Yep
It was Patrick Henry
Horace Greeley
Horace Tabor owned a amazing silver mine which made him famous. Name: David Tabor one of his ancestors :)
They didn't have a weakness, they made it so others would have one hence the fates
To criticize an institution, person, or group, indirectly The fall of anything or anyone is a cause for humour, something to laugh at, something to laugh about. Satires make use of this principle. But a satire it is not a mere humorous poem, but pure social criticism made immortal by attiring it in the form of poetry. Satires bring human mind to the loweliest of things or attitudes described in them, but their ultimate purpose like all other poetic forms is to elevate human mind. Cleverly cunning descriptions of those base and lowly things and attitudes give us glimpses of what is loftiness in such matters. That is the way the satires attain their purpose. It is a denunciation of vices, folly or abuses of any kind by the means of sarcasm, derision or ridicule
They didn't have a weakness, they made it so others would have one hence the fates
Horace F. Dean has written: 'Visitation evangelism made practical' -- subject(s): Evangelistic work, Visitations (Church work)
Pandora didn't have a "weakness". She was human in every way, and was sent to men as a punishment for accepting the gift of fire. The gods bestowed upon her an innate sense of curiosity, then forbade her from opening the jar she carried. They knew her will would eventually fail. That isn't a weakness, it's human nature.
Mark, Horace, Jack, Florance and Paul. they are also referred to as. Mark=Mark Horace=Horace Jack=John Florance=Mrs. Hugh Atkinson Paul=Paul this confused me for like forever and then i asked someone and then tada!!! it made sense!
Heracross weakness is: Fire (2x) Flying (4x) and Psychic (2x) Sorry, I made a mistake in the original one.
Horace Greeley made the phrase popular, but it was John Soule, an Indiana newspaper man who is credited with first uttering that line in 1851.
Horace Greely made it popular but the Quote itself belongs to John Soule.