1878 Silver Quotes & Sayings
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Top 1878 Silver Quotes

On any day in the Mission in San Francisco, you can see a hand-painted sign that is kind of funky, and maybe that person, if they had money, would prefer to have had a neon sign. But I don't prefer that. I think it's beautiful, what they did and that they did it themselves. That's what I find beautiful. — Margaret Kilgallen

Nothing taken for granted; everything received with gratitude; everything passed on with grace. — Gilbert K. Chesterton

I had no aspirations to be a musician, but I picked up a guitar for two seconds and haven't put it down since. — Slash

Two sounds of autumn are unmistakable ... the hurrying rustle of crisp leaves blown along the street ... by a gusty wind, and the gabble of a flock of migrating geese. — Hal Borland

I usually start writing a novel that I then abandon. When I say abandon, I don't think any writer ever abandons anything that they regard as even a half-good sentence. So you recycle. I mean, I can hang on to a sentence for several years and then put it into a book that's completely different from the one it started in. — Kate Atkinson

Intuition is often mistaken, but not altogether. — Mason Cooley

It's much funnier when the comedy can happen with me just trying my best to genuinely do a good thing. — Nathan Fielder

They were a bit like cows but twice and large, — Ken T Seth

All cruelty springs from weakness. — Seneca.

Killing the private property-that was the center of the Marxist economy and Marxist ideology. That was the center of the Lenin ideology. — Anatoly Chubais

I was frustrated as a child when I had to use a vacuum. It had a screaming noise and the smell of stale dog and a lack of performance. — James Dyson

We have a right to narrow down our universe ever further and further; until like the world of the Iliad and the Odyssey it is made up of certain simple endurances, enjoyments, mental and physical struggles, surrounded by the washing of the sea, the blowing of the wind, the swaying of the wheat, the falling of the rain, the voyaging of the clouds, and the motions of the sun and moon and dawn and twilight. — John Cowper Powys