Churches that depart from the Word will soon find that God has departed from them.
It is extreme evil to depart from the company of the living before you die.
Never depart from the way of martial arts.
Once you depart from the Ten Commandments as being the foundation of right and wrong, you are in a free fall.
You have sat too long for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!
And so while the great ones depart to their dinner, the secretary stays, growing thinner and thinner, racking his brain to record and report what he thinks that they think that they ought to have thought.
Dogs come into our lives to teach us about love and loyalty. They depart to teach us about loss. A new dog never replaces an old dog; it merely expands the heart. If you have loved many dogs, your heart is very big.
The past is always with us, for nothing that once was time can ever depart.
You are very amiable, no doubt, but you would be charming if you would only depart.
It is high time for me to depart, for at my age I now begin to see things as they really are.
Friends depart, and memory takes them To her caverns, pure and deep.
Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they come.
Now I do not myself share that superstitious reverence for the beliefs of common sense which many contemporary philosophers profess. But I think that we must start from them, and that we ought to depart from them only when we find good reason to do so.
If you see a man approaching with the obvious intent of doing you good, run for your life. Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they come.
In philosophy, when we make use of false principles, we depart the farther from the knowledge of truth and wisdom exactly in proportion to the care with which we cultivate them, and apply ourselves to the deduction of diverse consequences from them, thinking that we are philosophizing well, while we are only departing the farther from the truth; from which it must be inferred that they who have learned the least of all that has been hitherto distinguished by the name of philosophy are the most fitted for the apprehension of truth.
In the presence of some people we inevitably depart From ourselves: we are inaccurate, we say things we do not feel, And talk nonsense. When we get home we are conscious that we Have made fools of ourselves. Never go near these people.
But I am chained to Time, and cannot thence depart!
Say to the seceded States, "Wayward sisters, depart in peace. "
But on one man's soul it hath broken, A light that doth not depart; And his look, or a word he hath spoken, Wrought flame in another man's heart.
It’s almost always sadder to stay than to depart