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Quotes About Fancied

I fancied myself as some kind of god or an economic reformer like Keynes
~ George Soros
There is no prejudice so strong as that which arises from a fancied exemption from all prejudice.
~ William Hazlitt
they were non-thinkers, attaching themselves to any fancied power for the identity which this gave them. Without a reflection from her they were empty. Thus, they were dangerous.
~ Frank Herbert
How much time is wasted in what is called thought, but is merely care--an anxious idling over the fancied probabilities of result
~ George MacDonald
I lost the love of heaven above I spurned the lust of earth below I felt the sweets of fancied love And hell itself my only foe.
~ John Clare
It's always nice being fancied. It's always nice being wanted. Even it it's by the wrong person.
~ Tabitha Suzuma, Forbidden
Communists are people who fancied that they had an unhappy childhood.
~ Gertrude Stein
Communists are people who fancied that they had an unhappy childhood.
~ Gertrude Stein
Getting to the Premier League is significant enough. But staying in it is another thing entirely, particularly when you've not spent much and kept the core of the team that was promoted from the Championship and was not even fancied to do so in the first place.
~ Neil Etheridge
and because they were fond of reading, she fancied them satirical: perhaps without exactly knowing what it was to be satirical; but that did not signify. It was censure in common use, and easily given.
~ Jane Austen
I would catch them fast, eternally, thanks to the properties of my wonderful machine. In my hands I had the power to stop time,or so I fancied.
~ William Boyd
For Swann was finding in things once more, since he had fallen in love, the charm that he had found when, in his adolescence, he had fancied himself an artist; with this difference, that what charm lay in them now was conferred by Odette alone.
~ Marcel Proust
three women each of whom I had once loved, I said to myself that our social existence is, like an artist's studio, filled with abandoned sketches in which we have fancied for a moment that we could set down in permanent form our need of a great love, but it did not occur to me that sometimes, if the sketch be not too old, it may happen that we return to it and make of it a work wholly different, and possibly more important than what we had originally planned.
~ Marcel Proust