A Quote by William Shakespeare

Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows. — © William Shakespeare
Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.
Poverty has strange bedfellows.
Politics makes strange bedfellows.
Adversity makes strange bedfellows.
Politics make strange bedfellows.
War makes strange bedfellows.
Resurrection, like politics, makes strange bedfellows.
Politics doesn't make strange bedfellows - marriage does.
As we've learned in 1941, national emergencies can create strange bedfellows.
Perhaps Bach and Beethoven are strange bedfellows for Mickey Mouse, but it's all been a lot of fun.
The bedfellows politics made are never strange. It only seems that way to those who have not watched the courtship.
Art and business may be strange bedfellows, but an artist must make room in her bed for both.
The misery of a child is interesting to a mother, the misery of a young man is interesting to a young woman, the misery of an old man is interesting to nobody.
You took a quarter century off my age with that kidnapping stunt. No more going off with a strange men, hear me? -"You're a strange man." I'm your strange man.
The superior man acquaints himself with many sayings of antiquity and many deeds of the past, in order to strengthen his character thereby.
It is one of the strange discoveries a man can make that life, however you lead it, contains moments of exhilaration; there are always comparisons which can be made with worse times: even in danger and misery the pendulum swings.
Economic libertarians and Christian evangelicals, united by their common enemy, are strange bedfellows in today's Republican party, just as the two Georges - the archconservative Wallace and the uberliberal McGovern - found themselves in the same Democratic Party in 1972.
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