Our spontaneous action is always the best. Emerson.
Our stomach for good fortune is bottomless, but the entrance to it is narrow. Schopenhauer.
Our strength lies in our weakness (i.e., limitedness). Hazlitt.
Our temperaments differ in capacity of heat, 25 or we boil at different degrees. Emerson.
Our thinking is a pious reception. Emerson.
Our thoughts are often worse than we are, just as they are often better. George Eliot.
Our thoughts take wildest flight / Even at the moment when they should array themselves in pensive order. Byron.
Our time is fixed, and all our days are numbered; / How long, how short, we know not: this we know, / Duty requires we calmly wait the summons, / Nor dare to stir till Heaven shall give permission. Blair.
Our torment is unbelief, the uncertainty as to 30 what we ought to do, the distrust of the value of what we do, and the distrust that the necessity which we all at last believe in is fair and beneficial. Emerson.
Our valours are our best gods. Fletcher.