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Quotes About Fall

But since the affairs of men rest still incertain, Let's reason with the worst that may befall.
~ William Shakespeare
Boundless intemperance In nature is a tyranny. It hath been Th' untimely emptying of the happy throne And fall of many kings.
~ William Shakespeare
21 And there fell upon men a great hail out of heaven, every stone about the weight of a talent: and men blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was exceeding great.
~ William Smith
In the depths of horror and despair, one comes to a new steadiness. There is no farther to fall.
~ Winston Graham
Needleman, k?z?m ve benle beraber Milano'da opera izlerken locadan aÅŸa??ya biraz fazla eÄŸildi ve orkestra çukuruna düÅŸtü. Bir kaza olduÄŸunu kabullenemeyecek kadar gururlu olan Needleman, bir ay boyunca ayn? operaya gitti ve her gece kendini çukura att?.
~ Woody Allen
if I die innocent the shame will fall on those who are the cause of my death, since all sort of iniquity is attended with shame. But
~ Xenophon
I blinked deliberately, expecting my eyelids to act like lumberjacks. But the trees would not fall.
~ Yann Martel
If you begin to rely upon yourself and become arrogant in your skill, that is the day you will fall.
~ Unknown
Even if a thing is doomed—there is that moment of absurd hope that is worth the fall, that is worth everything.
~ Chuck Hogan
So you want to fall in love? You probably will soon, and if you do, enjoy it, it's harder later on.
~ Claire Morgan
Why don't clouds fall, since everything else does? Because gravity is less than the strength of the air that keeps them up there. Clever, right? Yes, but one day they fall as rain. That is my revenge.
~ Clarice Lispector
This savings gave her a little security since you can't fall farther than the ground.
~ Clarice Lispector
In short, for the murders of those I court, I bless the hour that holds your fall.
~ Claudio Sanchez
Men may differ as to the nature and the reach of conversion, but its necessity is established beyond all doubt; the whole of humanity proclaims the truth of the fall.
~ Herman Bavinck
In the first play, the crisis is Thomas More. In the second it's Anne Boleyn. In the third book, and the third play, it's crisis every day, an overlapping series of only just negotiable horrors. It's climbing and climbing. Then a sudden abrupt fall - within days.
~ Hilary Mantel
She wears trouble like a crown. If she ever falls in love, she'll fall like a comet, burning the sky as she goes.
~ Holly Black
It was terrifying," he says, "watching you fall. I mean, you're generally terrifying, but I am unused to fearing for you. And then I was furious. I am not sure I have ever been that angry before." "Mortals are fragile," I say. "Not you," he says in a way that sounds a little like a lament. "You never break.
~ Holly Black
Occasionally, there are battles in the sky. One likes to imagine the angels are always triumphant. One does not like to think of the ancient and terrible scales balancing the infernal and divine as wobbling back and forth. Tilting freely, to and fro. One does not like to think that sometimes it is the angel that falls.
~ Holly Black
It turned our that no matter how far you fall, there's always a lower place.
~ Holly Black
If I fall, you must promise not to laugh. I may still be a little bit poisoned.' ... I wonder exactly how much a little bit means. 'Maybe I should be the one to go first.' 'Nonsense,' he says. 'If you weren't behind me, then who would break my fall?
~ Holly Black
she could be more humiliated, it turned out that no matter how far you fall, there's always a lower place.
~ Holly Black
I was meant for the purpose of betraying the High Court. Never to survive past that. If I am the cause of Lady Nore's fall, it will give me all the more pleasure for her never having anticipated it.
~ Holly Black
It was terrifying," he says, "watching you fall. I mean, you're generally terrifying, but I am not used to fearing for you. And then I was furious. I am not sure I have ever been that angry before." ~Cardan
~ Holly Black
It was terrifying,' he says, 'watching you fall. I mean, you're generally terrifying, but I am unused to fearing for you. And then I was furious. I am not sure I have ever been that angry before.' 'Mortals are fragile,' I say. 'Not you,' he says in a way that sounds a little like a lament. 'You never break.
~ Holly Black