It is often when night looks darkest, it is often before the fever breaks that one senses the gathering momentum for change, when one feels that resurrection of hope in the midst of despair and apathy.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The story of Christian reformation, revival, and renaissance underscores that the darkest hour is often just before the dawn, so we should always be people of hope and prayer, not gloom and defeatism. God the Holy Spirit can turn the situation around in five minutes.
It is during our darkest moments that we must focus to see the light.
In politics, as in poetry, it is sometimes true that it is darkest before dawn.
As we wander, grieving, in yet another dark moment, amid our pain we must struggle to remember the redemptive power of love and hope.
A fever is an expression of inner rage.
When you look on the bright side, you're acknowledging that there is a dark side at which you are choosing not to gaze. If you think that the darkest hour is before the dawn, you accept that you are moving from darkness to light.
It feels really sad, to me, to go to a dark bedroom. It's like surrendering to the night or something.
In the cold, shivering twilight, preceding the daybreak of civilization, the dominating emotion of man was fear.
If there were no night, we would not appreciate the day, nor could we see the stars and the vastness of the heavens. We must partake of the bitter with the sweet. There is a divine purpose in the adversities we encounter every day. They prepare, they purge, they purify, and thus they bless.
Death is delightful. Death is dawn, The waking from a weary night Of fevers unto truth and light.