Danh ngôn của Benjamin Disraeli

Travel teaches toleration.
Travel teaches toleration.
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Tác giả: Benjamin Disraeli | Chuyên mục: Travel | Sứ mệnh: [1]
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Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng tác giả: Benjamin Disraeli
- Never apologize for showing feeling. When you do so, you apologize for the truth.
- The greatest good you can do for another is not just to share your riches but to reveal to him his own.
- It destroys one's nerves to be amiable every day to the same human being.
- No man is regular in his attendance at the House of Commons until he is married.
- Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember, and remember more than I have seen.
Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng chuyên mục: Travel
- When I travel overseas on many occasions, I get pulled out because I may be buying a one-way ticket, I may be traveling with my sister and we have different last names. That's smart profiling. Just pulling people out one at a time when we have millions of passengers in random screenings I'm not sure is the best way to do it.
- The show is '12 Monkeys,' and I'm playing the role that Bruce Willis played in the original film '12 Monkeys.' It is a show about time travel. My character is from a future post-apocalypse, and he has been given a mission to go back in time to essentially set things right and stop the apocalypse. No big deal.
- From a pretty early age, my mother realized that I was a little bit more gifted and talented than my own age group. So, she moved me over to play with the boys' travel soccer team when I was about 11 years old.
- When you do films after films, you don't let life happen. At least, in my case, I end up relying too much on emotions, which aren't raw enough. Travel helps me to get a renewed approach towards things.
- One problem with globalisation is that bad ideas seem to travel faster than good ones; first there was smearing tomato ketchup on everything; then drinking sugar-soaked cocktails ('Cosmo'-politanism) instead of our traditional whisky soda, and now this idea that we should abandon the poor to their fate in order to protect their dignity.