort of entailment. Or if you don't have children of the body, it's left as a debt to your common humanity. Or to your God, if you possess or are possessed by one. by Lois McMaster Bujold
  • You don't pay the price for success. You enjoy the price for success. by Zig Ziglar
  • You don't raise heroes, you raise sons. And if you treat them like sons, they'll turn out to be heroes, even if it's just in your own eyes. by Walter Schirra, Sr.
  • You don't seem to realize that a poor person who is unhappy is in a better position than a rich person who is unhappy. Because the poor person has hope. He thinks money would help. by Jean Kerr
  • You don't stop laughing because you grow old. You grow old because you stop laughing. by Michael Pritchard
  • You don't tell deliberate lies, but sometimes you have to be evasive. by Margaret Hilda Thatcher
  • You don't understand. I could have had class. I could have been a contender. by Budd Schulberg
  • You feel a little older in the morning. By noon I feel about 55. by Robert Joseph Bob Dole
  • You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, 'I have lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.' You must do the thing you think you cannot do. by Roosevelt, Eleanor
  • You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing which you think you cannot do. by Roosevelt, Eleanor
  • You get fifteen democrats in a room, and you get twenty opinions. by Senator Patrick Leahy
  • You get the best out of others when you give the best of yourself. by Harry Firestone
  • You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. by Kahlil Gibran
  • You got to be careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there. by Lawrence Peter Berra
  • You gotta have a dream. If you don't have a dream, how you gonna make a dream come true (South Pacific) by Oscar Hammerstein, II
  • You grow up the day you have your first real laugh at yourself. by Ethel Barrymore
  • You have a wonderful child. Then, when he's 13, gremlins carry him away and leave in his place a stranger who gives you not a moment's peace. by Jill Eikenberry
  • You have all the characteristics of a popular politician a horrible voice, bad breeding, and a vulgar manner. by Aristophanes
  • You have been my friend. That in itself is a tremendous thing. I wove my webs for you because I liked you. After all, what's a life, anyway We're born, we live a little while, we die. A spider's life can't help being something of a mess, with all this trapping and eating flies. By helping you, perhaps I was trying to lift up my life a trifle. Heaven knows anyone's life can stand a little of that. by E. B. White
  • You have given me a great responsibility to stay close to you, to be worthy of you and to exemplify what you are. by James Earl Jimmy Carter, Jr.
  • You have gone far and we are proud of you always. I know that you will keep your relationship with your Maker as it should be, for after all, that, as you must know, is the most important thing in this life. by Hannah Nixon
  • You have got to discover you, what you do, and trust it. by Barbra Streisand
  • You have not converted a man because you have silenced him. by John Morley
  • You have not lived a perfect day, even though you have earned your money, unless you have done something for someone who will never be able to repay you. by Ruth Smeltzer
  • You have played enough you have eaten and drunk enough. Now it is time for you to depart. by Horace
  • You have reached the pinnacle of success as soon as you become uninterested in money, compliments, or publicity. by Thomas Wolfe
  • You have spent many lives and much treasure to bring freedom to many lands that were reluctant to receive it. And here you have a people who won it by themselves and need only the help to preserve it. by Corazn Cojuangco Aquino
  • You have to allow a certain amount of time in which you are doing nothing in order to have things occur to you, to let your mind think. by Mortimer Adler
  • You have to be careful who you let define your good. by Lois McMaster Bujold
  • You have to be deviant if you're going to do anything new. by David Lee
  • You have to be yourself. Be very honest about who and what you are. And if people still like you, that's great. If they don't, that's their problem. by Sting
  • You have to choose where you look, and in making that choice you eliminate entire worlds. by Barbara Bloom
  • You have to eat the first piece of candy Before you can eat the whole bag. by Unknown
  • You have to expect things of yourself before you can do them. by Michael Jordan
  • You have to hang in there, because two or three years later, the gremlins will return your child, and he will be wonderful again. by Jill Eikenberry
  • You have to have confidence in your ability, and then be tough enough to follow through. by Rosalynn Carter
  • You have to kiss a lot of toads before you find a handsome prince. by American Proverb
  • You have to know how to accept rejection and reject acceptance. by Ray Bradbury
  • You have to laugh at yourself because you'd cry your eyes out if you didn't. by Emily Saliers
  • You have to lead people gently toward what they already know is right. by Philip
  • You have to learn that if you start making sure you feel good, everything will be okay. by Ruben Studdard
  • You have to leave the city of your comfort and go into the wilderness of your intuition. What you'll discover will be wonderful. What you'll discover will be yourself. by Alan Alda
  • You have to recognize when the right place and the right time fuse and take advantage of that opportunity. There are plenty of opportunities out there. You can't sit back and wait. by Ellen Metcalf
  • You have to sow before you can reap. You have to give before you can get. by Robert J. Collier
  • You have to walk carefully in the beginning of love the running across fields into your lover's arms can only come later when you're sure they won't laugh if you trip. by Jonathan Carroll
  • You just don't luck into things as much as you'd like to think you do. You build step by step, whether it's friendships or opportunities. by Barbara Bush
  • You know everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects. by Will Rogers
  • You know how to paint a room real fast Just put paint rollers on your feet and somehow figure out how to skate up the walls and across the ceiling. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know one thing that will really make a woman mad Just run up and kick her in the butt. (P.S. This also works with men.) by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know quite well, deep within you, that there is only a single magic, a single power, a single salvation...and that is called loving. Well, then, love your suffering. Do not resist it, do not flee from it. It is your aversion that hurts, nothing else. by Hermann Hesse
  • You know something that would really make me applaud A guy gets stuck in quicksand, then sinks, then suddenly comes shooting out, riding on water skis How do they do that by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know that being an American is more than a matter of where your parents came from. It is a belief that all men are created free and equal and that everyone deserves an even break. by Harry S Truman
  • You know that children are growing up when they start asking questions that have answers. by John J. Plomp
  • You know what charm is a way of getting the answer yes without having asked any clear question. by Albert Camus
  • You know what makes good hair for a snow man REAL hair. Don't ask me why, but it works. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know what would be the most terrifying thing that could ever happen to a flea Getting caught inside a watch somehow. You don't even care, do you. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know what would make a good story Something about a clown who makes people happy, but inside he's real sad. Also, he has severe diarrhea. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know what's interesting about Washington It's the kind of place where second-guessing has become second nature. by George W. Bush
  • You know what's probably a good thing to hang on your porch in the summertime, to keep mosquitoes away from you and your guests Just a big bag of blood. by Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
  • You know when you've read a good book when you turn the last page and feel a little as if you have lost a friend. by Paul Sweeney
  • You know why there's a Second Amendment In case the government fails to follow the first one. by Rush Limbaugh
  • You know, I think that if parents would spend less time worrying about what their kids watch on TV and more time worrying about what's going on in their kids' lives, this world would be a much better place. by Trey and Matt Stone Parker
  • You know, it was only a generation ago that actors couldn't be buried in the churchyard. by Ronald Reagan
  • You know, sometimes, when they say you're ahead of your time, it's just a polite way of saying you have a real bad sense of timing. by George Stanley McGovern
  • You know...that a blank wall is an apalling thing to look at. The wall of a museum -- a canvas -- a piece of film -- or a guy sitting in front of a typewriter. Then, you start out to do something -- that vague thing called creation. The beginning strikes awe within you. by Edward Steichen
  • You learn to speak by speaking, to study by studying, to run by running, to work by working and just so, you learn to love by loving. All those who think to learn in any other way deceive themselves. by Saint Francis de Sales
  • You learnt that, whatever you are doing in life, obstacles don't matter very much. Pain or other circumstances can be there, but if you want to do a job bad enough, you'll find a way to get it done. by Jack Youngblood
  • You live and learn. At any rate, you live. by Douglas Adams
  • You live and learn. At any rate, you live. by Douglas Noel Adams
  • You live, you learn You love, you learn You cry, you learn You lose, you learn You bleed, you learn You scream, you learn by Alanis Morissette
  • You look at where you're going and where you are and it never makes sense, but then you look back at where you've been and a pattern seems to emerge. And if you project forward from that pattern, then sometimes you can come up with something. by Robert M. Pirsig
  • You lose it if you talk about it. by Ernest Hemingway
  • You manage things you lead people. by Grace Murray Hopper
  • You may as well expect pears from an elm. by Miguel de Cervantes
  • You may be deceived if you trust too much, but you will live in torment if you do not trust enough. by Frank Crane
  • You may be deceived if you trust too much, but you will live in torment if you don't trust enough. by Frank H. Crane
  • You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don't try. by Beverly Sills
  • You may be sure that the Americans will commit all the stupidities they can think of, plus some that are beyond imagination. by Charles De Gaulle
  • You may deceive all the people part of the time, and part of the people all the time, but not all the people all the time. by Abraham Lincoln
  • You may delay, but time will not. by Benjamin Franklin
  • You may have a fresh start any moment you choose, for this thing that we call 'failure' is not the falling down, but the staying down. by Mary Pickford
  • You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it. by Margaret Hilda Thatcher
  • You may laugh at a friend's roof don't laugh at his sleeping accomodation. by Kenyan Proverb
  • You may live a long while with some people and be on friendly terms with them and never speak openly with them from your soul. by Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev
  • You may not be in a class by yourself, but it sure doesn't take long to call the roll. by Bum Philips
  • You may search my time-worn face, You'll find a merry eye that twinkles I am NOT an old lady Just a little girl with wrinkles. by Edythe E. Bregnard
  • You may share the labours of the great, but you may not share the spoil. by Aesop
  • You may use different sorts of sentences and illustrations before different sorts of audiences, but you don't -- if you are wise -- talk down to any audience. by Norman Thomas
  • You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far backward. by James Grover Thurber
  • You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far backward. by James Thurber
  • You miss 100 of the shots you never take. by Wayne Gretzky
  • You must accept that you might fail then, if you do your best and still don't win, at least you can be satisfied that you've tried. If you don't accept failure as a possibility, you don't set high goals, and you don't branch out, you don't try-you don't take the risk. by Rosalynn Carter
  • You must accept the truth from whatever source it comes. by Moses Ben Maimon Maimonides
  • You must be careful how you walk, and where you go, for there are those following you who will set their feet where yours are set. by Robert E. Lee
  • You must be still in the midst of activity, and be vibrantly alive in repose. by Indira Gandhi
  • You must be the change you wish to see in the world. by Mahatma Gandhi
  • You must be the change you wish to see in the world. by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
  • You must do the things you think you cannot do. by Roosevelt, Eleanor
  • You must first have a lot of patience to learn to have patience. by Stanislaw Lec
  • You must give some time to your fellow men. Even if it's a little thing, do something for others - something for which you get no pay but the privilege of doing it. by Albert Schweitzer
  • You must have a room, or a certain hour or so a day, where you don't know what was in the newspapers that morning... a place where you can simply experience and bring forth what you are and what you might be. by Joseph Campbell
  • You must have been warned against letting the golden hours slip by. Yes, but some of them are golden only because we let them slip by. by James Barrie
  • You must keep sending work out you must never let a manuscript do nothing but eat its head off in a drawer. You send that work out again and again, while you're working on another one. If you have talent, you will receive some measure of success - but only if you persist. by Isaac Asimov
  • You must learn day by day, year by year to broaden your horizon. The more things you love, the more you are interested in, the more you enjoy, the more you are indignant about, the more you have left when anything happens. by Ethel Barrymore
  • You must learn from your past mistakes, but not lean on your past successes. by Denis Watley
  • You must learn to face the fact, always, that you choose to do what you do, and that everything you do affects not only you but others. by Holly Lisle
  • You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment. Fools stand on their island opportunities and look toward another land. There is no other land, this is no other life but this. by Henry David Thoreau
  • You must live with people to know their problems, and live with God in order to solve them. by P. T. Forsyth
  • You must lose a fly to catch a trout. by George Herbert
  • You must not for one instant give up the effort to build new lives for yourselves. Creativity means to push open the heavy, groaning doorway to life. This is not an easy struggle. Indeed, it may be the most difficult task in the world, for opening the door to your own life is, in the end, more difficult than opening the doors to the mysteries of the universe. by Daisaku Ikeda
  • You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty. by Mahatma Gandhi
  • You must not pity me because my sixtieth year finds me still astonished. To be astonished is one of the surest ways of not growing old too quickly. by Sidonie Gabrielle Colette
  • You must not think me necessarily foolish because I am facetious, nor will I consider you necessarily wise because you are grave. by Sydney Smith
  • You must pray that the way be long, full of adventures and experiences. by Constantine Peter Cavafy
  • You must pursue this investigation of Watergate even if it leads to the president. I'm innocent. You've got to believe I'm innocent. If you don't, take my job. by Richard Milhous Nixon
  • You must work--- we must all work To make the world worthy of its children. by Pablo Casals
  • You must write for children in the same way as you do for adults, only better. by Maxim Gorky
  • You need chaos in your soul to give birth to a dancing star. by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
  • You need more fact in the dangerous art of giving presents than in any other social action. by William Bolitho
  • You need only claim the event of your life to make yourself yours. When you truly possess all you have been and done, which may take some time, you are fierce with reality. by Florida Scott-Maxwell
  • You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating the very phrases which our founding fathers used in the struggle for independence. by Charles Austin Beard
  • You need people who can walk their companies into the future rather than back them into the future. by Warren Bennis
  • You need to know that a member of Congress who refuses to allow the minimum wage to come up for a vote made more money during last year's one-month government shutdown than a minimum wage worker makes in an entire year. by William Jefferson Clinton
  • You never conquer a mountain. Mountains can't be conquered you conquer yourself--your hopes, your fears. by Jim Whitaker
  • You never find yourself until you face the truth. by Pearl Bailey
  • You never have a chance for your luck to operate if you don't take risks. by Unknown
  • You never know till you try to reach them how accessible men are but you must approach each man by the right door. by Henry Ward Beecher
  • You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. by James Agee
  • You never know what's hit you. A gunshot is the perfect way. (When asked how he would choose to die) by John Fitzgerald Kennedy
  • You never lose by loving. You always lose by holding back. by Barbara DeAngelis
  • You never really know someone until you have been their friend. by Walker Best
  • You never saw a fish on the wall with its mouth shut. by Sally Berger
  • You never see animals going through the absurd and often horrible fooleries of magic and religion. Only man behaves with such gratuitous folly. It is the price he has to pay for being intelligent but now, as yet, intelligent enough. by Aldous Huxley
  • You often get a better hold upon a problem by going away from it for a time and dismissing it from your mind altogether. by Frank H. Crane
  • You only have power over people so long as you don't take everything away from them. But when you've robbed a man of everything he's no longer in your power -- he's free again. by Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn
  • You only live once - but if you work it right, once is enough. by Joe E. Lewis
  • You only live once, but if you live right, once is enough. by Unknown
  • You ought not to practice childish ways, since you are no longer that age. by Homer
  • You probably wouldn't worry about what people think of you if you could know how seldom they do. by Olin Miller
  • You progress not through improving what has been done, but reaching toward what has yet to be done. by Kahlil Gibran
  • You really have to experience the feeling of being with the president in the oval office. ... It's a disease I came to call Ovalitis. by John Dean
  • You say that love is nonsense....I tell you it is no such thing. For weeks and months it is a steady physical pain, an ache about the heart, never leaving one, by night or by day a long strain on one's nerves like toothache or rheumatism, not intolerable at any one instant, but exhausting by its steady drain on the strength. by Henry Adams
  • You see but your shadow when you turn your back to the sun. by Kahlil Gibran
  • You see few people here in America who really care very much about living a Christian life in a democratic world. by Clare Booth Luce
  • You see these bums, you know, blowing up campuses ... storming around about this issue. (On student protesters against Vietnam War) by Richard Milhous Nixon
  • You see things and you say 'Why' But I dream things that never were and I say 'Why not' by Luigi Pirandello
  • You see things and you say, 'Why' But I dream things that never were and I say, Why not by George Bernard Shaw
  • You see things as they are and ask, 'Why' I dream things as they never were and ask, 'Why not' by George Bernard Shaw
  • You see through love, and that deludes your sight, As what is straight seems crooked through the water. by John Dryden
  • You see what power is - holding someone else's fear in your hand and showing it to them by Amy Tan
  • You see, but you do not observe. by Conan Doyle
  • You see, in life, lots of people know what to do, but few people actually do what they know. Knowing is not enough You must take action. by Anthony Robbins
  • You see, wire telegraph is a kind of a very, very long cat. You pull his tail in New York and his head is meowing in Los Angeles. Do you understand this And radio operates exactly the same way you send signals here, they receive them there. The only difference is that there is no cat. by Albert Einstein
  • You shall go with me, newly-married bride,And gaze upon a merrier multitude.White-armed Nuala, Aengus of the Birds,Feachra of the hurtling form, and himWho is the ruler of the Western Host,Finvara, and their Land of Heart's Desire.Where beauty has no ebb, decay no flood,But joy is wisdom, time an endless song. by William Butler Yeats
  • You shall judge a man by his foes as well as by his friends. by Joseph Conrad
  • You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad. by Aldous Huxley
  • You should always go to other people's funerals, otherwise, they won't come to yours. by Lawrence Peter Berra
  • You should enter a ballpark the way you enter a church. by Bill Lee
  • You should go to a pear tree for pears, not to an elm. by Publilius Syrus
  • You should hammer your iron when it is glowing hot. by Publilius Syrus
  • You should never bet against anything in science at odds of more than about 10-12 to 1. by Ernest Rutherford
  • You should not live one way in private, another in public. by Publilius Syrus
  • You should pray for a sound mind in a sound body. by Juvenal
  • You should respect each other and refrain from disputes you should not, like water and oil, repel each other, but should, like milk and water, mingle together. by Buddha
  • You shouldn't say it is not good. You should say, you do not like it and then, you know, you're perfectly safe. by James Abbott McNeill Whistler
  • You signed a contract. But much more important than that, you gave your word. And I intend to hold you to that word within the bounds of the law. If necessary, without the bounds of the law. by John and Brand, Josh Falsey
  • You simply *must* stop taking advice from other people. by Melissa Timberman
  • You sort of start thinking anything's possible if you've got enough nerve. by J. K. Rowling
  • You spend all your life trying to do something they put people in asylums for. by Jane Fonda
  • You start out giving your hat, then you give your coat, then your shirt, then your skin and finally your soul. by Charles De Gaulle
  • You teach best what you most need to learn. by Richard Bach
  • You think a man is a man cause he wears team colors and guzzles beer in front of the tube Can't you see, boys, the sands of time are dribbling through the hourglass by Robin Green
  • You think America is the biggest place on Earth, but it's not. The view from Mir put everything in perspective. by Shannon Lucid
  • You think Nature is some Disney movie Nature is a killer. Nature is a bitch. It's feeding time out there 24 hours a day, every step that you take is a gamble with death. If it isn't getting hit with lightning today, it's an earthquake tomorrow or some deer tick carrying Lime disease. Either way, you're ending up on the wrong end of the food chain. by Jeff Melvoin
  • You till be glad to know the President is practicing safe snacks. in reference to her husband's fainting spell caused by a pretzel by Laura Bush
  • You traverse the world in search of happiness, which is within the reach of every man. A contented mind confers it on all. by Horace
  • You try to give away what you want yourself. by Lois McMaster Bujold
  • You wake me up early in the morning to tell me I am right Please wait until I am wrong. by Johann von Neumann
  • You wake up in the morning, and your purse is magically filled with twenty-four hours of unmanufactured tissue of the universe of your life It is yours. It is the most precious of possessions. No one can take it from you. And no one receives either more or less than you receive. by Thomas Arnold Bennett
  • You were a stranger to sorrow therefore Fate has cursed you. by Euripides
  • You will be better advised to watch what we do instead of what we say. by John N. Mitchell
  • You will be pleased to know I stand obediently for the national anthem, though of course I would defend your right to remain seated should you so decide. by Ira Glasser
  • You will certainly not be able to take the lead in all things yourself, for to one man a god has given deeds of war, and to another the dance, to another lyre and song, and in another wide-sounding Zeus puts a good mind. by Homer
  • You will do foolish things, but do them with enthusiasm. by Sidonie Gabrielle Colette
  • You will do foolish things, but do them with enthusiasm. by Colette
  • You will find as you look back upon your life that the moments when you have truly lived are the moments when you have done things in the spirit of love. by Henry Drummond
  • You will find it a very good practice always to verify your references sir. by Martin Routh
  • You will find rest from vain fancies if you perform every act in life as though it were your last. by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
  • You will find something more in woods than in books. Trees and stones will teach you that which you can never learn from masters. by Saint Bernard
  • You will find that the mere resolve not to be useless, and the honest desire to help other people, will, in the quickest and delicatest ways, improve yourself. by John Ruskin
  • You will find that the State is the kind of organization which, though it does big things badly, does small things badly, too. by John Kenneth Galbraith
  • You will never find time for anything. If you want time you must make it. by Charles Roberts Buxton
  • You will never stub your toe standing still. The faster you go, the more chance there is of stubbing your toe, but the more chance you have of getting somewhere. by Charles Franklin Kettering
  • You won't be happy with more until you're happy with what you've got. by Angel Blessing
  • You write in order to change the world, knowing perfectly well that you probably can't, but also knowing that literature is indispensable to the world... The world changes according to the way people see it, and if you alter, even by a millimeter, the way ... people look at reality, then you can change it. by James Arthur Baldwin
  • You'll never have a quiet world till you knock the patriotism out of the human race. by George Bernard Shaw
  • You're alive. Do something. The directive in life, the moral imperative was so uncomplicated. It could be expressed in single words, not complete sentences. It sounded like this Look. Listen. Choose. Act. by Barbara Hall
  • You're born naked, the rest is drag. by Ru Paul
  • You're confusing product with process. Most people, when they criticize, whether they like it or hate it, they're talking about product. That's not art, that's the result of art. Art, to whatever degree we can get a handle on (I'm not sure that we really can) is a process. It begins in the heart and the mind with the eyes and hands. by Jeff Melvoin
  • You're dealing with the demon of external validation. You can't beat external validation. You want to know why Because it feels sooo good. by Barbara Hall
  • You're going to have to find out where you want to go. And then you've got to start going there. But immediately. You can't afford to lose a minute. by J. D. Salinger
  • You're never as good as everyone tells you when you win, and you're never as bad as they say when you lose. by Lou Holtz
  • You're never too old to become younger. by Mae West
  • You're not the only one who's made mistakes, but they're the only things that you can truly call your own. by Billy Joel
  • You're not to be so blind with patriotism that you can't face reality. Wrong is wrong, no matter who does it or says it. by Malcolm X
  • You're only as good as the people you hire. by Ray Kroc
  • You're only given a little spark of madness. You mustn't lose it. by Robin Williams
  • You're searching, Joe, for things that don't exist I mean beginnings. Ends and beginnings-there are no such things. by Robert Frost
  • You're so goddamned concerned about the civilians, and I don't give a damn. to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger on civilian casualties in Vietnam by Richard Milhous Nixon
  • You're the one I love to love, hate to hate, love to hate and hate to love. by Unknown
  • You've achieved success in your field when you don't know whether what you're doing is work or play. by Warren Beatty
  • You've been listening to the adagio from Beethoven's 7th Symphony. I think Ludwig pretty much summed up death in this one. You know, he had lost just about all his hearing when he wrote it, and I've often wondered if that didn't help him tune into the final silence of the great beyond. by Andrew Schneider
  • You've got to be original, because if you're like someone else, what do they need you for by Bernadette Peters
  • You've got to do your own growing, no matter how tall your grandfather was. by Irish Proverb
  • You've got to have something to eat and a little love in your life before you can hold still for any damn body's sermon on how to behave. by Billie Holiday
  • You've got to love what you're doing. If you love it, you can overcome any handicap or the soreness or all the aches and pains, and continue to play for a long, long time. by Gordie Howe
  • You've got to make a conscious choice every day to shed the old - whatever 'the old' means for you. by Sarah Ban Breathnach
  • You've got to take the bitter with the sour. by Samuel Goldwyn
  • You've got to take the initiative and play your game. In a decisive set, confidence is the difference. by Chris Marie Evert
  • You've got your phenomenon on one hand. Concrete and knowable. On the other hand you've got the incomprehensible. You call it God, but to me, God or no, it remains just that, the unknowable. by Robin Green
  • You've never been lost until you've been lost at Mach 3. by Paul Crickmore
  • You, the Spirit of the Settlement ... Not understand that America is God's crucible, the great melting-pot where all the races of Europe are melting and re-forming Here, you stand, good folk, think I, when I see them at Ellis Island, here you stand in your fifty groups, with your fifty languages and histories, and your fifty blood hatreds and rivalries... by Israel Zangwill
  • You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection. by Buddha
  • Young leading cadres have risen up by helicopter. They should really rise step by step. by Deng Xiaoping
  • Young men think old men are fools but old men know young men are fools. by George Chapman
  • Young men think old men are fools but old men know young men are fools. by Truman Capote
  • Young men's minds are always changeable, but when an old man is concerned in a matter, he looks both before and after. by Homer
  • Young men, hear an old man to whom old men hearkened when he was young. by Caesar Augustus
  • Young people are in a condition like permanent intoxication, because youth is sweet and they are growing. by Aristotle
  • Young people have an almost biological destiny to be hopeful. by Marshall Ganz
  • Young people, nowadays, imagine that money is everything and when they grow older, they know it. by Oscar Fingall O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
  • Young pigs grunt as as old pigs grunted before them. by Danish proverb
  • Your aspirations are your possibilities. by Samuel Johnson
  • Your body is precious. It is our vehicle for awakening. Treat it with care. by Buddha
  • Your brain can only absorb what your ass can endure. by P. Dan Wiwchar
  • Your central self is totally untouched By grief, confusion, desperation. by Vernon Howard
  • Your chances of success are directly proportional to the degree of pleasure you desire from what you do. If you are in a job you hate, face the fact squarely and get out. by Michael Korda
  • Your children are not your children. They are the sons and daughters of Life's longing for itself... You may house their bodies but not their souls, for their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. by Kahlil Gibran
  • Your children need your presence more than your presents. by Jesse Louis Jackson
  • Your confidence in the people, and your doubt about them, are closely related to your self-confidence and your self-doubt. by Kahlil Gibran
  • Your decision to be, have and do something out of ordinary entails facing difficulties that are out of the ordinary as well. Sometimes your greatest asset is simply your ability to stay with it longer than anyone else. by Brian Tracy
  • Your descendants shall gather your fruits. by Virgil
  • Your enemy is never a villain in his own eyes. Keep this in mind, it may offer a way to make him your friend. If not, you can kill him without hate--and quickly. by Robert Anson Heinlein
  • Your face is a book, where men may read strange matters. by William Shakespeare
  • Your first appearance, he said to me, is the gauge by which you will be measured try to manage that you may go beyond yourself in after times, but beware of ever doing less. by Jean Jacques Rousseau
  • Your friend has a friend don't tell him. by Jewish Proverb
  • Your friend is the man who knows all about you, and still likes you. by Thomas Fuller
  • Your friends praise your abilities to the skies, submit to you in argument, and seem to have the greatest deference for you but, though they may ask it, you never find them following your advice upon their own affairs nor allowing you to manage your own, without thinking that you should follow theirs. Thus, in fact, they all think themselves wiser than you, whatever they may say. by Lord Melbourne
  • Your grandchildren will likely find it incredible - or even sinful - that you burned up a gallon of gasoline to fetch a pack of cigarettes by Dr. Paul MacCready, Jr.
  • Your ignorance, cramps my conversation. by Sir Anthony Hawkins
  • Your intellect may be confused, but your emotions will never lie to you. by Roger
  • Your joy is your sorrow unmasked. And the self-same well from which your laughter rises was often-times filled with your tears. by Rene Descartes
  • Your life and my life flow into each other as wave flows into wave, and unless there is peace and joy and freedom for you, there can be no real peace or joy or freedom for me. To see reality--not as we expect it to be but as it is--is to see that unless we live for each other and in and through each other, we do not really live very satisfactorily that there can really be life only where there really is, in just this sense, love. by Frederick Buechner
  • Your life is the sum result of all the choices you make, both consciously and unconsciously. If you can control the process of choosing, you can take control of all aspects of your life. You can find the freedom that comes from being in charge of yourself. by Robert F. Bennett
  • Your life story would not make a good book. Don't even try. by Fran Lebowitz
  • Your love will last forever, If you do not expect her to walk the same path, But you look in the same direction. by T. Clay Sanders
  • Your manuscript is both good and original, but the part that is good is not original and the part that is original is not good. by Samuel Johnson
  • Your mental attitude is someting you can control outright and you must use self-discipline until you create a Positive Mental Attitude -- your mental attitude attracts to you everything that makes you what you are. by Napolean Hill
  • Your mind must always go, even while you're shaking hands and going through all the maneuvers. I developed the ability long ago to do one thing while thinking about another. by Richard Milhous Nixon
  • Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning. by Bill Gates
  • Your only obligation in any lifetime is to be true to yourself. by Richard Bach
  • Your pain is the breaking of the shell that encloses your understanding. Even as the stone of the fruit must break, that its heart may stand in the sun, so must you know pain. by Kahlil Gibran
  • Your philosophy determines whether you will go for the diciplines or continue the errors. by Unknown
  • Your preoccupation should be on doing what you do as well as you can. What your co-workers say about you, what your opponent is doing -- that doesn't matter. by Jay Leno
  • Your sacred space is where you can find yourself again and again. by Joseph Campbell
  • Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it. by Jalal ud-Din Rumi
  • Your theory is crazy, but it's not crazy enough to be true. by Niels Bohr
  • Your true value depends entirely on what you are compared with. by Bob Wells
  • Your very silence shows you agree. by Euripides
  • Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart ... Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens. by Carl Gustav Jung
  • Your work is first, learning is first, winning is everything because without it there is nothing. by Orson Scott Card
  • Youth cannot know how age thinks and feels. But old men are guilty if they forget what it was to be young. by J. K. Rowling
  • Youth is a blunder Manhood a struggle Old Age a regret. by Benjamin Disraeli
  • Youth is a wonderful thing what a crime to waste it on children. by Sir Walter Besant
  • Youth is a wonderful thing. What a crime to waste it on children. by George Bernard Shaw
  • Youth is not a time of life, it is a state of mind. You are as old as your doubt, your fear, your despair. The way to keep young is to keep your faith young. Keep your self confidence young. Keep your hope young. by Luella F. Phean
  • Youth is not enough. And love is not enough. And success is not enough. And, if we could achieve it, enough would not be enough. by Mignon McLaughlin
  • Youth is something very new twenty years ago no one mentioned it. by Coco Chanel
  • Youth is the best time to be rich and the best time to be poor. by Euripides
  • Youth isn't always all it's touted to be. by Lawana Blackwell
  • Youth would be an ideal state if it came a little later in life. by Herbert Henry Asquith
  • Youth, large, lusty, loving- Youth, full of grace, force, fascination. Do you know that Old Age may come after you with equal grace, force, fascination by Mark Twain
  • Youth, which is forgiven everything, forgives itself nothing age, which forgives itself everything, is forgiven nothing. by George Bernard Shaw