1928 Peace Quotes & Sayings
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Top 1928 Peace Quotes

She never managed to find herself in these books no matter how hard she tried, exhuming traits from between the pages and donning them for an hour, a day, a week. We think in some ways, we have all done this our whole lives, searching for the book that will give us the keys to ourselves, let us into a wholly formed personality as though it were a furnished room to let. As though we could walk in and look around and say to the gray-haired landlady behind us, We'll take it. — Eleanor Brown

Life is easier than you'd think;all that is necessary is to accept the impossible, do without the indispensable and bear the intolerable. Kathleen Norris — Susanne Matthews

She was a redhead and he liked redheads; they were either outrageously ugly or almost supernaturally attractive. — Philip K. Dick

My definition of palatable might be slightly different from yours. — Alan Rickman

Words of wisdom are spoken by children at least as often as scientists. — James Newman

When we go down to the low-tide line, we enter a world that is as old as the earth itself - the primeval meeting place of the elements of earth and water, a place of compromise and conflit and eternal change. — Rachel Carson

I knew I could never clean away this memory. We were stained and spoiled forever. — Keren David

The answer to the drug problem is not criminalisation and incarceration, but education, regulation and treatment. — Merlyn Gabriel Miller

A lot of young chefs today get carried away by trends, by influences, by movements. — Daniel Boulud

I will not be governed by the tyranny of immediacy. — Mary Anne Radmacher

A man is sorry to be honest for nothing. — Ovid

it is best to limit daytime naps to a maximum of 20 minutes and take them earlier in the day rather than later. Chill — Alan Anderson

I don't think any musician ever thinks about making a statement. I think everybody goes into music loving it. — Hugh Masekela

Old women are more reconciled to death than old men. By bringing life to the world, we come to see ourselves as debtors. What's given is taken. — R. Scott Bakker

My love for math eventually became a passion. I went to math camp when I was fourteen and came home clutching a Rubik's Cube to my chest. Math provided a neat refuge from the messiness of the real world. It marched forward, its field of knowledge expanding relentlessly, proof by proof. And — Cathy O'Neil