Searching for 'seems' quotes
| The beautiful seems right by force of beauty, and the feeble wrong because of weakness. |
| by Elizabeth B. Browning |
| Bores bore each other too; but it never seems to teach them anything. |
| by Don Marquis |
| The world is seldom what it seems; to man, who dimly sees, realities appear as dreams, and dreams realities. |
| by Thomas Moore |
| Experience seems to most of us to lead to conclusions, but empiricism has sworn never to draw them. |
| by George Santayana |
| How little do they see what really is, who frame their hasty judgment upon that which seems. |
| by Robert Southey |
| The future ... seems to me no unified dream but a mince pie, long in the baking, never quite done. |
| by E.B. White |
| The actual tragedies of life bear no relation to one's preconceived ideas. In the event, one is always bewildered by their simplicity, their grandeur of design, and by that element of the bizzare which seems inherent in them. |
| by Jean Cocteau |
| We must, however, acknowledge, as it seems to me, that man with all his noble qualities...still bears in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowly origin. |
| by Charles Darwin |
| It seems to me we can never give up longing and wishing while we are thoroughly alive. There are certain things we feel to be beautiful and good, and we must hunger after them. |
| by George Eliot |
| It seems to me we can never give up longing and wishing while we are thoroughly alive. There are certain things we feel to be beautiful and good, and we must hunger after them. |
| by George Eliot |
| Love seems the swiftest, but it is the slowest of all growths. No man or woman really knows what perfect love is until they have been married a quarter of a century. |
| by Mark Twain |
| History seems to us an arena of instincts and fashions, of appetite, avarice, and craving for power, of blood lust, violence, destruction, and wars, of ambitious ministers, venal generals, bombarded cities, and we too easily forget that this is only one of its many aspects. |
| by Hermann Hesse |
| History shows that the human mind, fed by constant accessions of knowledge, periodically grows too large for its theoretical coverings, and bursts them asunder to appear in new habiliments, as the feeding and growing grub, at intervals, casts its too narrow skin and assumes another.... Truly the imago state of Man seems to be terribly distant, but every moult is a step gained. |
| by Charles Darwin |
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