Victoria Justice Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Victoria Justice. Here they are! All 26 of them:

Sir Storm, I have decided that you are a god of poetic justice." Baka to Storm
Victoria Danann (My Familiar Stranger (Knights of Black Swan, #1))
What do you want?” chided Leo. “To be ordinary? To be human?” He said the word as if it stained his tongue. “Better human than a monster,” he muttered. Leo’s jaw tightened. “Take heed, little brother,” he said. “Do not lump us in with those base creatures. We are not Corsai, swarming like insects. We are not Malchai, feeding like beasts. Sunai are justice. Sunai are balance. Sunai are—” “Self-righteous and prone to speaking in third person?” cut in August before he could stop himself.
Victoria E. Schwab (This Savage Song (Monsters of Verity, #1))
It is a small thing, yes, but on small things hinge the turning of the world. Very rarely does the opportunity come to stand up against torture and evildoing - or for justice and equality - in the grand gestures most of us dream of. On the other hand, the opportunity to stand up against a small injustice, or for a small truth or a small good, comes nearly every day.
Victoria Goddard (The Hands of the Emperor (Lays of the Hearth-Fire, #1))
It's always the same story. Naturally one doesn't get the woman one should have had; but if by some damned freak of reason and justice it ever does happen, then of course she dies immediately after.
Knut Hamsun (Victoria)
We are not Malchai, feeding like beasts. Sunai are justice. Sunai are balance. Sunai are—” “Self-righteous and prone to speaking in third person?” cut in August before he could stop himself
Victoria E. Schwab (This Savage Song (Monsters of Verity, #1))
Never let anyone take away your dreams.
Victoria Justice
Fear equaled power. Elgon now knew that kindness equaled loyalty, and he would fight every fiery bone in his body to see justice done.
Victoria Lynn (Once I Knew (The Chronicles of Elira))
Russia was a genuine great power, but with a tragic flaw. Its vicious, archaic autocracy had to be emasculated for any type of better system to emerge. Unmodern in principle, let alone in practice, the autocracy died a deserving death in the maelstrom of the Anglo-German antagonism, the bedlam of Serbian nationalism, the hemophilia bequeathed by Queen Victoria, the pathology of the Romanov court, the mismanagement by the Russian government of its wartime food supply, the determination of women and men marching for bread and justice, the mutiny of the capital garrison, and the defection of the Russian high command. But the Great War did not break a functioning autocratic system; the war smashed an already broken system wide open.
Stephen Kotkin (Stalin: Paradoxes of Power, 1878-1928)
Fear equaled power. But Elgon now knew that kindness equaled loyalty, and he would fight with every fiery bone in his body to see justice done, the kingdom returned to its proper order, and the plans of the wicked set to flame.
Victoria Lynn (Once I Knew (The Chronicles of Elira #1))
Maya Schenwar and Victoria Law’s book Prison by Any Other Name: The Harmful Consequences of Popular Reforms, we’ve learned how to send people into outer space and how to shrink a powerful computer into a device that fits into the palm of our hand, yet we haven’t yet learned how to face our racial history or how to tell the truth about the devastation wrought by colonialism, militarism, and global capitalism. We’ve learned how to develop powerful surveillance systems and how to build missiles that can reach halfway around the globe. But what have we learned about the true meaning of justice?
Michelle Alexander (The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness)
She was in love with a man who still loved his deceased fiancée.
K. Victoria Chase (Serial Games (Virginia Justice, #1))
Yeah, where’s God in all of this?
K. Victoria Chase (Serial Games (Virginia Justice, #1))
The Queen (Victoria) wrote generously to her mother, 'I quite understand your feelings on the occasion of Sir John Conroy's death. . . I will not speak of the past and the many sufferings he entailed on us by creating divisions between you and me which could never have existed otherwise, they are buried with him.. For his poor wife and children I am truly sorry." Thanking the Queen for her letter the Duchess of Kent wrote 'Yes, Sir John Conroy's death was a most painful shock. I shall not try and excuse the many errors that unfortunate man committed, but it would be very unjust if I allowed all the blame to be thrown on him. I am in justice bound to accuse myself. . . I erred in believing blindly, in acting with out refection. . . I allowed myself unintentionally to be led led to hurt you, my dearest child, for whom I would have given at every moment my life! Refection came always too late, but not the deserved punishment! My sufferings were great, very great. God be praised that those terrible times are gone by and that only death can separate me from you My beloved Victoria.
Cecil Woodham-Smith (Queen Victoria, From her Birth to the Death of the Prince Consort)
My dear friend Queen Victoria, who has absolute trust in the Divine Justice and goodness, used to often say to me: "What we do not understand now, we shall understand some day- in this life or the next" Empress Eugenie
Theo Aronson (Queen Victoria and the Bonapartes)
Justice can only be delivered by someone who doesn't care to about how much he's paid, or where he is in the chain of command. Someone who's ego won't be inflated by grandeur or power. Someone who won't be influenced by this guy's being the CEO of this or his being the Mayor of that. And let's face it: that someone couldn't be human.
Eliza Victoria (Project 17)
We didn't do a good enough job to make sure something like the Second World War could never happen again. We only looked at one side of the story. There were two monsters, Hitler and Stalin, and the regimes behind them, but in Nurmberg only the Nazis were tried. There was no justice for the Soviet regime.
Victoria Amelina
Mi pasión es rumor de un palmar.” As Victoria led him into the hut, Steve murmured: “My passion is the whispering of palm trees.
Paul Levine (SHATTERED JUSTICE (Four Sizzling Thrillers): Solomon vs. Lord, The Deep Blue Alibi, To Speak for the Dead, and Illegal)
The truth is never easy, but it is always necessary. It is the foundation of justice, the pathway to healing, and the key to unlocking the mysteries of the past. We must have the courage to seek the truth, no matter how difficult, and to embrace it, no matter how painful (Page 56)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Hawaii Nei: Island Plays (Talanoa: Contemporary Pacific Literature, 3))
The truth is never easy, but it is always necessary. It is the foundation of justice, the pathway to healing, and the key to unlocking the mysteries of the past. We must have the courage to seek the truth, no matter how difficult, and to embrace it, no matter how painful (Kneubuhl 56)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Casts a Shadow: A Hawai'i Mystery)
The truth is not always easy to accept, but it is always necessary. It is the foundation of trust, the cornerstone of justice, and the key to unlocking the mysteries of the past. We must have the courage to face the truth, no matter how uncomfortable, and to embrace it as a catalyst for growth and change (Kneubuhl 51)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Leaves Its Mark)
Justice is not just about punishment. It is about healing, about reconciliation, and about restoring balance to our community. We must strive to find solutions that are fair and just, and that bring about a sense of harmony and peace to those who have been harmed(Kneubuhl 92)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Leaves Its Mark)
We must honor the memory of those who have passed on, by seeking the truth, by speaking the truth, and by bringing justice to those who have been wronged. We must never forget the impact of our actions, both good and bad, and strive to make a positive difference in the lives of those around us." (Kneubuhl 124)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Leaves Its Mark)
The truth is not always easy to accept, but it is always necessary. It is the foundation of trust, the cornerstone of justice, and the key to unlocking the mysteries of the past. We must have the courage to face the truth, no matter how uncomfortable, and to embrace it as a catalyst for growth and change (Kneubuhl 101)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Casts a Shadow: A Hawai'i Mystery)
We must always remember that justice is not just about punishment. It is about healing, about reconciliation, and about restoring balance to our community. We must strive to find solutions that are fair and just, and that bring about a sense of harmony and peace to those who have been harmed (Kneubuhl 123)
Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl (Murder Casts a Shadow: A Hawai'i Mystery)
Justice can only be delivered by someone who doesn't care about how much he's paid, or where he is in the chain of command. Someone who's ego won't be inflated by grandeur or power. Someone who wont be influenced by this guy's being a CEO of this or his being a Mayor of that. And let's face it: that someone couldn't be human.
Eliza Victoria
On the day after Albert died, when she had taken the Duchess of Sutherland into the King’s Room to see his body, the Queen had turned as they both looked down at Albert’s dead face and asked plaintively, ‘Will they do him justice now?’ By day’s end, 23 December 1861, there was no one in the country who could have doubted the extent to which the nation had indeed done justice to its late Prince. The day had been a great celebration, not just of the Prince, but of sober British moral values. Benjamin Disraeli had no hesitation in his own paean to the late Consort: ‘With Prince Albert we have buried our sovereign,’ he confided unequivocally to Count Vitzthum, Saxon envoy to the Court of St James’s. ‘This German prince has governed England for twenty-one years with a wisdom and energy such as none of our kings have ever shown.
Helen Rappaport (A Magnificent Obsession: Victoria, Albert, and the Death That Changed the British Monarchy)