1.
So as a prelude whites must be made to realise that they are only human, not superior. Same with Blacks. They must be made to realise that they are also human, not inferior.
Steven Biko
'It is imperative for both Whites and Blacks to understand that they are all equal, not one being superior or the other inferior.'
2.
The most uninteresting part of the biography of a composer is his childhood. All those preludes are the same and the reader hurries on to the fugue.
Dmitri Shostakovich
4.
Taking it easy is often the prelude to backsliding. Comfort precedes collapse.
Vance Havner
6.
How many times had those awful words - "I know what I'm doing" - been uttered throughout history as prelude to disaster?
Christopher Buckley
7.
Freedom is not won by merely overthrowing a tyrannical ruler or an oppressive regime. That is usually only the prelude to a new tyranny, a new oppression.
Jonathan Sacks
10.
This was but a prelude; where books are burnt human-beings will be burnt in the end
Heinrich Heine
11.
Do not ever disturb prelude music for others, for reverence is essential to revelation
Boyd K. Packer
12.
There is, of course, nothing wrong in a program that aims to please everybody, except that as a rule it is a prelude to dictatorship.
J. Christopher Herold
13.
To militant Islamists, the expulsion of the Soviets was just the prelude to purging the entire Islamic world of infidels.
Gilles Kepel
15.
You know that failure prelude to being the victim of what is criminally wrong.
Zig Ziglar
16.
You said a curse is only a curse if I allowed myself to me cursed by it. You said... I had it in my power to free myself of any curse - that curses were preludes to blessings.
Lauren Kate
17.
For what is delusion but the prelude to hurt. And what is hurt but the prelude to rage.
Joyce Carol Oates
18.
Dancing is the normal prelude to intercourse.
Sylvia Plath
19.
Sometimes it seems to me that the celebration of a person is really just a prelude to ridicule.
Matthew Specktor
20.
Ideas have significance for him only as a prelude to action.
Eric Hoffer
21.
How often is the passing of one storm only a prelude to another.
Jane Yolen