It is true that in America I've become a national hero, but really I was a hopeless case, that was all.
It is impossible to communicate with Schumann. The man is hopeless; he doesn't talk at all.
When things are really desperate and hopeless and you can't do anything about this, and there's a sense that something must be done, that is something usually leads to the U. N.
We muckraked, not because we hated our world, but because we loved it. We were not hopeless, we were not cynical, we were not bitter.
I just wanted to fit in as a teenager, but it was hopeless.
We have received a dog with serious eye problems and a skin disease in hopeless stage. The person who brought it here demanded we cure it for free and refused the idea of euthanasia to end its pain.
You can always find some expert who will say something hopelessly hopeless about anything.
With God life is an endless hope. Without God, life is a hopeless end.
Tribulations cannot cease until God either sees us remade or sees that our remaking is now hopeless.
I came to a terrifying place in my life where I knew I was hopeless. My only hope was to change. . . . or die.
I don't have any politics. I feel that as soon as politics arises, things are already in a hopeless state of deterioration.
Realize that there are not hopeless situations; there are only people who take hopeless attitudes.
Planning anything is hopeless.
A people without children would face a hopeless future; a country without trees is almost as helpless.
I'm really hopeless with technology - I don't even have a computer.
It’s not bad people I fear so much as good people. When a person is sure that he is good, he is nearly hopeless; he gets cruel- he believes in punishment.
You can always find contradictions and hope, in hopeless circumstances, and a sense of redemption in somebody who makes the same mistake, over and over. So far, so good. That's how I put it.
The whole life of Demosthenes. . . leaves the impression of a melancholy state of things, and of the brazen insolence of wickedness. A particularly striking idea of how things really were in Greece can be obtained from one feature of life - the sons who turned out badly. . . . the sons of gifted but arrogant fathers turned out merely arrogant, the grandsons hopeless; it is respect alone that sustains families and gives them traditions.
Be someone's light when they are hopeless.
One should. . . be able to see things as hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise.