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False Hope Quotes

1.
False hopes are more dangerous than fears.
J. R. R. Tolkien

Authors on False Hope Quotes: J. R. R. Tolkien Lois Greiman Winston Churchill Patti Davis Kim Campbell Tess Gerritsen Barbara Ehrenreich Jesse Ball Rob Payne Edgar Allan Poe Julian Fellowes Stephen Grosz Bill Maher Mike Caro Laini Taylor Alexander Hamilton
2.
False hope really makes you cynical.
Bill Maher

3.
There is no worse mistake in public leadership than to hold out false hope soon to be swept away.
Winston Churchill

4.
False hope is nicer than no hope at all.
Edgar Allan Poe

5.
Harsh reality is always better than false hope.
Julian Fellowes

6.
False hope is better than no hope at all.
Lois Greiman

7.
Closure is just as delusive-it is the false hope that we can deaden our living grief.
Stephen Grosz

8.
Canadians want to see real hope restored, not false hopes raised.
Kim Campbell

9.
And as far as false hope, there is no such thing. There is only hope or the absence of hope - nothing else.
Patti Davis

10.
Wishes are false. Hope is true. Hope makes its own magic.
Laini Taylor

11.
False hope is sometimes much worse and sometimes much better than no hope.
Mike Caro

12.
It is wisdom to recognize necessity when all other courses have been weighed, though as folly it may appear to those who cling to false hope.
J. R. R. Tolkien

13.
What Rizzoli thought, staring at her own image, was that she hated Elizabeth Hurley for giving women false hope. The brutal truth was, there are some women who will never be beautiful, and Rizzoli was one of them.
Tess Gerritsen

14.
Cheerfulness, up to and including delusion and false hope, has a recognized place in medicine.
Barbara Ehrenreich

15.
False hope is the bread - and - butter of my existence, the only thing that keeps me going.
Rob Payne

16.
That would be the death of anyone - to recognize false hopes with a certainty. One mustn't know that. If it is offered, refuse!
Jesse Ball

17.
Necessity, especially in politics, often occasions false hopes, false reasonings, and a system of measures, correspondingly erroneous.
Alexander Hamilton