Browse through our collection of quotes tagged with Friends.
Hopes are planted in friendship's garden where dreams blossom into priceless treasures.
Source Unknown
Let your friends be the friends of your deliberate choice.
It takes two people to ruin a perfectly good day. First a person who says something downright nasty about you, and second, a dear friend who makes sure you hear about it immediately.
Make friends before you need them
Love is blind; friendship closes its eyes.
A true friend never gets in your way unless you happen to be going down.
Arnold Glasgow
The man that hails you Tom or Jack, and proves by thumps upon your back how he esteems your merit, is such a friend, that one had need be very much his friend indeed to pardon or to bear it.
William Cowper
A good motto is: Use friendliness but do not use your friends.
Frank Crane
A friend is one to whom one may pour out all the contents of one's heart, chaff and grain together, knowing that the gentlest of hands will take and sift it, keep what is worth keeping, and with a breath of kindness, blow the rest away.
Dinah Maria Mulock Craik
A friend is someone with whom you dare to be yourself.
What is a friend? I will tell you it is someone with whom you dare to be yourself.
If two friends ask you to judge a dispute, don't accept, because you will lose one friend; on the other hand, if two strangers come with the same request, accept because you will gain one friend.
Saint Augustine of Hippo
I want my friend to miss me as long as I miss him.
What is a friend? A single soul dwelling in two bodies.
Aristotle
I enjoyed the meetings, too. It was like having friends.
J.K. Rowling
Friendships are fragile things and require as much care in handling as any other fragile and precious thing.
Randolph Silliman Bourne
Love Him, and keep Him for thy Friend, who, when all go away, will not forsake thee, nor suffer thee to perish at the last.
Thomas Kempis
My friend is he who will tell me my faults in private.
Ibn Gabirol
The very flexibility and ease which make men's friendships so agreeable while they endure, make them the easier to destroy and forget. And a man who has a few friends, or one who has a dozen (if there be any one so wealthy on this earth), cannot forget on how precarious a base his happiness reposes; and how by a stroke or two of fate --a death, a few light words, a piece of stamped paper, a woman's bright eyes --he may be left, in a month, destitute of all.
Robert Louis Stevenson
So long as we are loved by others I should say that we are almost indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend.