« All Fall Quotes · Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Page
Fall Quotes by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- The best fortune that can fall to a man is that which corrects his defects and makes up for his failings.
- Let your trouble be Light will follow dark Though the heaven falls You may hear the lark.
- The soul that sees beauty may sometimes walk alone.
- When she sees the leaves fall, they raise no other idea in her mind than that winter is approaching.
- People of uncommon abilities generally fall into eccentricities when their sphere of life is not adequate to their abilities.
- There is no trifling with nature; it is always true, grave, and severe; it is always in the light, and the faults and errors fall…
More Fall Quotes
- But human beings fall easily into despair, and from the very beginning we invented stories that enabled us to place our lives… — Karen Armstrong
- If you worried about falling off the bike, you'd never get on. — Lance Armstrong
- Central banks don't have divine wisdom. They try to do the best analysis they can and must be prepared to stand or… — Mary Kay Ash
- From my close observation of writers... they fall into two groups: 1) those who bleed copiously and visibly at any bad review,… — Isaac Asimov
- I didn't go to school for a full year until I was 12. In the summer I was a wild child in… — Margaret Atwood
- The honors of this world, what are they but puff, and emptiness, and peril of falling? — Saint Augustine
- To be fond of dancing was a certain step towards falling in love. — Jane Austen
- I had many friends to help me to fall; but as to rising again, I was so much left to myself, that… — Teresa of Avila
- Another mode of accumulating power arises from lifting a weight and then allowing it to fall. — Charles Babbage
- I would hate now to be married. It does occur to me on occasion that, if I fall and hit my head,… — Lauren Bacall
- Fortune is like the market, where, many times, if you can stay a little, the price will fall. — Francis Bacon
- The desire of excessive power caused the angels to fall; the desire of knowledge caused men to fall. — Francis Bacon