Your greatness is not attached to your accomplishments, but rather to your soulful essence that is a gift of incomparable beauty and majesty. |
|
The chief proof of a man's real greatness lies in his perception of his own smallness. |
|
Lots of students who have achieved greatness were in the bottom half of their class. |
|
There is no use in trying for greatness, as even the attainment of greatness would go unnoticed and unremarked upon. |
|
I think Indian literature in English and in the vernacular can only reach greatness consistently if the two interact and feed off one another. |
|
Diana was a non-entity who achieved greatness through marriage, and by virtue of her beauty. |
|
He was a jet plane touching down in every city and burg from here to Harrisburg, carrying the message of the greatness of Napa Valley wine. |
|
Distorted, slurred vocals suggest greatness without having any inadequacies exposed. |
|
He has gone about his business quietly, never once feeling the need to tell the world of his greatness. |
|
Pushkin's greatness is nowhere more evident than in his realisation that such impercipience undoes everybody. |
|
Today they are genuinely uncertain of their own greatness, or of how to exercise their power. |
|
The greatness of Kalki, who passed away 50 years ago, lies in his putting Tamil journalism on a pedestal. |
|
In that golden period of the early 1990s, there was greatness in every role he touched. |
|
I have always found this piece shallow and out of proportion from a pen of such greatness, although I know I am in the minority amongst oboists. |
|
Performance is the only criterion by which a team chasing greatness can judge itself. |
|
But those days are long gone and the demise of its heavy industry remains the most poignant reminder of the city's former greatness. |
|
As a lad he stood on a hayrick, the proud young Hamlet, giving utterances of greatness. |
|
With all her heart and soul, Mary magnified and glorified the Lord by proclaiming his greatness. |
|
They must get the big things right, but they don't achieve greatness without sweating the small stuff. |
|
Homer's Iliad is stunningly recreated, but never achieves the greatness it deserves. |
|
|
Did he have good reason to think his family would hinder his quest after greatness? |
|
He gave himself airs so that others could more easily recognize his greatness. |
|
The implications for national greatness and commercial superiority were stressed repeatedly. |
|
Manchester United's ambition is to assume greatness by winning several times a competition that Rangers are just privileged to be part of. |
|
On the spiritual plane we are to honour Almighty God with praise for His greatness and glory. |
|
For some of us it is to be the best at our job and achieve greatness in our chosen field. |
|
In the same way Hawking, trapped in a crippled body, is physically ensnared but has mentally transcended this barrier to achieve greatness. |
|
Each and every one of us has been given tremendous potential for greatness by our Creator. |
|
Destined for academic greatness, Masters says he still had time to fool about at grammar school in Richmond, North Yorkshire. |
|
And that belief came from ideas that saw greatness as the counterpoint to everyone else's lack of it. |
|
The editorial involved no dilation on the privileges or responsibilities of citizenship or the significance and greatness of our history. |
|
In all my previous visits, these claims to greatness were more than backed up by the quality of the food. |
|
There was a time when William's importance, even greatness, was taken for granted. |
|
Demonstrations of greatness ultimately rank above close finishes or spectacular upsets. |
|
I don't think writers should be this godlike figure who reads from a podium and signs books while their fans quake before their greatness. |
|
Secondly, being raised up to heaven is again no proof of divinity or greatness. |
|
The regime sought to overcome the quietism of the middle classes and of the long-suffering peasantry with the propaganda of national greatness. |
|
His rah-rah memos to the staff, exhorting them to higher greatness, fell flat on the page. |
|
In time, they will find that social and political freedom is the only source of national greatness. |
|
Perhaps we should make a distinction here between greatness and excellence. |
|
|
During the past hundred years, the Western world has been pluming itself on the greatness of its achievements. |
|
If you don't get HBO, you're missing a large part of that greatness, which is fine by me. |
|
But his weakness as a human being will always prevent him from rising to the pinnacle of greatness. |
|
True, it's quite possibly the weakest song on the album, but its only sin is being merely good amidst greatness. |
|
An amoral society may have its advantages, but a fertile field for literary greatness is not one of them. |
|
You have made an idiotic reply to what it is not for me to describe as an act of greatness. |
|
The effort put in by everyone involved, the scope and the lavishness of the production are evident and can be mistaken for greatness. |
|
The paintings are huge and animated, bringing alive the greatness of the Lord who destroys evil and ensures peace. |
|
Winning away at Anfield, defeating Arsenal, annihilating Rangers home and away, all smack of a team capable of greatness. |
|
Whether you think it's lovely but insubstantial, or lovely and great, will depend in large part on what you expect from greatness. |
|
Jonathan Edwards, 1703-1758, achieved greatness as an American preacher-evangelist, principal of a college and revivalist. |
|
Next came scores of Yeshiva students singing stirring songs about the greatness of the Torah. |
|
It is easy to confuse greatness in a specialized field with skill in writing about it. |
|
Your achievement reminds us of the potential for greatness that resides in every one of us. |
|
The greatness of a nation or a people is well judged by the manner it reacts and deals with calamities. |
|
The broad story of Capote's ascent to literary greatness and descent into decades of writer's block in that time is well known. |
|
Making the game look easy and having time on the ball were always seen as measures of greatness. |
|
With every line of his statement, epic memories of past greatness were dishonoured and uprooted. |
|
His greatness can be judge not just by his skills but by the number of victories in championship fights. |
|
It may be a bit of an odd shape for a listed company, but it's going like a bomb, and those who know such things reckon it's bound for greatness. |
|
|
Despite the technology, you still need human talent and ingenuity to create a work of greatness. |
|
Whatever his personal qualities, greatness inevitably accrues to such a man. |
|
It is a work dedicated essentially to the greatness of the god Viu and is, therefore, particularly sacred to Vaiavas, worshippers of Viu. |
|
We have always said that our little country has within it the seeds of greatness. |
|
It is axiomatic that every generation thinks the music of its youth was a benchmark of pop greatness. |
|
Respect and belief are two of the most important stepping stones to greatness. |
|
Though very good as individuals, they never achieved true greatness until one teamed up with the other. |
|
Rather, he was given the qualities needed to achieve greatness and made the most of them. |
|
Indeed, he nearly got bounced from the tour until a new-found maturity put him on the path to greatness. |
|
At every ground there were sell-outs and lock-outs to testify to the greatness of Gallaher's team. |
|
The greatness of the text consists in its inexhaustible capacity to express the fundamental features of our human drama. |
|
Not that one swallow makes a summer but there were flashes of former greatness. |
|
Standing behind the throne of the ruler, they accented his power and greatness. |
|
Through his mother's contacts, he acted as if he were born to greatness, whereas in truth he had to achieve it by his own indefatigable efforts. |
|
The greatness of maternal love has been the topic of many an immortal piece of writing. |
|
The next week or so will be a barometer of just how far Houllier has travelled in his mission to return Liverpool to greatness. |
|
In every way, the greatness of the deed and the thunderousness of the propaganda should be emphasized. |
|
But there had been little in his background to suggest he was destined for greatness. |
|
The collection includes many objects from the colonies that celebrate the greatness of the British Empire. |
|
It was enough to tell himself that his pursuit of literary greatness was incompatible with the obligations of marriage. |
|
|
As a symbol of Stein's greatness and a cue for the home fans to go mental, nothing beats the sight of that big silver pot. |
|
Elvis was a titan, a heroic everyman, an emblem of America's true greatness. |
|
Lichtenstein, Rauschenberg and, most especially, Warhol rose to greatness through their mastery of serigraphy. |
|
To me, it sounds like a gradual, maybe even lifelong, struggle between greatness and tragic flaws. |
|
Her pale face betrayed the greatness of the shock she had just been through. |
|
So knowing them off, especially the more obscure shelf marks, is a sign of greatness amongst us nerds. |
|
Rage has powered him to greatness as a footballer and rage has made a complete eejit of him. |
|
True greatness cannot be ascribed to a team which mistimes the art of peaking, and fails to win the big one. |
|
The true height of our real greatness is that it can't possibly be quantified. |
|
He went 15-6 with a 1.62 GAA in the playoffs and seems destined for further greatness. |
|
He was headed for a starred double-first, and seemed destined for greatness. |
|
Reagan's greatness lies in that he clearly saw this monstrosity for what it was and relentlessly worked to defeat it. |
|
This capacity for greatness can reside only in the neshamah, the spirit which God instills within man. |
|
There have been more wicked kings in English history, but none so unredeemed by any signal greatness or virtue. |
|
With mucho dollars attesting to their greatness, brilliant tacticians of the business world were profiled in countless splashy news reports. |
|
To achieve greatness, a filmmaker needs to direct three unequivocally great movies. |
|
Thus, while The Sleeping Dragon has occasional moments of greatness, it is, overall, a lackluster, uninvolving game. |
|
The duo's third album, Rubber Factory, is jammed with blues 'n' garage rock anthems that surely destine these rust belt heroes for global greatness. |
|
He appeared to understand however belatedly that he was in the presence of another kind of greatness. |
|
The President loved the quote, and turned it into an entire ending about American greatness and aspiration. |
|
|
Iran was awed by the majesty of the Shahanshah, the king of kings, and thought it was at the zenith of greatness. |
|
The audience adorn themselves in patriotic tat, such as Union Jack hats and novelty polyester ties, and sing songs about Britain's greatness whilst waving plastic flags. |
|
The problem with Pinot Noir is that it teases winemakers with greatness. |
|
In the presence of greatness, especially in the rough, where honor is often due the sage who stands outside the affairs of the world, every word or action can be persuasive. |
|
These three longhairs hinted at greatness on their first EP, but with this new joint they are clearly the ones to beat on the Canadian underground rock scene. |
|
He was a charismatic loose cannon, a leader with the makings of greatness repeatedly brought low by his own untamed passions and headstrong impulsiveness. |
|
His true greatness began after he traded his Army uniform for that of a good humor man. |
|
And they need to be set straight and gingerly brushed out of the way of said greatness. |
|
And those who were seemingly immortal in their event, like Moses, probably have the most to lose in that being beaten will tarnish the public's memories of their greatness. |
|
After a somewhat awkward first 15 min, the film gathers its pace and form, touching greatness on many levels, not least the performances and camera use. |
|
In the teaching of European history, it is the marchlands of Empire, Castile, France, Prussia, that have often fought their way to greatness and fame. |
|
The seedlings of his potential greatness as a leader are sprinkled throughout it. |
|
Once he realizes the joy of selflessness, he will achieve greatness. |
|
He was trashed by some of his contemporaries who just did not comprehend his greatness. |
|
As heroes, those who serve and sacrifice embody the virtues that underwrite American greatness. |
|
Readers, wherever they are from, want to feel that they are in direct, unmediated contact with greatness. |
|
They need nothing more than a squeeze of lemon to achieve greatness. |
|
Sometimes great nations have a rendezvous with greatness, and such is the case today.Translated from the French by Janet Lizop. |
|
They harry, hassle, then show the odd touch of greatness to get a result. |
|
Perhaps, then, Vergil's great epic does not aim only to magnify the greatness of Augustus' Rome but also to sound a note of caution or, even, warning. |
|
|
The most obvious course for a politician tipped for greatness, yet hampered by a cherubic countenance and a light voice, would be to gain a reputation for solidity. |
|
Burns not only tells the story of Johnson's rise and fall from sport's greatness, he also frames it with chilling accounts of the times in which Johnson lived. |
|
And this upcoming Saturday night, we will see if Jones still have any of his greatness left or that maybe, Father Time has finally grabbed a chokehold on Jones. |
|
Their greatness can perhaps be best measured in terms of their permanence. |
|
There were plenty of good, entertaining films out there on both the blockbuster end and the indie end of things, but instances of greatness were rare. |
|
The flag was saluted, cheers given for the King and senior classes were given the task of writing a composition on the greatness of the British Empire. |
|
Amid the fisticuffs there's greatness, as we film junkies know. |
|
They have potential for greatness, but they need to let go, let it happen. |
|
The early C minor quartet has elements of greatness imbued in it but the ideas are slightly fuddled and the composer was to improve quite immeasurably later. |
|
On the day of his birth a Brahmin priest predicts his future greatness. |
|
Audiences leap to their feet, they cheer, they sing, they stick on goofy ear-to-ear grins, and they all know they are privileged to be in the presence of greatness. |
|
He was hard, fair, kind and generous, and destined for greatness. |
|
Then, prove the greatness of your leadership by purging the party of all those who have failed to see that you are the physical embodiment of the party and the state. |
|
In the eyes of his contemporaries his military greatness was not in doubt. |
|
The ability to win the big ones is, of course, the mark of true greatness. |
|
Rather than such Hellenic greatness of soul, Proverbs emphasized humbleheartedness. |
|
In neither case, unfortunately, did goofiness lead to greatness. |
|
Many fighters down the years have bounced back from defeat to prove their greatness and that's exactly what I intend to do. |
|
Confronted by the challenge and stimulus of particularity, he moved from a lullingly smooth craftsman's competence to greatness. |
|
She has played a hooker, a barkeep and a karaoke con artist and seems to be edging her way to the precipice of some greatness. |
|
|
He has spent enumerable hours in design and redesign and at the machines in his shop producing a rifle that promises greatness. |
|
Ulysses's tragic greatness is unmistakable in his attempt to transgress all limits, emblematically the limits of the humanly navigable world. |
|
He launches into a flight of oratory on the past greatness of Petra. |
|
Proud parents John and Joyce Ferrie told today they were nervous wrecks as they watched their son stride towards golfing greatness. |
|
Perhaps, as Valerie Jarrett has suggested, he is simply too easily bored to invest his greatness in such mundanity. |
|
From his perspective on the Italian peninsular, Petrarch saw the Roman and classical period as an expression of greatness. |
|
They may be from Surrey but there's nothing soft about these southern screamers insists the band are destined for heavy rock greatness. |
|
King had accomplished much, but his greatness was already behind him. |
|
But hopefully the greatness of the series will be memorialized, too. |
|
Hershel also believes that a higher power has destined Rick for greatness. |
|
He has titles enough to greatness, without borrowing plumes from the gratuitous bedeckings of prurient writers. |
|
The purest literary talent appears at one time great, at another time small, but character is of a stellar and undiminishable greatness. |
|
He plays Maguire with the earnestness of a man who wants to find greatness and happiness in an occupation where only success really counts. |
|
Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon 'em. |
|
Since the Battle of Salamis, Greece had not achieved the greatness and the glory which today holds. |
|
From his perspective on the Italian peninsula, Petrarch saw the Roman and classical period as an expression of greatness. |
|
And for the first few songs, he was encouragingly, overcompensatingly manic, his good leg pumping, talking up the greatness in store. |
|
To walk the footsteps of greatness requires that you start at the bottom of a long stair. |
|
At his death the elegies his fellow poets wrote in his memory attested to his greatness as a poet. |
|
Though depicted as a key moment in Prussia's rise to greatness, the war weakened Prussia. |
|
|
The greatness of the Great Reform Bill lay less in substance than in symbolism. |
|
He takes greatness of kingdoms according to bulk and currency, and not after their intrinsic value. |
|
Thine O Lord is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty. |
|
It is hard to see how any candid student can deny the greatness of this symphony. |
|
Shakespeare's Richard was a cruel, vindictive and irresponsible king, who attained a semblance of greatness only after his fall from power. |
|
And so we go on preparing more months more years precious perhaps vital for the greatness of Britain for the locusts to eat. |
|
His greatness came in the war with France, with the adversary setting the pace. |
|
Those who try to think and act politically and, thereby think and act invitationally, come down on the side of greatness, courage, and autonomy. |
|
Churchill is the epitomy of a leader whose greatness was rooted almost entirely in the way he led in wartime. |
|
It was these skalds who first referred to his greatness with emphasis on his generosity to the church and military achievements. |
|
It is not of pride or greatness that he cometh not aboard your ships. |
|
A gothic cathedral therefore not only invited the visitors to elevate themselves spiritually, it was also meant to demonstrate the greatness of God. |
|
He almost gives his failings as a warrant for his greatness. |
|
Such legends may have emerged when Alexander was king, and possibly at his own instigation, to show that he was superhuman and destined for greatness from conception. |
|
The greatness of these Irish lords suddenly fell and vanished. |
|
Do you hear how we are shent for keeping your greatness back? |
|
British historian Max Hastings says there is no question that as a military genius Napoleon ranks with Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar in greatness. |
|
Due to the greatness of his size, he was an effective bodyguard. |
|
Such is its greatness and length that on either side its end has not been seen or known, so that it is certain that it goes round the whole globe. |
|