W. Somerset Maugham Thinking Quotations
W. Somerset Maugham Quotes about:
Thinking Quotes from:
- All Thinking Quotes
- Hillary Clinton
- Donald Trump
- Cassandra Clare
- C S Lewis
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Taylor Swift
- Sherrilyn Kenyon
- Albert Einstein
- Stephen King
- Marianne Williamson
- Terry Pratchett
- J K Rowling
- Rush Limbaugh
- Richelle Mead
- Haruki Murakami
- Henry David Thoreau
- John Green
- Eckhart Tolle
- Neil Gaiman
- Dalai Lama
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Ducks Quotes
I don't understand anything. Life is so strange. I feel like some one who's lived all his life by a duck-pond and suddenly is shown the sea. It makes me a little breathless, and yet it fills me with elation. I don't want to die, I want to live. I'm beginning to feel a new courage. I feel like one of those old sailors who set sail for undiscovered seas and I think my soul hankers for the unknown.
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Careers Quotes
When some incident has shattered the career you’ve mapped out for yourself, a folly, a crime or a misfortune, you mustn’t think you’re down and out. It may be a stroke of luck, and when you look back years later you may say to yourself that you wouldn’t for anything in the world exchange the new life disaster has forced upon you for the dull, humdrum existence you would have led if circumstances hadn’t intervened.
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Love Is Quotes
The tragedy of love is not death or separation. How long do you think it would have been before one or other of them ceased to care? Oh, it is dreadfully bitter to look at a woman whom you have loved with all your heart and soul, so that you felt you could not bear to let her out of your sight, and realize that you would not mind if you never saw her again. The tragedy of love is indifference.
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Things In Life Quotes
You know, there are two good things in life, freedom of thought and freedom of action. In France you get freedom of action: you can do what you like and nobody bothers, but you must think like everybody else. In Germany you must do what everybody else does, but you may think as you choose. They're both very good things. I personally prefer freedom of thought. But in England you get neither: you're ground down by convention. You can't think as you like and you can't act as you like. That's because it's a democratic nation. I expect America's worse.
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