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300-an Kata Mutiara Motivasi Hidup.

1. A day will never be anymore than what you make of it. Josh S. Hinds
2. A friend is one who knows you and loves you just the same. Elbert Hubbard
3. A good head and a good heart are always a formidable ombination. !elson "andela.
#. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single ste$. %onfuius
&. A $erson who aims at nothing is sure to hit it. Anonymous
'. A thief believes everybody steals. E.(. Howe
). Ae$t everything about yourself * + mean everything, -ou are you and that is the beginning and the
end * no a$ologies, no regrets. %lark "oustakas
.. Ah, but a man/s reah should e0eed his gras$, or what/s a heaven for1 2obert 3rowning
4. All life is an e0$eriment. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
15. All suessful $eo$le men and women are big dreamers. 6hey imagine what their future ould be,
ideal in every res$et, and then they work every day toward their distant vision, that goal or $ur$ose.
3rian 6ray
11. All that we are is the result of what we have thought. 3uddha
12. All the breaks you need in life wait within your imagination, +magination is the worksho$ of your
mind, a$able of turning mind energy into aom$lishment and wealth. !a$oleon Hill
13. Always bear in mind that your own resolution to sueed is more im$ortant than any one thing.
Abraham 7inoln
1#. An insinere and evil friend is more to be feared than a wild beast8 a wild beast may wound your body,
but an evil friend will wound your mind. 3uddha
1&. Are you bored with life1 6hen throw yourself into some work you believe in with all your heart, live
for it, die for it, and you will find ha$$iness that you had thought ould never be yours. 9ale %arnegie
1'. As + grow older, + $ay less attention to what men say. + just wath what they do. Andrew %arnegie
1). Assum$tions allow the best in life to $ass you by. John Sales
1.. At least three times every day take a moment and ask yourself what is really im$ortant. Have the
wisdom and the ourage to build your life around your answer. 7ee Jam$olsky.
14. 3e true to your work, your word, and your friend. Henry 9avid 6horeau
25. %herish your visions and your dreams, as they are the hildren of your soul, the blue$rints of your
ultimate ahievements. !a$oleon Hill
21. %irumstane does not make the man8 it reveals him to himself. James Allen
22. %onfidene is a habit that an be develo$ed by ating as if you already had the onfidene you desire
to have. 3rian 6ray
23. %onsisteny is the last resort of the unimaginative. :sar (ilde
2#. %onsult not your fears but your ho$es and your dreams. 6hink not about your frustrations, but about
your unfulfilled $otential. %onern yourself not with what you tried and failed in, but with what it is
still $ossible for you to do. ;o$e John <<+++
2&. %ourage is not the absene of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more im$ortant than
fear. Ambrose 2edmoon
2'. 9arkness annot drive out darkness8 only light an do that. Hate annot drive out hate8 only love an
do that. "artin 7uther =ing, Jr.
2). 9eath is not the biggest fear we have8 our biggest fear is taking the risk to be alive > the risk to be
alive and e0$ress what we really are. 9on "iguel 2ui?
2.. 9esire is the starting $oint of all ahievement, not a ho$e, not a wish, but a keen $ulsating desire,
whih transends everything. !a$oleon Hill
24. 9iamonds are nothing more than hunks of oal that stuk to their jobs. "alolm @orbes
35. 9o not dwell in the $ast, do not dream of the future, onentrate the mind on the $resent moment.
3uddha
31. 9o not go where the $ath may lead, go instead where there is no $ath and leave a trail. 2al$h (aldo
Emerson
32. 9o not let what you annot do interfere with what you an do. John (ooden
33. 9o not seek to follow in the footste$s of the wise. Seek what they sought. 3asho
3#. 9o the things you know, and you shall learn the truth you need to know. Aeorge "adonald
3&. 9o what you an, with what you have, where you are. 6heodore 2oosevelt
3'. 9on/t be afraid to take a big ste$. -ou an/t ross a hasm in two small jum$s. 9avid 7loyd Aeorge
3). 9on/t wait for your shi$ to ome in, swim out to it. Anon
3.. 9ream lofty dreams, and as you dream, so you shall beome. -our vision is the $romise of what you
shall one day be8 your ideal is the $ro$hey of what you shall at last unveil. James Allen
34. 9reams are the touhstones of our harater. Henry 9avid 6horeau
#5. Every e0it is an entry somewhere. 6om Sto$$ard.
#1. Every human has four endowmentsBselfBawareness, onsiene, inde$endent will and reative
imagination. 6hese give us the ultimate human freedomC 6he $ower to hoose, to res$ond, to hange.
Ste$hen %ovey
#2. Every $roblem has a gift for you in its hands. 2ihard 3ah
#3. Everything has been figured out, e0e$t how to live. JeanB;aul Sartre
##. Everything that is ha$$ening at this moment is a result of the hoies you/ve made in the $ast. 9ee$ak
%ho$ra
#&. @ailure is sim$ly the o$$ortunity to begin again, this time more intelligently. Henry @ord
#'. @all seven times, stand u$ eight. Ja$anese ;roverb
#). @ear is that little darkroom where negatives are develo$ed. "ihael ;rithard
#.. @ear less, ho$e more8 (hine less, breathe more8 6alk less, say more8 Hate less, love more8 And all
good things are yours. Swedish ;roverb
#4. @inish eah day and be done with it. -ou have done what you ould8 some blunders and absurdities
have re$t in8 forget them as soon as you an. 6omorrow is a new day8 you shall begin it serenely and
with too high a s$irit to be enumbered with your old nonsense. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
&5. @or true suess ask yourself these four DuestionsE (hy1 (hy not1 (hy not me1 (hy not now1
James Allen
&1. @ortune favors the brave. ;ublius 6erene
&2. @reedom is that instant between when someone tells you to do something and when deide how to
res$ond. Jeffery 3orenstein
&3. @riends are treasures. Horae 3runs
&#. Ao onfidently in the diretion of your dreams. 7ive the life you/ve imagined. Henry 9avid 6horeau
&&. Areat s$irits have always enountered violent o$$osition from mediore minds. Albert Einstein
&'. He is able who thinks he is able. 3uddha.
&). He who angers you onDuers you. Eli?abeth =enny
&.. He who ontrols others may be $owerful, but he who has mastered himself is mightier still. 7aoB6?u
&4. He who dies with the most toys is, nonetheless, still dead. Fnknown
'5. He who knows others is wise. He who knows himself is enlightened. Anonymous
'1. Here is the test to find whether your mission on Earth is finishedE if you/re alive, it isn/t. 2ihard 3ah
'2. + have never heard anything about the resolutions of the a$ostles, but a good deal about their ats.
Horae "ann
'3. + hear and + forget, + see and + remember. + do and + understand. %hinese ;roverb
'#. + know of no more enouraging fat than the unDuestionable ability of man to elevate his life by
onsious endeavor. Henry 9avid 6horeau
'&. + learned that it is the weak who are ruel, and that gentleness is to be e0$eted only from the strong.
7eo 2osten.
''. +f a man does only what is reDuired of him, he is a slave. +f a man does more than is reDuired of him,
he is a free man. %hinese ;roverb
'). +f you always $ut limits on everything you do, $hysial or anything else. +t will s$read into your work
and into your life. 6here are no limits. 6here are only $lateaus, and you must not stay there, you must
go beyond them. 3rue 7ee
'.. +f you believe in what you are doing, then let nothing hold you u$ in your work. "uh of the best
work of the world has been done against seeming im$ossibilities. 9ale %arnegie
'4. +f you deliberately $lan on being less than you are a$able of being, then + warn you that you/ll be
unha$$y for the rest of your life. Abraham H. "aslow
)5. +f you don/t like something, hange it. +f you an/t hange it, hange your attitude. 9on/t om$lain.
"aya Angelou
)1. +f you don/t risk anything, then you risk even more. Eria Jong
)2. +f you find it in your heart to are for somebody else, you will have sueeded. "aya Angelou
)3. +f you love something, let it go. +f it omes bak it/s yours. +f it doesn/t, it never really was in the first
$lae. Fnknown
)#. +f you want rainbows, you have to $ut u$ with the rain. 9olly ;arton
)&. +magination is more im$ortant than knowledge. =nowledge is limited. +magination enirles the
world. Albert Einstein
)'. +m$ossible is a word to be found only in the ditionary of fools. !a$oleon 3ona$arte
)). +n three words + an sum u$ everything +/ve learned about lifeE it goes on. 2obert @rost
).. +ssue a blanket $ardon. @orgive everyone who has ever hurt you in any way. @orgiveness is a $erfetly
selfish at. +t sets you free from the $ast. 3rian 6ray
)4. +t is a man/s own mind, not his enemy or foe, that lures him to evil ways. 3uddha
.5. +t is better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for what you are not. Andre Aide
.1. +t is better to debate a Duestion without settling it than to settle a Duestion without debating it. Jese$h
Joubert.
.2. +t is good to have an end to journey toward, but it is the journey that matters in the end. Frsula =.
7eAuin.
.3. +t is hard to fail, but it is worse never to have tried to sueed. 6heodore 2oosevelt
.#. +t is not beause things are diffiult that we do not dare, it is beause we do not dare that they are
diffiult. Senea
.&. +t is not enough to have a good mind8 the main thing is to use it well. 2ene 9esartes
.'. +t is not for him to $ride himself who loveth his own ountry, but rather for him who loveth the whole
world. 6he earth is but one ountry and mankind its iti?ens. 3aha/uGllah
.). +t is not length of life, but de$th of life. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
... +t is one of the most beautiful om$ensations of life, that no man an sinerely try to hel$ another
without hel$ing himself. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
.4. +t is only with the heart that one an see rightly8 what is essential is invisible to the eye. Antoine 9e
SaintBE0u$ery.
45. +t takes a great man to be a good listener. %alvin %oolidge
41. +t was a high ounsel that + one heard given to a young $erson, HAlways do what you are afraid to do.
2al$h (aldo Emerson
42. +t was when + found out + ould make mistakes that + knew + was on to something. :rnette %oleman
43. +t/s not who you are that holds you bak, it/s who you think you/re not. Fnknown
4#. +t/s always too early to Duit. !orman Iinent ;earle
4&. +t/s not the situation C +t/s your reation to the situation 2obert %onklin
4'. +/ve ome to believe that all my $ast failure and frustrations were atually laying the foundation for the
understandings that have reated the new level of living + now enjoy. Anthony 2obbins
4). Just when you think that a $erson is just a bakdro$ for the rest of the universe, wath them and see
that they laugh, they ry, they tell jokes C they/re just friends waiting to be made. Jeffery 3orenstein
4.. =ee$ away from $eo$le who try to belittle your ambitions. Small $eo$le always do that, but the really
great make you feel that you, too, an beome great. "ark 6wain
44. =now the true value of time8 snath, sei?e, and enjoy every moment of it. !o idleness, no delay, no
$rorastination8 never $ut off till tomorrow what you an do today. Earl of %hesterfield
155.=nowing is not enough8 we must a$$ly. (illing is not enough8 we must do. Aoethe
151.=nowledge is $ower. @ranis 3aon
152.7earn from yesterday, live for today, ho$e for tomorrow. 6he im$ortant thing is to not sto$
Duestioning. Albert Einstein
153.7earn to enjoy every minute of your life. 3e ha$$y now. 9on/t wait for something outside of yourself
to make you ha$$y in the future. 6hink how really $reious is the time you have to s$end, whether it/s
at work or with your family. Every minute should be enjoyed and savored. Earl !ightingale
15#.7et others lead small lives, but not you. 7et others argue over small things, but not you. 7et others ry
over small hurts, but not you. 7et others leave their future in someone else/s hands, but not you. Jim
2ohn
15&.7et us not be ontent to wait and see what will ha$$en, but give us the determination to make the right
things ha$$en. ;eter "arshall
15'.7iberty means res$onsibility. 6hat is why most men dread it. Aeorge 3ernard Shaw
15).7ife at any time an beome diffiultE life at any time an beome easy. +t all de$ends u$on how one
adjusts oneself to life. "orarji 9esai
15..7isten or thy tongue will kee$ thee deaf. Amerian +ndian ;roverb
154.7ive as if your were to die tomorrow. 7earn as if you were to live forever. Aandhi
115. 7ive out of your imagination, not your history. Ste$hen %ovey
111. 7ook at a day when you are su$remely satisfied at the end. +t/s not a day when you lounge around
doing nothing, it/s when you/ve had everything to do and you/ve done it. "argaret 6hather
112. 7ook at everything as though you were seeing it for the first time or the last time. 6hen your time on
earth will be filled with glory. 3etty Smith
113. 7ooking bak, + have this to regret, that too often when + loved, + did not say so. 9avid Arayson
11#. "an annot disover new oeans unless he has the ourage to lose sight of the shore. Andre Aide
11&. "an/s mind, one strethed by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions. :liver (endell
Holmes, Jr
11'. "ay you live every day of your life. Jonathan Swift
11). "en are born to sueed, not to fail. Henry 9avid 6horeau
11.. "inds are like $arahutes8 they work best when o$en. 7ord 6homas 9ewar
114. !ever be bullied into silene. !ever allow yourself to be made a vitim. Ae$t no one/s definition of
your life8 define yourself. Harvey @ierstein
125.!ever look down on anybody unless you hel$ing him u$. Jesse Jakson
121.!o matter how hard the $ast, you an always begin again. 3uddha
122.!o one an make you feel inferior without your onsent. Eleanor 2oosevelt
123.!o steam or gas ever drives anything until it is onfined. !o !iagara is ever turned into light and
$ower until it is tunneled. !o life ever grows until it is foused, dediated, disi$lined. Harry Emerson
@osdik
12#.!othing great was ever ahieved without enthusiasm. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
12&.!othing is so strong as gentleness and nothing is so gentle as real strength. 2al$h (. Sokman
12'.!ot deiding is a deision, you let things go without your ontrol. Anonymous
12).!urture your mind with great thoughts. 3enjamin 9israeli
12..:ne may walk over the highest mountain one ste$ at a time. John (anamaker
124.:ne should not stand at the foot of a sik $erson/s bed, beause that $lae is reserved for the guardian
angel. Jewish @olk Saying
135.:ne thing you an/t reyle is wasted time. Anonymous
131.:ne/s mind, one strethed by a new idea, never regain sits original dimensions. :liver (endel
Holmes
132.:nly those who will risk going too far an $ossibly find out how far one an go. 6. S. Elliot
133.:ur greatest glory is not in never failing but in rising u$ every time we fail. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
13#.:ur strength grows out of our weakness. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
13&.;eo$le are just as ha$$y as they make u$ their minds to be. Abraham 7inoln
13'.;eo$le beome really Duite remarkable when they start thinking that they an do things. (hen they
believe in themselves they have the first seret of suess. !orman Iinent ;eale
13).;eo$le only see what they are $re$ared to see. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
13..;eo$le who fight fire with fire usually end u$ with ashes. Abigail Ian 3uren
134.;roblems are only o$$ortunities in work lothes. Henry =aiser
1#5.2eal rihes are the rihes $ossessed inside. 3. %. @orbes
1#1.2emember, ha$$iness doesn/t de$end u$on who you are or what you have, it de$ends solely u$on
what you think. 9ale %arnegie
1#2.SelfB$ity gets you nowhere. :ne must have the adventurous daring to ae$t oneself as a bundle of
$ossibilities and undertake the most interesting game in the world > making the most of one/s best.
Harry Emerson @osdik
1#3.Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you/ll land among the stars. 7es 3rown
1##.Sim$liity is the key to brilliane. 3rue 7ee
1#&.Somewhere, something inredible is waiting to be known. %arl Sagan
1#'.S$oon feeding in the long run teahes us nothing but the sha$e of the s$oon. E. ". @orster
1#).Suess seems to be onneted with ation. Suessful men kee$ moving. 6hey make mistakes, but
they don/t Duit. %onrad Hilton
1#..6eahers o$en the door, but you must enter by yourself. %hinese ;roverb
1#4.6ell me who admires you and loves you, and + will tell you who you are. %harles Augustin SainteB
3eauve
1&5.6he basis of o$timism is sheer terror. :sar (ilde
1&1.6he best motivation is selfBmotivation. 6he guy says, H+ wish someone would ome by and turn me on.
J(hat if they don/t show u$1 -ou/ve got to have a better $lan for your life. Jim 2ohn
1&2.6he better $art of ha$$iness is to wish to be what you are. 9esiderius Erasmus
1&3.6he brighter you are, the more you have to learn. 9on Herold
1&#.6he e0$ert at anything was one a beginner. Hayes
1&&.6he fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is $re$ared to die at any time.
"ark 6wain
1&'.6he future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. Eleanor 2oosevelt
1&).6he greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low
and we reah it. "ihelangelo
1&..6he harder you work, the lukier you get. " Ale0ander
1&4.6he highest reward for man/s toil is not what he gets for it, but what he beomes by it. John 2uskin
1'5.6he im$ortant thing is not to sto$ Duestioning. Albert Einstein
1'1.6he journey is the reward. 6ao Saying
1'2.6he less you o$en your heart to others, the more yourheart suffers. 9ee$ak %ho$ra
1'3.6he 7ord is my light, and my salvation8 whom shall + fear1 ;salm 2)
1'#.6he man who trims himself to suit everybody will soon whittle himself away. %harles Shwa
1'&.6he measure of a man is the way he bears u$ under misfortune. ;lutarh
1''.6he mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled. ;lutarh
1').6he most beautiful thing we an e0$eriene is the mysterious. Albert Einstein
1'..6he most wasted day of all is that during whih we have not laughed. Sebastian 2. !. %hamfort
1'4.6he nearest way to glory is to strive to be what you wish to be thought to be. Sorates
1)5.6he only man who never makes mistakes is the man who never does anything. 6heodore 2oosevelt
1)1.6he only real mistake is the one from whih we learn nothing. John ;owell
1)2.6he only thing neessary for the trium$h of evil is for good men to do nothing. Edmund 3urke
1)3.6he only way of finding the limits of the $ossible is by going beyond them into the im$ossible. Abied
%. %larke
1)#.6he only way to have a friend is to be one. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
1)&.6he $ur$ose of life is a life of $ur$ose. 2obert 3yrne
1)'.6he Duestion is not whether we will die, but how we will live. Joan 3orysenko
1)).6he seret of getting ahead is getting started. "ark 6wain
1)..6he seret of health for both mind and body is not to mourn for the $ast, not to worry about the future,
nor to antii$ate troubles, but to live in the $resent moment wisely and earnestly. 3uddha
1)4.6he whole seret of a suessful life is to find out what is one/s destiny to do, and then do it. Henry
@ord
1.5.6he wise man does at one what the fool does finally. 3altasar Araian
1.1.6he words $rinted here are one$ts. -ou must go through the e0$erienes. %arl @rederik
1.2.6he world has the habit of making room for the man whose words and ations show that he knows
where he is going. !a$oleon Hill
1.3.6here are no aidentsC there is only some $ur$ose that we haven/t yet understood. 9ee$ak %ho$ra
1.#.6here are no mistakes, no oinidenes. All events are blessings given to us to learn from. 9r.
Elisabeth =ublerB2oss
1.&.6here are no shortuts to any $lae worth going. Fnknown
1.'.6here are only two ways to live your life. :ne is as though nothing is a mirale. 6he other is as if
everything is. Albert Einstein
1.).6here are some $eo$le who live in a dream world, and there are some who fae reality8 and then there
are those who turn one into the other. 9ouglas Everett
1...6here are those who dream and wish and there are those who dream and work. Jeune.E. "+ntyre.
1.4.6here are two rules for suessE 1K !ever tell everything you knowC 2oger H. 7inoln
145.6here is just one life for eah of usE our own. Euri$ides
141.6here is no end. 6here is no beginning. 6here is only the infinite $assion of life. @ederio @ellini
142.6here is no suh thing in anyone/s life as an unim$ortant day. Ale0ander (oollott
143.6here/s a basi human weakness inherent in all $eo$le whih tem$ts them to want what they an/t
have and not want what is readily available to them. 2obert J. 2inger
14#.6hinkingE 6he talking of the soul with itself. ;lato
14&.6hose who do not remember the $ast are ondemned to re$eat it. Aeorge Santayana
14'.6hose who stand for nothing fall for anything. Ale0ander Hamilton
14).6is nobler to lose honor to save the lives of men than tis to gain honor by taking them. 9avid
3orenstein
14..6o aom$lish great things, we must not only at, but also dream8 not only $lan, but also believe.
Anatole @rane
144.6o be yourself in a world that is onstantly trying to make you something else is the greatest
aom$lishment. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
255.6o onfine our attention to terrestrial matters would be to limit the human s$irit. Ste$hen Hawking
251.6o hell with irumstanes8 + reate o$$ortunities. 3rue 7ee
252.6o live a $ure unselfish life, one must ount nothing as one/s own in the midst of abundane. 3uddha
253.6omorrow is a new day8 you shall begin it serenely and with too high a s$irit to be enumbered with
your old nonsense. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
25#.6wenty years from now you will be more disa$$ointed by the things that you didn/t do than by the
ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. %ath the trade winds in
your sails. E0$lore. 9ream. 9isover. "ark 6wain
25&.Fse what talent you $ossessE the woods would be very silent if no birds sang e0e$t those that sang
best. Henry Ian 9yke
25'.Iitory belongs to the most $ersevering. !a$oleon 3ona$arte
25).(e are what we re$eatedly do. E0ellene, then is not an at, but a habit. Aristotle
25..(e are what we think. All that we are arises with our thoughts. (ith our thoughts, we make the world.
3uddha
254.(e an try to avoid making hoies by doing nothing, but even that is a deision. Aary %ollins
215.(e must ae$t life for what it atually is * a hallenge to our Duality without whih we should never
know of what stuff we are made, or grow to our full stature. +da 2. (ylie
211. (e must use time wisely and forever, reali?e that the time is always ri$e to do right. !elson "andela
212.(e need more $eo$le who s$eiali?e in the im$ossible. Fnknown
213.(e never know the worth of water /til the well is dry. English ;roverb
21#.(hat ha$$ens is not as im$ortant as how you reat to what ha$$ens. 6haddeus Aolas
21&.(hat lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters om$ared to what lies within us. :liver
(endell Holmes
21'.(hat the mind of man an oneive and believe, the mind of man an ahieve. !a$oleon Hill
21).(hat we an or annot do, what we onsider $ossible or im$ossible, is rarely a funtion of our true
a$ability. +t is more likely a funtion of our beliefs about who we are. Anthony 2obbins
21..(hat you are is what you have been, and what you will be is what you do now. 3uddha
214.(hat you do s$eaks so loudly that + annot hear what you say. 2al$h (aldo Emerson
225.(hen an afflition ha$$ens to you, you either let it defeat you, or you defeat itC 2osalind 2ussell
221.(hen + find myself fading, + lose my eyes and reali?e my friends are my energy. Fnknown
222.(hen one door of ha$$iness loses, another o$ens8 but often we look so long at the losed door that
we do not see the one whih has o$ened for us. Helen =eller
223.(hen you are ontent to be sim$ly yourself and don/t om$are or om$ete, everybody will res$et
you. 7aoB6?u
22#.(hen you get to the end of your ro$e, tie a knot and hang on. @ranklin 9. 2oosevelt
22&.(hether you think you an or whether you think you an/t, you/re rightL Henry @ord
22'.(isdom begins in wonder. Sorates
22).(ithout a struggle, there an be no $rogress. @rederik 9ouglass
22..(ithout hange, something slee$s inside us, and seldom awakens. 6he slee$er must awaken. @rank
Herbert
224.(ork as though you would live forever, and live as though you would die today. :g "andino
235.(rite the bad things that are done to you in sand, but write the good things that ha$$en to you on a
$iee of marble. Arabi ;arable
231.-ou and + are essentially infinite hoieBmakers. +n every moment of our e0istene, we are in that field
of all $ossibilities where we have aess to an infinity of hoies. 9ee$ak %ho$ra.
232.-ou are never given a wish without also being given the $ower to make it ome true. -ou may have to
work for it, however. 2ihard 3ah
233.-ou an have anything you want, if you want it badly enough. -ou an be anything you want to be, do
anything you set out to aom$lish if you hold to that desire with singleness of $ur$ose. Abraham
7inoln
23#.-ou don/t get harmony when everybody sings the same note. 9oug @loyd
23&.-ou gain strength, ourage and onfidene by every e0$eriene in whih you really sto$ to look fear in
the fae. -ou must do the thing that you think you annot do. Eleanor 2oosevelt
23'.-ou get the best out of others when you give the best of yourself. Harry @irestone
23).-ou live through the darkness from what you learned in the light. Ho$e "a9onald
23..-ou must be the hange you wish to see in the world. "ahatma Aandhi
234.-ou must do the things you think you annot do. Eleanor 2oosevelt
2#5.-ou were born with $otential. -ou were born with goodness and trust. -ou were born with ideals and
dreams. -ou were born with greatness. -ou were born with wings. -ou are not meant for rawling, so
don/t. -ou have wings. 7earn to use them and fly. 2umi
2#1.(hat $eo$le fear the most is the fear itself . 6heodore 2oosevelt
2#2.-ou will find as you look bak u$on your life that the moments when you have truly lived are the
moments when you have done things in the s$irit of love. Henry 9rummond.
2#3.-ou will never $ossess what you are unwilling to $ursue. "ike "urdok
2##.-ou, yourself, as muh as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affetion. 3uddha
2#&.-our life is in your hands, to make of it what you hoose. John =ehoeefore Aod we are all eDually
wise B and eDually foolish. Albert Einstein
2#'.6o be idle is a short road to death and to be diligent is a way of life8 foolish $eo$le are idle, wise
$eo$le are diligent. 3uddha
2#).6he wise ones fashioned s$eeh with their thought, sifting it as grain is sifted through a sieve. 3uddha
2#..+t is always wise to look ahead, but diffiult to look further than you an see. (inston %hurhill
2#4.(hen you are winning a war almost everything that ha$$ens an be laimed to be right and wise.
(inston %hurhill
2&5.A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool. (illiam Shakes$eare
2&1.A wise and frugal Aovernment, whih shall restrain men from injuring one another, whih shall leave
them otherwise free to regulate their own $ursuits of industry and im$rovement, and shall not take
from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. 6his is the sum of good government, and this is
neessary to lose the irle of our feliities. 6homas Jefferson
2&2.+t is a wise father that knows his own hild. (illiam Shakes$eare
2&3."odest doubt is alled the beaon of the wise. (illiam Shakes$eare
2&#.7et me embrae thee, sour adversity, for wise men say it is the wisest ourse. (illiam Shakes$eare
2&&.6he well bred ontradit other $eo$le. 6he wise ontradit themselves. :sar (ilde
2&'.(ise men donGt need advie. @ools wonGt take it. 3enjamin @ranklin
2&).7ifeGs 6ragedy is that we get old to soon and wise too late. 3enjamin @ranklin
2&..(ho is wise1 He that learns from everyone. (ho is $owerful1 He that governs his $assions. (ho is
rih1 He that is ontent. (ho is that1 !obody. 3enjamin @ranklin
2&4.A wise man an learn more from a foolish Duestion than a fool an learn from a wise answer. 3rue
7ee
2'5.7et us raise a standard to whih the wise and honest an re$air8 the rest is in the hands of Aod. Aeorge
(ashington
2'1.6he teaher who is indeed wise does not bid you to enter the house of his wisdom but rather leads you
to the threshold of your mind. =halil Aibran
2'2.6he aim of the wise is not to seure $leasure, but to avoid $ain. Aristotle
2'3.All this worldly wisdom was one the unamiable heresy of some wise man. Henry 9avid 6horeau
2'#.6he wise man does not e0$ose himself needlessly to danger, sine there are few things for whih he
ares suffiiently8 but he is willing, in great rises, to give even his life B knowing that under ertain
onditions it is not worthwhile to live. Aristotle
2'&.+ have always been regretting that + was not as wise as the day + was born.
Henry 9avid 6horeau
2''.6he wise man does not lay u$ his own treasures. 6he more he gives to others, the more he has for his
own. 7ao 6?u
2').@or the wise man looks into s$ae and he knows there is no limited dimensions. 7ao 6?u
2'..!ow the reason the enlightened $rine and the wise general onDuer the enemy whenever they move
and their ahievements sur$ass those of ordinary men is foreknowledge. Sun 6?u
2'4.+t is only the enlightened ruler and the wise general who will use the highest intelligene of the army
for the $ur$oses of s$ying, and thereby they ahieve great results. Sun 6?u
2)5.6he skilful em$loyer of men will em$loy the wise man, the brave man, the ovetous man, and the
stu$id man. Sun 6?u
2)1.!ineBtenths of wisdom is being wise in time. 6heodore 2oosevelt
2)2.!o man is so foolish but he may sometimes give another good ounsel, and no man so wise that he
may not easily err if he takes no other ounsel than his own. He that is taught only by himself has a
fool for a master. Hunter S. 6hom$son
2)3.A wise ruler ought never to kee$ faith when by doing so it would be against his interests. !iolo
"ahiavelli
2)#.6he wise man does at one what the fool does finally. !iolo "ahiavelli
2)&.+s there anyone so wise as to learn by the e0$eriene of others1 Ioltaire
2)'.Su$erstition is to religion what astrology is to astronomy the mad daughter of a wise mother. 6hese
daughters have too long dominated the earth. Ioltaire
2)).He is a hard man who is only just, and a sad one who is only wise. Ioltaire
2)..He who is not just is severe, he who is not wise is sad. Ioltaire
2)4.A hero is born among a hundred, a wise man is found among a thousand, but an aom$lished one
might not be found even among a hundred thousand men. ;lato
2.5.7ove is the joy of the good, the wonder of the wise, the ama?ement of the Aods. ;lato
2.1.He was a wise man who invented beer. ;lato
2.2.(ise men s$eak beause they have something to say8 @ools beause they have to say something. ;lato
2.3.(e ought to fly away from earth to heaven as Duikly as we an8 and to fly away is to beome like
Aod, as far as this is $ossible8 and to beome like him is to beome holy, just, and wise. ;lato
2.#.6he $unishment whih the wise suffer who refuse to take $art in the government, is to live under the
government of worse men. ;lato
2.&.;oets utter great and wise things whih they do not themselves understand. ;lato
2.'.A word to the wise ainGt neessary B itGs the stu$id ones that need the advie. 3ill %osby
2.).(ise men, when in doubt whether to s$eak or to kee$ Duiet, give themselves the benefit of the doubt,
and remain silent. !a$oleon Hill
2...(here ignorane is bliss, G6is folly to be wise. 6homas Aray
2.4.A word to the wise is infuriating. Hunter S. 6hom$son
245.SelfB$ity is our worst enemy and if we yield to it, we an never do anything wise in this world. Helen
=eller
241.!o matter how dull, or how mean, or how wise a man is, he feels that ha$$iness is his indis$utable
right. Helen =eller
242.9ivide and rule, the $olitiian ries8 unite and lead, is wathword of the wise. Johann (olfgang von
Aoethe
243.+gnorant men raise Duestions that wise men answered a thousand years ago. Johann (olfgang von
Aoethe
24#.+f you young fellows were wise, the devil ouldnGt do anything to you, but sine you arenGt wise, you
need us who are old. "artin 7uther
24&.+ have no faith in human $erfetability. + think that human e0ertion will have no a$$reiable effet
u$on humanity. "an is now only more ative B not more ha$$y B nor more wise, than he was '555
years ago. Edgar Allan ;oe
24'.+ have read in ;lato and %iero sayings that are wise and very beautiful8 but + have never read in either
of themE %ome unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden.
Saint Augustine
24).6o the wise, life is a $roblem8 to the fool, a solution. "arus Aurelius
24..: wise manL Aive your wealth only to the worthy and never to others. 6he water of the sea reeived
by the louds is always sweet. %hanakya
244.9o not reveal what you have thought u$on doing, but by wise ounil kee$ it seret being determined
to arry it into e0eution. %hanakya
355.6he wise man should restrain his senses like the rane and aom$lish his $ur$ose with due
knowledge of his $lae, time and ability. %hanakya
351."y idea is always to reah my generation. 6he wise writer writes for the youth of his own generation,
the ritis of the ne0t, and the shoolmasters of ever afterward. @. Sott @it?gerald
352.(e are made wise not by the reolletion of our $ast, but by the res$onsibility for our future. Aeorge
3ernard Shaw
353."en are wise in $ro$ortion, not to their e0$eriene, but to their a$aity for e0$eriene. Aeorge
3ernard Shaw
35#.+tGs not wise to violate rules until you know how to observe them. 6. S. Eliot
35&.!o man is great enough or wise enough for any of us to surrender our destiny to. 6he only way in
whih anyone an lead us is to restore to us the belief in our own guidane. Henry "iller
35'."any men have been a$able of doing a wise thing, more a unning thing, but very few a generous
thing. Ale0ander ;o$e
35).How $rone to doubt, how autious are the wiseL Ale0ander ;o$e
35..3elief is a wise wager. Aranted that faith annot be $roved, what harm will ome to you if you gamble
on its truth and it $roves false1 +f you gain, you gain all8 if you lose, you lose nothing. (ager, then,
without hesitation, that He e0ists. 3laise ;asal
354.6he wise have always said the same things, and fools, who are the majority have always done just the
o$$osite. Arthur Sho$enhauer
315.An o$timist is a $erson who sees a green light everywhere, while a $essimist sees only the red
sto$light... the truly wise $erson is olorblind. Albert Shweit?er
311. 6he wise are wise only beause they love. 6he fool are fools only beause they think they an
understand love. ;aulo %oelho
312.Aiving every man a vote has no more made men wise and free than %hristianity has made them good.
H. 7. "enken
313.+t is im$ossible to imagine the universe run by a wise, just and omni$otent Aod, but it is Duite easy to
imagine it run by a board of gods. H. 7. "enken
31#.!o matter how long he lives, no man ever beomes as wise as the average woman of fortyBeight. H. 7.
"enken
31&.A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees. (illiam 3lake
31'.6he fool who $ersists in his folly will beome wise. (illiam 3lake
31).+f the fool would $ersist in his folly he would beome wise. (illiam 3lake
31..Every judgement of onsiene, be it right or wrong, be it about things evil in themselves or morally
indifferent, is obligatory, in suh wise that he who ats against his onsiene always sins. 6homas
ADuinas
314.6hatGs what a man wants in a wife, mostly8 he wants to make sure one fool tells him heGs wise. Aeorge
Eliot
325.+tGs so sim$le to be wise. Just think of something stu$id to say and say the o$$osite. Sam 7evenson
321.6o ta0 and to $lease, no more than to love and to be wise, is not given to men. Edmund 3urke
322.A single onversation aross the table with a wise man is better than ten years mere study of books.
Henry (adsworth 7ongfellow
323.Eduation, n.E 6hat whih disloses to the wise and disguises from the foolish their lak of
understanding. Ambrose 3iere

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