No longer shall I paint interiors with men reading and women knitting. I will paint living people who breathe and feel and suffer and love.
‐‐ Edvard Munch
No longer should we rely on oil from countries that are not necessarily friendly or democratic.
‐‐ Cathy McMorris Rodgers
No longer should women be denied the right to vote, no longer should women be treated as second class citizens, no longer should women not be allowed to be a citizen at all.
‐‐ Ginny Brown-Waite
No love is entirely without worth, even when the frivolous calls to the frivolous and the base to the base.
‐‐ Iris Murdoch
No lover, if he be of good faith, and sincere, will deny he would prefer to see his mistress dead than unfaithful.
‐‐ Marquis de Sade
No lying knight or lying priest ever prospered in any age, but especially not in the dark ones. Men prospered then only in following an openly declared purpose, and preaching candidly beloved and trusted creeds.
‐‐ John Ruskin
No. Maceo played sax, didn't he, well they used to sit in.
‐‐ Tommy Chong
No machines will ever truly fully figure the brain out, because the brain's performance is constantly altered or else constrained by this inanimate, rogue artifact you can't control, namely, speech.
‐‐ Tom Wolfe
No major entitlement, once it has been implemented, has ever been unwound.
‐‐ Ted Cruz
No man bosses me around, and no man ever will.
‐‐ Cybill Shepherd
No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money.
‐‐ Samuel Johnson
No man but feels more of a man in the world if he have a bit of ground that he can call his own. However small it is on the surface, it is four thousand miles deep; and that is a very handsome property.
‐‐ Charles Dudley Warner
No man can add one dollar to his bank account by worrying.
‐‐ Vash Young
No man can be a failure if he thinks he's a success; If he thinks he is a winner, then he is.
‐‐ Robert W. Service
No man can be a politician, except he be first a historian or a traveller; for except he can see what must be, or what may be, he is no politician.
‐‐ James Harrington
No man can be an agnostic who has a sense of humour.
‐‐ E. M. Forster
No man can be happy without a friend, nor be sure of his friend till he is unhappy.
‐‐ Thomas Fuller
No man can be ideally successful until he has found his place. Like a locomotive he is strong on the track, but weak anywhere else.
‐‐ Orison Swett Marden
No man can be stronger than his destiny.
‐‐ Mary Hunter Austin
No man can be subject to any laws, excepting those which have received the assent of himself or his representatives and which are promulgated beforehand and applied legally.
‐‐ Marquis de Lafayette
No man can become a saint in his sleep.
‐‐ Henry Drummond
No man can call himself liberal, or radical, or even a conservative advocate of fair play, if his work depends in any way on the unpaid or underpaid labor of women at home, or in the office.
‐‐ Gloria Steinem
No man can climb out beyond the limitations of his own character.
‐‐ John Morley
No man can discover his own talents.
‐‐ Brendan Behan
No man can ever end with being superior who will not begin with being inferior.
‐‐ Sydney Smith
No man can given anybody his freedom.
‐‐ Stokely Carmichael
No man can in any measure resemble the scripture saints.
‐‐ Charles Simeon
No man can lose what he never had.
‐‐ Izaak Walton
No man can pass into eternity, for he is already in it.
‐‐ Frederic William Farrar
No man can produce great things who is not thoroughly sincere in dealing with himself.
‐‐ James Russell Lowell
No man can put a chain about the ankle of his fellow man without at last finding the other end fastened about his own neck.
‐‐ Frederick Douglass
No man can resolve himself into Heaven.
‐‐ Dwight L. Moody
No man can reveal to you nothing but that which already lies half-asleep in the dawning of your knowledge.
‐‐ Khalil Gibran
No man can see God in this life and live because His glory would annihilate our poor, weak human nature.
‐‐ Mother Angelica
No man can stand still; the moment progress is not made, retrogression begins. If the blade is not kept sharp and bright, the law of rust will assert its claim.
‐‐ Orison Swett Marden
No man can succeed in a line of endeavor which he does not like.
‐‐ Napoleon Hill
No man can taste the fruits of autumn while he is delighting his scent with the flowers of spring.
‐‐ Samuel Johnson
No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.
‐‐ George Jean Nathan
No man can understand why a woman shouldn't prefer a good reputation to a good time.
‐‐ Helen Rowland
No man chooses evil because it is evil; he only mistakes it for happiness, the good he seeks.
‐‐ Mary Wollstonecraft
No man could be equipped for the presidency if he has never been tempted by one of the seven cardinal sins.
‐‐ Eugene McCarthy
No man could have accepted me because I am too rebellious. It would have been catastrophe. I am too into my own thing.
‐‐ Fatema Mernissi
No man deserves to be praised for his goodness, who has it not in his power to be wicked. Goodness without that power is generally nothing more than sloth, or an impotence of will.
‐‐ Francois de La Rochefoucauld
No man e'er felt the halter draw, With good opinion of the law.
‐‐ John Trumbull
No man enjoys the true taste of life, but he who is ready and willing to quit it.
‐‐ Lucius Annaeus Seneca
No man ever achieved worth-while success who did not, at one time or other, find himself with at least one foot hanging well over the brink of failure.
‐‐ Napoleon Hill
No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says: He is always convinced that it says what he means.
‐‐ George Bernard Shaw
No man ever did, nor ever shall, truly go forth to convert the nations, nor to prophesy in the present state of witnesses against Antichrist, but by the gracious inspiration and instigation of the Holy Spirit of God.
‐‐ Roger Williams
No man ever got very high by pulling other people down. The intelligent merchant does not knock his competitors. The sensible worker does not knock those who work with him. Don't knock your friends. Don't knock your enemies. Don't knock yourself.
‐‐ Alfred Lord Tennyson