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"Like swift water an ACTIVE mind never stagnates." »Author Unknown
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"Meditation has been defined as the cessation of ACTIVE eternal thought." »H Hahn Blavatsky
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"Whoever brings cheerfulness to his work, and is ever ACTIVE, dashes through the world?s labours." »Tieck
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"To be intelligent is to be open-minded, ACTIVE, memoried, and persistently experimental." »Leopold Stein
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"No kind of sensation is keener and more ACTIVE than that of pain its impressions are unmistakable." »Marquis de Sade
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"ACTIVE minds that think and study, Like swift brooks are seldom muddy." »Arthur Guiterman
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"A man of quick and ACTIVE wit For drudgery is more unfit, Compared to those of duller parts, Than running nags are to draw carts." »Butler
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"We must look for ways to be an ACTIVE force in our own lives. We must take charge of our own destinies, design a life of substance and truly begin to live our dreams." »Les Brown
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"Some men never seem to grow old. Always ACTIVE in thought, always ready to adopt new ideas, they are never chargeable with foggyism. Satisfied, yet ever dissatisfied, settled, yet ever unsettled, they always enjoy the best of what is, are the first to find the best of what will be." »William Shakespeare
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"I've found that luck is quite predictable. If you want more luck, take more chances. Be more ACTIVE. Show up more often." »Brian Tracy
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"If you had the seeds of pestilence in your body you would not have a more ACTIVE contagion that you have in your tempers, tastes, and principles. Simply to be in this world, whatever you are, is to exert an influence, compared with which mere language and persuasion are feeble." »Horace Bushnell
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"The death-knell of the republic had rung as soon as the ACTIVE power became lodged in the hands of those who sought, not to do justice to all citizens, rich and poor alike, but to stand for one special class and for its interests as opposed to the interests of others." »Theodore Roosevelt
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"We have not passed that subtle line between childhood and adulthood until we move from the passive voice to the ACTIVE voice-that is, until we have stopped saying 'It got lost,' and say, 'I lost it.'" »Sydney Harris
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"If you have no friends to share or rejoice in your success in life - if you cannot look back to those whom you owe gratitude, or forward to those to whom you ought to afford protection, still it is no less incumbent on you to move steadily in the path of duty; for your ACTIVE excretions are due not only to society; but in humble gratitude to the Being who made you a member of it, with powers to save yourself and others." »Walter Scott
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"Living apart and at peace with myself, I came to realize more vividly the meaning of the doctrine of acceptance. To refrain from giving advice, to refrain from meddling in the affairs of others, to refrain, even though the motives be the highest, from tampering with another's way of life - so simple, yet so difficult for an ACTIVE spirit. Hands off" »Henry Miller
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"To love is not a passive thing. To love is ACTIVE voice. When I love I do something, I function, I give. I do not love in order that I may be loved back again, but for the creative joy of loving. And every time I do so love I am freed, at least a little, by the outgoing of love, from enslavement to that most intolerable of master, myself." »Bernard Iddings Bell
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"A mind too ACTIVE is no mind at all." »Theodore Roethke
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"A politician will always tip off his true belief by stating the opposite at the beginning of the sentence. For maximum comprehension, do not start listening until the first clause is concluded. Begin instead at the word "but" which begins the second, or ACTIVE, clause. This is the way to tell a liberal from a conservative -- before they tell you. Thus: "I have always believed in a strong national defense, second to none, but ... " (a liberal, about to propose a $20 billion defense cut)." »Frank Mankiewicz
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"There are many shining qualities on the mind of man; but none so useful as discretion. It is this which gives a value to all the rest, and sets them at work in their proper places, and turns them to the advantage of their possessor. Without it, learning is pedantry; wit, impertinence; virtue itself looks like weakness; and the best parts only qualify a man to be more sprightly in errors, and ACTIVE to his own prejudice. Though a man has all other perfections and wants discretion, he will be of no great consequence in the world; but if he has this single talent in perfection, and but a common share of others, he may do what he pleases in his station of life." »Joseph Addison
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