3 December 2020 Joseph Addison I will indulge my sorrows, and give way to all the pangs and fury of despair.
3 December 2020 Ann Landers People who drink to drown their sorrow should be told that sorrow knows how to swim.
3 December 2020 Mary Beth Whitehead I have great sympathy for people that are infertile, but a life is not something you can give away.
3 December 2020 Audrey Meadows They weren’t impatient for the boys to turn into cartoons again. They awarded sympathy, gave compassion. Because deep down they had found parts of themselves in the characters. You said it George.
3 December 2020 Dirk Benedict Life has never been easy. Nor is it meant to be. It is a matter of being joyous in the face of sorrow.
3 December 2020 Anson Mount I don’t care about sympathy. I care about playing a character who’s understandable and clear.
3 December 2020 Frances E. Willard In externals we advance with lightening express speed, in modes of thought and sympathy we lumber on in stage-coach fashion.
3 December 2020 A. N. Wilson I very much dislike the intolerance and moralism of many Christians, and feel more sympathy with Honest Doubters than with them.
3 December 2020 Benjamin Disraeli Two nations between whom there is no intercourse and no sympathy who are as ignorant of each other’s habits, thoughts, and feelings, as if they were dwellers in different zones, or inhabitants of different planets. The rich and the poor.
3 December 2020 Dirk Benedict If we wait until our lives are free from sorrow or difficulty, then we wait forever. And miss the entire point.
3 December 2020 Eamon de Valera Since this war began our sympathy has gone out to all the suffering people who have been dragged into it. Further hundreds of millions have become involved since I spoke at Limerick fortnight ago.
3 December 2020 John Burns I want the municipality to be a helping hand to the man with a desire of sympathy, to help the fallen when it is not in their power to help themselves.
3 December 2020 Joe Cornish I don’t think it’s an incredibly radical premise to try and have sympathy for someone who has made a mistake.