Browse through our collection of quotes tagged with Friends.
Every deed and every relationship is surrounded by an atmosphere of silence. Friendship needs no words -- it is solitude delivered from the anguish of loneliness.
Dag Hammarskjold
Friendship needs no words...
I always felt that the great high privilege, relief and comfort of friendship was that one had to explain nothing.
Katherine Mansfield
I'm treating you as a friend asking you to share my present minuses in the hope that I can ask you to share my future pluses
Those we hold most dear never truly leave us ... they live on in the kindnesses they showed, the comfort they shared and the love they brought into our lives.
Isabel Norton
In my friend, I find a second self.
Make new friends but keep the old ones; one is silver and the other's gold.
Source Unknown
Friendship is love with understanding.
Among Life's precious jewels, Genuine and rare, The one that we call friendship Has worth beyond compare.
Friendship should be a responsibility, never an opportunity.
A friend once wrote: Give me your faith, not your doubts.
A Friendship that's sincere are true. Gives joy like nothing else will do; That's why glad hearts look up and send A prayer of thanks for faithful friends.
A man never likes you so well as when he leaves your company liking himself.
And the joy of it all; when we count it all up; is found in the making of friends.
Build bridges instead of walls and you will have a friend.
A Friend is a treasure. More precious than Gold, For love shared is priceless And never grows old.
A ray of sunshine, a balmy breeze Are a gift from God above, And He also gives us faithful friends. To warm our hearts with love.
A friend walks in when everyone else walks out
A slender acquaintance with the world must convince every man that actions, not words, are the true criterion of the attachment of friends.
George Washington
There are persons who cannot make friends. Who are they? Those who cannot be friends. It is not the want of understanding or good nature, of entertaining or useful qualities, that you complain of: on the contrary, they have probably many points of attraction; but they have one that neutralizes all these --they care nothing about you, and are neither the better nor worse for what you think of them. They manifest no joy at your approach; and when you leave them, it is with a feeling that they can do just as well without you. This is not sullenness, nor indifference, nor absence of mind; but they are intent solely on their own thoughts, and you are merely one of the subjects they exercise them upon. They live in society as in a solitude.
William Hazlitt