1935 Chevy Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about 1935 Chevy with everyone.
Top 1935 Chevy Quotes

From the satisfaction of desire there may arise, accompanying joy and as it were sheltering behind it, something not unlike despair. — Andre Gide

One after the other, there came a series of incidents so curious and so inexplicable that the very shrewdest people began to feel uneasy. — Gaston Leroux

Temporality temporalizes as a future which makes present in the process of having been. — Martin Heidegger

You may wish that some parts of (your face) were different, but the actual fact is shown in the mirror. Now, can you look at your conditioning in a similar way? — Jiddu Krishnamurti

It is amazing but true that it is easy for any of us to rebuke someone else who is intending to do something evil and say, "Don't do that - that's a sin!" And yet it is difficult for us to say the same thing to ourselves. The reason is that saying it to ourselves requires a movement of the will, but saying it to someone else requires only a low level of thought based on things we have heard. — Emanuel Swedenborg

So I made a request. I said to the writers, I have a minor request that I just want to play a loser. — Justin Long

The world is now too dangerous for anything less than utopia. — R. Buckminster Fuller

Josh Brolin is an actor that I really, really like; he's fantastic. I worked with him once; he's a really great actor. — Rob Zombie

Math and science were my favorite subjects besides theater. — Jason Earles

I used to get really pissed off that my life was so dictated by when this Jesus guy was born and when he was dying every year. I felt really resentful that I couldn't get on with my own life because I was so busy with his. — Tori Amos

The eyes of men love to pluck the blossoms from the faded flowers they turn away. — Sophocles

Once again I have told you so little, and have asked no questions, and once again I must close. But not a single answer and, even more certainly, not a single question shall be lost. There exists some kind of sorcery by which two people, without seeing each other, without talking to each other, can at least discover the greater part about each other's past, literally in a flash, without having to tell each other all and everything; but this, after all, is almost an instrument of Black Magic (without seeming to be) which, although never without reward, one would certainly never resort to with impunity. Therefore I won't say it, unless you guess it first. It is terribly short, like all magic formulas. Farewell, and let me reinforce this greeting by lingering over your hand.
Yours, Franz K. — Franz Kafka