| Author |
Quotes |
| Edgar Watson Howe | Nothing is wonderful when you get used to it. |
| Edward Albee | I swear, if you existed I'd divorce you. |
| Edward Dahlberg | It takes a long time to understand nothing. |
| Edward Fitzgerald | I come like Water, and like Wind I go. |
| Edward Keating | You do not destroy an idea by killing people; you replace it with a better one. |
| Edward Lear | It's a fact the whole world knows; That Pobbles are happier without their toes. |
| Edward Noyes Westcott | They say a reasonable amount o' fleas is good for a dog--keeps him from broodin' over bein' a bog, mebbe. |
| Edward O Wilson | In a purely technical sense, each species of higher organism is richer in information than a Caravaggio painting, Bach fugue, or any other great work of art. |
| Edwin H Land | Politeness is the slow poison of collaboration. |
| Ee Cummings | to be nobody-but-myself in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make me everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting. |
| Eilliam Feather | If people really liked to work, we'd still be plowing the land with sticks and transporting goods on our backs. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | I think we ought to impress on both our girls and boys that successful marriages require just as much work, just as much intelligence and just as much unselfish devotion, as they give to any position they undertake to fill on a paid basis. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | I have learned long ago to possess my soul in patience and accept the inevitable. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | It is our freedom to progress that makes us all want to live and to go on. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | Whatever come we have to meet it. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | The battle for the individual rights of women is one of long standing and none of us should countenance anything which undermines it. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | This living in a democracy is a problem, isn't it? |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | One should always sleep in all of one's guest beds, to make sure that they are comfortable. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | To some of us, hunger was more academic than real, but we must try to develop the ability to feel the urgency of such a situation. |
| Eleanor Roosevelt | Long ago, I made up my mind that when things were said involving only me, I would pay no attention to them, except when valid criticism was carried by which I could profit. |
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