Toggle navigation
Collections
Fun
Jokes
Fortune
Photo
Nicknames
Blog
ﻮﺑﻻگ
Iran
The Bitter Past, More Welcome Is The Sweet. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well That Ends Well -- Act V, Sc.
Home
›
Fortune Cookies
›
Miscellaneous Collections
The bitter past, more welcome is the sweet.
-- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well
-- Act v, Sc. 3
Related:
All impediments in fancy's course Are motives of more fancy.
-- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act v, Sc. 3...
They say miracles are past. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act ii, Sc.
3...
The inaudible and noiseless foot of Time. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act v, Sc.
3...
Whose words all ears took captive. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act v, Sc.
3...
Praising what is lost Makes the remembrance dear. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act v, Sc.
3...
All the learned and authentic fellows. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act ii, Sc.
3...
A young man married is a man that 's marr'd. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act ii, Sc.
3...
My friends were poor but honest. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act i, Sc.
3...
Service is no heritage. -- William Shakespeare (1564-1616), All 's Well that Ends Well -- Act i, Sc.
3...