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"Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have."
By Author Unknown
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"Happiness is in the heart, not in the circumstances."
By Author Unknown
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"Hatred - The anger of the weak."
By Alphonse Daulet
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"He that fears your presence will hate you absence."
By Thomas Fuller
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"Hatred of enemies is easier and more intense than love of friends. But from men who are more anxious to injure opponents than to benefit the world at large no great good is to be expected."
By Lord Bertrand Russell
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"Hate pollutes the mind."
By Author Unknown
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"Hatred is a boomerang which is sure to hit you harder than the one at whom you throw it."
By Author Unknown
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"Hope is both the earliest and the most indispensable virtue inherent in the state of being alive. If life is to be sustained hope must remain, even where confidence is wounded, trust impaired."
By Erik H. Erikson
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"Hope is the companion of power, and mother of success; for who so hopes strongly has within him the gift of miracles."
By Samuel Smiles
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"Human nature is not of itself vicious."
By Thomas Paine
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"He must not laugh at his own wheeze. A snuff box has no right to sneeze."
By Dave Preston
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"Humor - the perfect relationship of the parts to the whole."
By Author Unknown
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"Hypocrisy can afford to be magnificent in its promises; for never intending to go beyond promises; it costs nothing."
By Edmund Burke
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"He who wishes to exert a useful influence must be careful to insult nothing. Let him not be troubled by what seems absurd, but concentrate his energies to the creation of what is good. He must not demolish, but build. He must raise temples where mankind may come and partake of the purest pleasure."
By Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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"Humanity has advanced, when it has advanced, not because it has been sober, responsible, and cautious, but because it has been playful, rebellious, and immature."
By Tom Robbins
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"Having supplied them with names, omnipotence, justice, knowledge, Providence, - what are they?"
By Author Unknown
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"How little do they see what really is, who frame their hasty judgments upon that which seems."
By Robert Southey
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"He who has not a good memory should never take upon himself the trade of lying."
By Michel de Montaigne
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"How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy! In youth we are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age we are looking backward to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on some future day when we have time."
By C. C. Colton
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"He that embarks on the voyage of life will always wish to advance rather by the impulse of the wind than the strokes of the oar; and many foulder in their passage; while they lie waiting for the gale."
By Johnson
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