Quotes About Decision
She is the best of them all," he said to himself, as he refolded the letter and put it back into his desk. I am not sure that it is well that a man should have any large number from whom to select a best; as, in such circumstances, he is so very apt to change his judgment from hour to hour.
~ Anthony Trollope
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Under such circumstances it would be better for him to go to Patagonia than to remain in England.
~ Anthony Trollope
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CHAPTER LXVI 'I MUST GO
~ Anthony Trollope
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People often say that marriage is an important thing, and should be much thought of in advance, and marrying people are cautioned that there are many who marry in haste and repent at leisure. I am not sure, however, that marriage may not be pondered over too much; nor do I feel certain that the leisurely repentance do not as often follow the leisurely marriages as it does the rapid ones. That some repent no one can doubt.
~ Anthony Trollope
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CHAPTER XLIX MISS TREFOIL'S DECISION
~ Anthony Trollope
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As Lady Eustace, — certainly not. If Frederic does marry her, of course I must know her. That's a different thing. One has to make the best one can of a bad bargain. I don't doubt they'd be separated before two years were over." "Oh, dear, how dreadful!" exclaimed Augusta.
~ Anthony Trollope
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Do?" said Mrs. Robarts. "Yes, something must be done. If I were a man I should go to Switzerland, of course; or, as the case is a bad one, perhaps as far as Hungary. What is it that girls do? they don't die nowadays, I believe.
~ Anthony Trollope
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And yet she knew that something must be done. She could not afford to wait as other girls might do. Why not Sir Griffin as well as any other fool? It may be doubted whether she knew how obstinate, how hard, how cruel to a woman a fool can be
~ Anthony Trollope
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There is nothing in the world so difficult as that task of making up one's mind.
~ Anthony Trollope
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After all, a husband is very much like a house or a horse. You don't take your house because it's the best house in the world, but because just then you want a house. You go and see a house, and if it's very nasty you don't take it. But if you think it will suit pretty well, and if you are tired of looking about for houses, you do take it. That's the way one buys one's horses, — and one's husbands.
~ Anthony Trollope
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Then they are to be married?" "I suppose it will come to that. It always does if the man is in earnest. Girls will accept men simply because they think it ill-natured to return the compliment of an offer with a hearty 'No.
~ Anthony Trollope
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Then John Morton made up his mind that he would never ask another American Senator to his house.
~ Anthony Trollope
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The Duchess of Omnium had since declared that she also would go, and there were to be two carriages. But
~ Anthony Trollope
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Perhaps she felt that if the two were engaged, it might be well to keep the lovers separated for awhile, lest they should quarrel before the engagement should have been so confirmed by the authority of friends as to be beyond the power of easy annihilation.
~ Anthony Trollope
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How could a man fix his attention on any book, with a charge of murder against himself affirmed by the deliberate decision of a judge?
~ Anthony Trollope
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After some loose fashion we turn over things in our mind and ultimately reach some decision, guided probably by our feelings at the last moment rather than by any process of ratiocination;-and then we think that we have thought.
~ Anthony Trollope
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CHAPTER XLV LORD RUFFORD MAKES UP HIS MIND
~ Anthony Trollope
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What to do with the Lookalofts even Mr. Plomacy could not decide. They must take their chance. They had been specially told in the invitation that all the tenants had been invited, and they might probably have the good sense to stay away if they objected to mix with the rest of the tenantry.
~ Anthony Trollope
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after I had calmed down my first thoughts were of my family who hadn't made it, and I decided then, at that moment, that whatever else I did I would try to help other people for the rest of my days as a repayment for the gift of life which had been given back to me.
~ Anton Gill
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the Duke of Wellington placed the peace and welfare of that actual United Kingdom above religious scruples and decided that Emancipation was necessary to secure it. The religious scruples included those of the sovereign, swept aside at the end in a masterly way that only Wellington could manage.
~ Antonia Fraser
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George IV remained unwilling to give his Royal Assent to the bill until the very end. He did so finally, 'with pain and regret'
~ Antonia Fraser
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We had to do something [in Bush v. Gore ], because countries were laughing at us. France was laughing at us.
~ Antonin Scalia
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It is a painful thing to say to oneself: by choosing one road I am turning my back on a thousand others. Everything is interesting; everything might be useful; everything attracts and charms a noble mind; but death is before us; mind and matter make their demands; willy-nilly we must submit and rest content as to things that time and wisdom deny us, with a glance of sympathy which is another act of our homage to the truth.
~ Antonin Sertillanges
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Think about it this way," Bud went on, pointing to the board. "What's the only thing that happened in this story between the time that I wasn't irritated and angry and the time I was?" I looked at the diagram. "Your choice not to do what you felt you should do," I said. "Your self-betrayal." "That's right. That's all that happened. So what caused my irritation and anger at Nancy?
~ Arbinger Institute
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