Dare Quotes

For above all things Love means sweetness, and truth, and measure; yea, loyalty to the loved one and to your word. And because of this I dare not meddle with so high a matter.

Marie de France

One must work and dare if one really wants to live.

Vincent van Gogh

Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly

Robert Francis Kennedy

I am not worthy of the wealth I owe, nor dare I say 'tis mine, and yet it is; but, like a timorous thief, most fain would steal what law does vouch mine own.

William Shakespeare

Writers may be disreputable, incorrigible, early to decay or late to bloom but they dare to go it alone.

John Updike

The person who gets the farthest is generally the one who is willing to do and dare. The sure-thing boat never gets far from shore.

Dale Carnegie

Let a man who has to make his fortune in life remember this maxim: Attacking is the only secret. Dare and the world yields, or if it beats you sometimes, dare it again and you will succeed.

William Makepeace Thackeray

The freedom now desired by many is not freedom to do and dare but freedom from care and worry.

James Truslow Adams

No land is bad, but land is worse. If a man owns land, the land owns him. Now let him leave home, if he dare.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

I drink, I huff, I strut, look big and stare; And all this I can do, because I dare.

George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham

I've got forward momentum. There's no virtue in it. It's just a balancing act. I don't dare stop.

Lois McMaster Bujold

This is just one example of the trimming of the self that along with the language itself, where verbs and nouns changed places as freely as one dare to have them do so bred in us such an overpowering sense of ambivalence that in ten years we ended up with a willpower in no way superior to a seaweeds.

Iosip Aleksandrovich Brodsky

Do not dare not to dare.

C.S. Lewis

Dare to believe that good things are possible when you follow your heart.

Bryant McGill

This life in us; however low it flickers or fiercely burns, is still a divine flame which no man dare presume to put out, be his motives never so humane and enlightened; To suppose otherwise is to countenance a death-wish; Either life is always and in all circumstances sacred, or intrinsically of no account; it is inconceivable that it should be in some cases the one, and in some the other

Malcolm Muggeridge
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