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Charlotte Bronte

"They outnumbered me, and I was worsted and under their feet; but, as yet, I was not dead."

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"They outnumbered me, and I was worsted and under their feet; but, as yet, I was not dead."

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Donna Grant

"You can endure every hardship with hope."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"I have both the violent turbulence of the storm and the quiet promises of God in the storm. And what I must work to remember is that something is not necessarily stronger simply because it's louder."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"When relationship is gone, the strength for life is gone and there is no more energy to live."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"The obstacles are man-made, so we can overcome with divine-strength."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"A thought can be cast down by speaking out loud words of resistance and words of God."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Pain that results in success is better than pleasure that results in failure."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"As rain does not bother the ocean, nor heat bother the sun, so adversity does not bother the great."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"There is something awe-inspiring in one who has lost all inhibitions, who will do anything. Of course we make him pay afterward for his moment of superiority, his moment of impressiveness."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"You cannot break me. My spirit is stronger."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Every struggle you overcome, will build the strength of your spirit."

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Charlotte Bronte
"You had no right to be born; for you make no use of life. Instead of living for, in, and with yourself, as a reasonable being ought, you seek only to fasten your feebleness on some other person's strength."

Life

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Charlotte Bronte
"I don't call you handsome, sir, though I love you most dearly: far too dearly to flatter you. Don't flatter me."

Love

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Charlotte Bronte
"A ruffled mind makes a restless pillow."

Mind

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Charlotte Bronte
"The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter - often an unconscious, but still a truthful interpreter - in the eye."

Soul

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Charlotte Bronte
"What tale do you like best to hear?' 'Oh, I have not much choice! They generally run on the same theme - courtship; and promise to end in the same catastrophe - marriage."

Marriage

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Charlotte Bronte
"I used to rush into strange dreams at night: dreams many-coloured, agitated, full of the ideal, the stirring, the stormy--dreams where, amidst unusual scenes, charged with adventure, with agitating risk and romantic chance, I still again and again met Mr. Rochester, always at some exciting crisis; and then the sense of being in his arms, hearing his voice, meeting his eye, touching his hand and cheek, loving him, being loved by him--the hope of passing a lifetime at his side, would be renewed, with all its first force and fire. Then I awoke. Then I recalled where I was, and how situated. Then I rose up on my curtainless bed, trembling and quivering; and then the still, dark night witnessed the convulsion of despair, and heard the burst of passion."

Dreams

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Charlotte Bronte
"Thank you, Mr. Rochester, for your great kindness. I am strangely glad to get back again to you: and wherever you are is my home-my only home."

Love

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Charlotte Bronte
"Cheerfulness, it would appear, is a matter which depends fully as much on the state of things within, as on the state of things without and around us."

Happiness

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Charlotte Bronte
"To toil, to think, to long, to grieve,-Is such my future fate?The morn was dreary, must the eveBe also desolate?"

Grief

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Charlotte Bronte
"Anybody may blame me who likes, when I add further, that, now and then, when I took a walk by myself in the grounds; when I went down to the gates and looked through them along the road; or when, while Adele played with her nurse, and Mrs. Fairfax made jellies in the storeroom, I climbed the three staircases, raised the trap-door of the attic, and having reached the leads, looked out afar over sequestered field and hill, and along dim sky-line - that then I longed for a power of vision which might overpass that limit; which might reach the busy world, towns, regions full of life I had heard of but never seen - that then I desired more of practical experience than I possessed; more of intercourse with my kind, of acquaintance with variety of character, than was here within my reach."

Experience

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