He might never really do what he said, but at least he had it in mind. He had somewhere to go.
‐‐ Louis L'Amour
He missed an invaluable opportunity to hold his tongue.
‐‐ Andrew Lang
He mocks the people who proposes that the government shall protect the rich and that they in turn will care for the laboring poor.
‐‐ Grover Cleveland
He must be independent and brave, and sure of himself and of the importance of his work, because if he isn't he will never survive the scorching blasts of derision that will probably greet his first efforts.
‐‐ Robert E. Sherwood
He must be lightning slow.
‐‐ Ron Atkinson
He must be very ignorant for he answers every question he is asked.
‐‐ Voltaire
He must pull out his own eyes, and see no creature, before he can say, he sees no God; He must be no man, and quench his reasonable soul, before he can say to himself, there is no God.
‐‐ John Donne
He ne'er is crowned with immortality Who fears to follow where airy voices lead.
‐‐ John Keats
He never admitted anything, even on his deathbed. He was a deluded liar. If it weren't for my father, I don't think I would be so open. So that's a huge blessing.
‐‐ Anne Heche
He never chooses an opinion; he just wears whatever happens to be in style.
‐‐ Leo Tolstoy
He never is alone that is accompanied with noble thoughts.
‐‐ John Fletcher
He never wants anything but what's right and fair; only when you come to settle what's right and fair, it's everything that he wants and nothing that you want.
‐‐ Thomas Hughes
He never yelled or screamed so I felt very at home and comfortable.
‐‐ Margaret O'Brien
He not busy being born is busy dying.
‐‐ Bob Dylan
He obliged Cinderella to sit down, and, putting the slipper to her little foot, he found it went on very easily, and fitted her as if it had been made of wax.
‐‐ Charles Perrault
He once had his toes amputated so he could stand closer to the bar.
‐‐ Mike Harding
He only earns his freedom and his life Who takes them every day by storm.
‐‐ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
He only employs his passion who can make no use of his reason.
‐‐ Marcus Tullius Cicero
He only half dies who leaves an image of himself in his sons.
‐‐ Carlo Goldoni
He only is exempt from failures who makes no efforts.
‐‐ Richard Whately
He only profits from praise who values criticism.
‐‐ Heinrich Heine
He only seems to me to live, and to make proper use of life, who sets himself some serious work to do, and seeks the credit of a task well and skillfully performed.
‐‐ Sallust
He or she must be successful in economic terms, but always within an ethical framework. Whether his or her constituency is a corporation and its shareholders or the customers in a small and privately held business, his or her first responsibility is to serve that constituency.
‐‐ Lee R. Raymond
He ordered killings as easily as he ordered linguine.
‐‐ Kitty Kelley
He owned a service station, and I used to go there and piddle around - pump some gas, get in the way.
‐‐ Jack Youngblood
He painted me when I was young because he was in love with me, but now that he has loved me he doesn't paint me anymore.
‐‐ Jane Birkin
He passes from lyric to epic poetry in order to speak about the world and the torment in the world through man, rationally and emotionally. The poet then becomes a danger.
‐‐ Salvatore Quasimodo
He piled upon the whale's white hump the sum of all the general rage and hate felt by his whole race from Adam down; and then, as if his chest had been a mortar, he burst his hot heart's shell upon it.
‐‐ Herman Melville
He plants trees to benefit another generation.
‐‐ Caecilius Statius
He played football too long without a helmet.
‐‐ Jerome Cavanagh
He played the king as if afraid someone else would play the ace.
‐‐ John Mason Brown
He played the King as though under momentary apprehension that someone else was about to play the ace.
‐‐ Eugene Field
He ploughs the waves, sows the sand, and hopes to gather the wind in a net, who places his hopes in the heart of a woman.
‐‐ Jacopo Sannazaro
He preaches well that lives well.
‐‐ Miguel de Cervantes
He preacheth patience that never knew pain.
‐‐ Henry George Bohn
He presented himself as the friend to Main Street America, and yet that aw-shucks persona ended up packaging policies and programs that were at times deeply injurious to the very people he swore to serve. After all, Reaganomics set in motion one of the largest wealth redistributions in American history, away from the poor and toward the rich.
‐‐ Eugene Jarecki
He punched me. If that's his best punch, he'll be in trouble some day.
‐‐ Patrick Roy
He put a ring in the toe of a stocking. On Christmas Eve, we opened our stockings and it was there at the bottom of the toe. Then he got down on his knees and he was shaking.
‐‐ Kyra Sedgwick
He put in your heart certain wishes and plans; in my heart, he put other different desires.
‐‐ Sitting Bull
He puts his right hand lightly on the cup, I put my left, leaving the right free to transcribe, and away we go. We get, oh, 500 to 600 words an hour. Better than gasoline.
‐‐ James Merrill
He read his mind. He's a strange sort of man, isn't he? It's not just the advice and the wisdom that he has.
‐‐ Omar Sharif
He really is terribly heavy going. Like running up hill in roller skates.
‐‐ Alan Ayckbourn
He really loved baseball and loved being on the field. But Mantle was lonely in a lot of ways. He had many great friends, and by all accounts was a good, generous and loyal friend. But there were a lot of people who wanted only a piece of him.
‐‐ Jane Leavy
He reproduced himself with so much humble objectivity, with the unquestioning, matter of fact interest of a dog who sees himself in a mirror and thinks: there's another dog.
‐‐ Rainer Maria Rilke
He resolved, having done it once, never to move his eyeballs again.
‐‐ Kingsley Amis
He rolls it under his tongue as a sweet morsel.
‐‐ Matthew Henry
He's 78 years old... He's not the same Orrin Hatch I knew 12 years ago.
‐‐ Scott Howell
He's 85 and he's met another woman. Still, at 85, why ever not?
‐‐ Christine Keeler
He's a couple sandwiches short of a picnic.
‐‐ Lance Bass