| |
| The only reason for time is so that everything doesn't happen at once. | | Albert Einstein | |
| The past is an old armchair in the attic, the present an ominous ticking sound, and the future is anybody's guess | | James Thurber | |
| The present is never our goal: the past and present are our means: the future alone is our goal. Thus, we never live but we hope to live; and always hoping to be happy, it is inevitable that we will never be so. | | Blaise Pascal | |
| |
| |
| |
| The time which we have at our disposal every day is elastic; the passions we feel expand it, those that we inspire contract it, and habit fills up what remains | | Marcel Proust | |
| |
| The years seem to rush by now, and I think of death as a fast approaching end of a journey - double and treble the reason for loving as well as working while it is day | | George Eliot | |
| There is a time for departure even when there's no certain place to go. | | Tennessee Williams | |
| There is a time to take counsel of your fears, and there is a time to never listen to any fear. | | George S. Patton | |
| There is something about saying "Ok" and hanging up the receiver with a bang that kids a man into feeling that he has just pulled off a big deal, even if he has only called the telephone company to find out the correct time | | Robert Benchley | |
| There may be a time in life when one is tired of everything and feels as if all one does is wrong, and there maybe some truth in it- do you think this is a feeling one must try to forget and to banish, or is it 'the longing for God,' which one must not fear, but cherish to see if it may bring us some good? Is it 'the longing for God' which leads us to make a choice which we never regret? Let us keep courage and try to be patient and gentle. And not mind being eccentric, and make distinction between good and evil. | | Vincent van Gogh | |
| These times of ours are serious and full of calamity, but all times are essentially alike | | Ralph Waldo Emerson | |
| Those who live to the future must always appear selfish to those who live to the present | | Ralph Waldo Emerson | |
| Time and money spent in helping men do more for themselves is far better than mere giving | | Henry Ford | |
| Time and truth are friends, though there are many moments hostile to truth | | Joseph Joubert | |
| Time carries off all things; wouldst thou exchange - Name, looks, nature, luck? Just give time full range | | Plato | |
| |
| |