Famous Love Quotes - Our inspirational quotes



'Tis skill not strength that governs a ship.
Topic: Ability
Author: Thomas Fuller
Learning hath gained most by those books by which the printers have lost.
Topic: Advice
Author: Thomas Fuller
Today is yesterday's pupil.
Topic: Advice
Author: Thomas Fuller
Thou ought to be nice, even to superstition, in keeping thy promises, and therefore equally cautious in making them.
Topic: Advice
Author: Thomas Fuller
He is rich that is satisfied.
Author: Thomas Fuller
Anger is one of the sinews of the soul.
Topic: Anger
Author: Thomas Fuller
Anger is one of the sinews of the Soul; he that wants it hath a maimed mind.
Topic: Anger
Author: Thomas Fuller
Two things a man should never be angry at: what he can help, and what he cannot help.
Topic: Anger
Author: Thomas Fuller
Two things a man should never be angry at: what he can help, and what he cannot help. Clarendon -Thomas Fuller.
Topic: Anger
Author: Thomas Fuller
He that is proud of the rustling of his silks, like a madman, laughs at the ratling of his fetters. For indeed, Clothes ought to be our remembrancers of our lost innocency.
Topic: Apparel
Author: Thomas Fuller
He was one of a lean body and visage, as if his eager soul, biting for anger at the clog of his body, desired to fret a passage through it.
Topic: Appearance
Author: Thomas Fuller
Good clothes open all doors.
Topic: Appearance
Author: Thomas Fuller
Blindness Hatred is blind, as well as love.
Topic: Blind
Author: Thomas Fuller
A blind man will not thank you for a looking-glass.
Topic: Blind
Author: Thomas Fuller
Learning hath gained most by those books by which the printers have lost.
Topic: Books
Author: Thomas Fuller
Nothing is easy to the unwilling. -Thomas Fuller.
Topic: Change
Author: Thomas Fuller
Feast of John Keble, Priest, Poet, Tractarian, 1866 God's own work must be done by God's own ways. Otherwise, we can take no comfort in obtaining the end, if we cannot justify the means used thereunto.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Thomas Fuller
Lord, before I commit a sin, it seems to me so shallow that I may wade through it dry-shod from any guiltiness; but when I have committed it, it often seems so deep that I cannot escape without drowning.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Thomas Fuller
It is the best sorrow in a Christian soul when his sins are loathsome and offensive unto him--a happy token that there hath not been of late in him any insensible supply of heinous offenses, because his stale sins are still his new and daily sorrow.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Thomas Fuller
Feast of Thomas More, Scholar & Martyr, & John Fisher, Bishop & Martyr, 1535 Sorrow for sin and sorrow for suffering are ofttimes so twisted and interwoven in the same person -- yea, in the same sigh and groan -- that sometimes it is impossible for the party himself so to separate and divide them in his own sense and feeling, as to know which proceeds from the one and which from the other. Only the all-seeing eye of an infinite God is able to discern and distinguish them.
Topic: Christianity
Author: Thomas Fuller
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