It is worse than a crime, it is a blunder.
One of the best parts of Thanksgiving for me is re-watching some of the classic holiday blunders that have been depicted on television. I remember laughing uncontrollably on the set of 'That Girl' back in 1967 when we shot the episode, 'Thanksgiving Comes But Once A Year, Hopefully' during our second season.
Blunders rarely travel alone.
A clever man commits no minor blunders.
To rectify past blunders is impossible, but we might profit by the experience of them.
The remedy for all blunders, the cure of blindness, the cure of crime, is love.
You must make your own blunders, must cheerfully accept your own mistakes as part of the scheme of things.
It is worse that a crime, it is a blunder. [Fr. , C'est plus qu'un crime, c'est une faute. ]
It is a capital blunder; as you discover, when another man recites his charities.
Is man God's biggest blunder, or is man's God?
But what is woman? Only one of nature's agreeable blunders.
Much later, when I was discussing cosmological problems with Einstein, he remarked that the introduction of the cosmological term was the biggest blunder he ever made in his life.
One of the blunders religious people are particularly fond of making is the attempt to be more spiritual than God
In games against humans, you often win because the opponent blunders a piece, and you can often survive when you do it yourself. Against the computer, you make only one mistake - the last one.
The best men of the best epochs are simply those who make the fewest blunders and commit the fewest sins.
Think about death. You do not know how much time remains to you. And remember that if you do not become different, everything will be repeated again, all foolish blunders, all silly mistakes, all loss of time and opportunity - everything will be repeated with the exception of the chance you had this time, because chance never comes in the same form. You will have to look for your chance next time. And in order to do this, you will have to remember many things, and how will you remember then if you do not remember anything now?
George theThird Ought never to have occurred. One can only wonder At so grotesque a blunder.
There is one statesman of the present day, of whom I always say that he would have escaped making the blunders that he has made if he had only ridden more in buses.
Most men would rather be charged with malice than with making a blunder.
Is man one of God's blunders? Or is God one of man's blunders?