Arouse quotes:

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  • Arouse in the other person an eager want. -- Dale Carnegie
  • Arouse a bee and it will come at you with the force of a dragon. -- Takeda Shingen
  • One's soldier should not abuse the enemy. 'Arouse a bee and it will come at you with the force of a dragon. -- Takeda Nobushige
  • The thing should have plot and character, beginning, middle and end. Arouse pity and then have a catharsis. Those were the best principles I was ever taught. -- Anne Rice
  • In a Nutshell - Fundamental Techniques In Handling People; Principle 1 - Don't criticize, condemn or complain; Principle 2 - Give honest and sincere appreciation; Principle 3 - Arouse in the other person an eager want. -- Dale Carnegie
  • Hard times arouse an instinctive desire for authenticity. -- Coco Chanel
  • Nature in America does not arouse powerful emotions in me. -- Italo Calvino
  • Hope arouses, as nothing else can arouse, a passion for the possible. -- William Sloane Coffin
  • Buildings designed with careful attention to aesthetics arouse and enlighten their occupants and that promotes their good health. -- Robert Evans
  • The goal of modern propaganda is no longer to transform opinion but to arouse an active and mythical belief. -- Jacques Ellul
  • The ineffable joy of forgiving and being forgiven forms an ecstasy that might well arouse the envy of the gods. -- Elbert Hubbard
  • Don't get the impression that you arouse my anger. You see, one can only be angry with those he respects. -- Richard M. Nixon
  • A good sermon should be like a woman's skirt: short enough to arouse interest but long enough to cover the essentials. -- Ronald Knox
  • Each individual fact, taken by itself, can indeed arouse our curiosity or our astonishment, or be useful to us in its practical applications. -- Hermann von Helmholtz
  • Only when we realize that there is no eternal, unchanging truth or absolute truth can we arouse in ourselves a sense of intellectual responsibility. -- Hu Shih
  • Civil disobedience's main goal typically is to try to arouse and inspire others to join and do something. Well, sometimes that is a good tactic, sometimes not. -- Noam Chomsky
  • Family relationships trigger childhood wounds, and those wounds often trump our rational thinking. We can't 'rationally' transcend the kind of primal pain that such relationships can arouse. -- Marianne Williamson
  • In song the same rule applies as in dramatic verse: the meaning must yield itself, or yield itself sufficiently to arouse the attention and interest, in real time. -- James Fenton
  • When you know what an actor has, you can reach in and arouse it. If you don't know what he has, you don't know what the hell is going on. -- Elia Kazan
  • I consider my ability to arouse enthusiasm among men the greatest asset I possess. The way to develop the best that is in a man is by appreciation and encouragement. -- Charles Schwab
  • The progress of the natural sciences in modern times has of course so much exceeded all expectations that any suggestion that there may be some limits to it is bound to arouse suspicion. -- Friedrich August von Hayek
  • When the initial effort of political and business leaders to influence public opinion on an issue is to threaten rather than to engage and persuade, they further arouse public opposition rather than win support. -- Preston Manning
  • If Christ has died for me, ungodly as I am, without strength as I am, then I cannot live in sin any longer, but must arouse myself to love and serve Him who has redeemed me. -- Charles Spurgeon
  • No nude, however abstract, should fail to arouse in the spectator some vestige of erotic feeling, even if it be only the faintest shadow - and if it does not do so it is bad art and false morals. -- Kenneth Clark
  • A musician cannot move others unless he too is moved. He must of necessity feel all of the affects that he hopes to arouse in his audience, for the revealing of his own humour will stimulate a like humour in the listener. -- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
  • I submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for law. -- Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Beautiful sights arouse feelings of love, and contrary sights bring feelings of disgrace and hate. And the emotions of the soul and spirit bring something additional to the body itself, which exists under the control of the soul and the direction of the spirit. -- Giordano Bruno
  • There are individuals who are working very hard to promote fear and antagonism towards Islam and Muslims in this country. It's fueled, in part, by the first African-American president that we have. Obama's father was a Muslim and people have used this to arouse hostility against him. -- Feisal Abdul Rauf
  • If this work can contribute in any way toward proving this, and at the same time arouse the conscience of the American people to a demand for justice to every citizen, and punishment by law for the lawless, I shall feel I have done my race a service. -- Ida B. Wells
  • The crucial thing is to arouse the awareness that as a matter of human conscience we can never permit the people of any country to fall victim to nuclear weapons, and for each individual to express their refusal to continue living in the shadow of the threat they pose. -- Daisaku Ikeda
  • The opposition tried to brand us as the 'Ground Zero megamosque.' The language was deliberately wordsmithed in order to arouse hostility against us. But the idea that the Jewish mayor of New York City and the president of the United States supported a mosque at Ground Zero, and took a lot of flak for it, raised their stature in the Muslim world. -- Feisal Abdul Rauf
  • It is better to arouse envy than pity. -- Publilius Syrus
  • He who works for his own interests will arouse much animosity -- Confucius
  • It was a melancholy secret that reality can arouse desires but never satisfy them. -- Erich Maria Remarque
  • I paint not the things I see but the feelings they arouse in me. -- Franz Kline
  • I want a woman who can arouse my intellect as well as my loins. -- Eddie Murphy
  • He who regulates everything by laws, is more likely to arouse vices than reform them. -- Baruch Spinoza
  • The cues that arouse desire are changed by Fashion, but feel like the proddings of Nature. -- Mason Cooley
  • The essential thing is to arouse such an interest that it engages the child's whole personality. -- Maria Montessori
  • It is not the criminals who arouse the hatred of others, but the men who are honest. -- Jose Rizal
  • Enthusiasm does not always speak for those who arouse it, but always for those who experience it. -- Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach
  • I come not to entertain you with worldly festivities but to arouse your sleeping memory of immortality. -- Paramahansa Yogananda
  • Excessive economic, social and cultural inequalities among peoples arouse tensions and conflicts, and are a danger to peace. -- Pope Paul VI
  • criticism is dangerous, because it wounds a person's precious pride, hurt his sense of importace and arouse resentment. -- Dale Carnegie
  • The Master said, รข??If your conduct is determined solely by considerations of profit you will arouse great resentment. -- Confucius
  • Pornography is supposed to arouse sexual desires. If pornography is a crime, when will they arrest makers of perfume? -- Richard Fleischer
  • The photographs don't arouse me. All I can think about is the hard work it took to make them. -- Helmut Newton
  • The goal of modern propaganda is no longer to transform opinion but to arouse an active and mythical belief -- Jacques Ellul
  • I've never been able to arouse any interest in myself for digitally produced sound, and so the computer turns me off. -- David Tudor
  • You're a man, man. That means seeing two rocks on the ground that kind of look like tits will arouse you. -- S.A. Tawks
  • Bad teaching is teaching which presents an endless procession of meaningless signs, words and rules, and fails to arouse the imagination. -- W. W. Sawyer
  • Because monks come from the midst of purity, they consider as good and pure what does not arouse desire among other people. -- Dogen
  • Collaboration operates through a process in which the successful intellectual achievements of one person arouse the intellectual passions and enthusiasms of others. -- Alexander von Humboldt
  • A sunrise or sunset can be ablaze with brilliance and arouse all the passion, all the yearning, in the soul of the beholder. -- Mary Balogh
  • Actors should arouse a sense of wonder because of their ability to exceed what the spectators can envision ever being able to do. -- Jerzy Grotowski
  • Translators can be considered as busy matchmakers who praise as extremely desirable a half-veiled beauty. They arouse an irresistible yearning for the original. -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  • Modern science should indeed arouse in all of us a humility before the immensity of the unexplored and a tolerance for crazy hypotheses. -- Martin Gardner
  • To be effective the preacher's message must be alive; it must alarm, arouse, challenge; it must be God's present voice to a particular people. -- Aiden Wilson Tozer
  • Sex therapist claims that the most effective way to arouse your man is to spend 10 minutes licking his ears!! Personally, I think its bollocks!! -- Billy Connolly
  • Apparently, dancing for him and throwing herself at him weren't enough. Apparently, she had to nearly commit murder to arouse him enough to attack her. -- Gena Showalter
  • Mozart's music is the mysterious language of a distant spiritual kingdom, whose marvelous accents echo in our inner being and arouse a higher, intensive life. -- E. T. A. Hoffmann
  • When you dress and behave in a way that is designed primarily to arouse sexual desire in men, you are committing pornography with your life. -- Joshua Harris
  • Do not arouse disdainful mind when you prepare a broth of wild grasses; do not arouse joyful mind when you prepare a fine cream soup. -- Dogen
  • Fairies, arouse! Mix with your song Harplet and pipe, Thrilling and clear, Swarm on the boughs! Chant in a throng! Morning is ripe, Waiting to hear. -- William Allingham
  • Any man who takes Jesus Christ seriously becomes the target of the devil. Most church members do not give Satan enough trouble to arouse his opposition -- Vance Havner
  • Nothing is burdensome if taken lightly, and nothing need arouse one's irritation so long as one doesn't make it bigger than it is by getting irritated." -- Seneca
  • May the God of peace arouse in all an authentic desire for dialogue and reconciliation. Violence cannot be overcome with violence. Violence is overcome with peace. -- Pope Francis
  • arouse in the other person an eager want. He who can do this has the whole world with him. He who cannot walks a lonely way. -- Dale Carnegie
  • No death, no doom, no anguish can arouse the surpassing despair which flows from a loss of identity.- Through the Gates of the Silver Key -- H. P. Lovecraft
  • Absolute, unquestioning faith in God is the greatest method of instantaneous healing. An unceasing effort to arouse that faith is man's highest and most rewarding duty. -- Paramahansa Yogananda
  • The doom of a nation can be averted only by a storm of flowing passion, but only those who are passionate themselves can arouse passion in others. -- Adolf Hitler
  • Literature is a form of permanent insurrection. Its mission is to arouse, to disturb, to alarm, to keep men in a constant state of dissatisfaction with themselves. -- Mario Vargas Llosa
  • A teacher in search of his/her own freedom may be the only kind of teacher who can arouse young persons to go in search of their own -- Maxine Greene
  • If we define pornography as any message from any communication medium that is intended to arouse sexual excitement, then it is clear that most advertisements are covertly pornographic. -- Philip Slater
  • To science, not even the bark of a tree or a drop of pond water is dull or a handful of dirt banal. They all arouse awe and wonder. -- Jane Jacobs
  • A nation's character is the sum of its splendid deeds; they constitute one common patrimony, the nation's inheritance. They awe foreign powers, they arouse and animate our own people. -- Henry Clay
  • don't just describe an emotion, arouse it, make them experience it, by manipulating the symbol of the emotion, and sometimes we have to come into awareness through the back door. -- Tom Wolfe
  • What we do, if we are successful, is to stir interest in the matter at hand, awaken enthusiasm for it, arouse a curiosity, kindle a feeling, fire up the imagination. -- Julius Sumner Miller
  • Being poor in Africa is something people in America can't relate to. Part of the challenge is bringing that reality to people and moving them. You have to arouse compassion. -- Madonna Ciccone
  • I consider my ability to arouse enthusiasm among men the greatest asset I possess. The way to develop the best that is in a man is by appreciation and encouragement. -- Charles Schwab
  • The novel may stimulate you to think. It may satisfy your aesthetic sense. It may arouse your moral emotions. But if it does not entertain you it is a bad novel. -- W. Somerset Maugham
  • To become wholly compassionate requires us to open our eyes and hearts, to behold the pain and exploitation our culture obscures, to arouse deadened emotions, and to rise above our egos. -- Joanne Stepaniak
  • Perfect beauty implies perfect simplicity, a quality that at first sight does not arouse the emotions which we feel before gigantic works, objects whose very disproportion constitutes an element of beauty. -- Eugene Delacroix
  • When we hate a person, with an intimate, imaginative, human hatred, we enter into his mind, or sympathize -- any strong interest will arouse the imagination and create some sort of sympathy. -- Charles Horton Cooley
  • For benefits by their very greatness spotlight the difference in conditions and arouse a secret annoyance in those who profit from them. But the charm of simple good manners is almost irresistible. -- Alexis de Tocqueville
  • We always tend to distrust geniuses about genius, as if what they say didn't arouse much empathy in us, or as if we were waiting till some more reliable source of information came along... -- Randall Jarrell
  • Never awake me when you have good news to announce, because with good news nothing presses; but when you have bad news, arouse me immediately, for then there is not an instant to be lost -- Napoleon Bonaparte
  • Never awake me when you have good news to announce, because with good news nothing presses; but when you have bad news, arouse me immediately, for then there is not an instant to be lost. -- Napoleon Bonaparte
  • Slumbering in every human being lies an infinity of possibilities, which one must not arouse in vain. For it is terrible when the whole man resonates with echoes and echoes, none becoming a real voice. -- Elias Canetti
  • What suggests to non-Evangelical scholars that the resurrection narratives contain legendary accounts? First there is a variety of apparent contradictions in the stories which in any ancient narrative would have to arouse the historian's suspicion. -- Robert M. Price
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