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Passion Quotes - Page 138

Beautify your inner dialogue. Beautify your inner world with love light and compassion. Life will be beautiful.

Beautify your inner dialogue. Beautify your inner world with love light and compassion. Life will be beautiful.

Amit Ray (2010). “Meditation: Insights and Inspiration”, p.100, INNER LIGHT PUBLISHERS

Our passions are like convulsion fits, which, though they make us stronger for a time, leave us the weaker ever after.

Alexander Pope (1812). “The works of Alexander Pope. With a selection of explanatory notes, and the account of his life by dr. Johnson”, p.228

What Reason weaves, by Passion is undone.

Alexander Pope (1815). “Poetical works”, p.222

I want to know what passion is. I want to feel something strongly.

Peter Edgerly Firchow, Aldous Huxley (1984). “The end of Utopia: a study of Aldous Huxley's Brave new world”, Bucknell Univ Pr

From their experience or from the recorded experience of others (history), men learn only what their passions and their metaphysical prejudices allow them to learn.

Aldous Huxley, Robert S. Baker, James Sexton (2002). “Complete Essays: 1956-1963, and supplement, 1920-1948”, Ivan R. Dee Publisher

The same hot lightning that burns your blood with passion–– cools your fears with peace.

Aberjhani (2010). “The River of Winged Dreams (Hardcover Gift Edition)”, p.68, Lulu.com

Affection, mistress of passion, sways it to the mood of what it likes or loathes.

William Shakespeare (1842). “The Comedies, Histories, Tragedies, and Poems of William Shakspere”, p.323

O that my tongue were in the thunder's mouth! Then with passion would I shake the world, And rouse from sleep that fell anatomy Which cannot hear a lady's feeble voice, Which scorns a modern invocation.

William Shakespeare (2013). “Histories of Shakespeare in Plain and Simple English (a Modern Translation and the Original Version)”, p.89, BookCaps Study Guides

Mercy but murders, pardoning those that kill.

William Shakespeare, Edmond Malone, Samuel Johnson, George Steevens, Alexander Pope (1790). “The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare: In Ten Volumes: Collated Verbatim with the Most Authentick Copies, and Revised; with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators; to which are Added, an Essay on the Chronological Order of His Plays; an Essay Relative to Shakspeare and Jonson; a Dissertation on the Three Parts of King Henry VI; an Historical Account of the English Stage; and Notes; by Edmond Malone”, p.98

Let the sap of reason quench the fire of passion.

William Shakespeare, Capel Lofft (1812). “Aphorisms from Shakespeare”, p.25