25 Chapters Quotes & Sayings
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Top 25 Chapters Quotes

If your ratings are high and there's money being made, you're allowed to be a perfectionist in television. — Dan Harmon

If you can't do it, don't pledge to do it. Don't be a liar; say only what you can do. It's better for you to have a "single sentence" manifesto about your life which is fulfilled than to have 25 chapters' theories about your visions that remain undone! — Israelmore Ayivor

Never give up trying to do what you really want to do in life. Where ever there is love and inspiration, you can never go wrong. — Timothy Pina

I pretty much like all music except for country. I'm not a big fan of country. — Ashley Benson

Allowing yourself to stop reading a book - at page 25, 50, or even, less frequently, a few chapters from the end - is a rite of passage in a reader's life, the literary equivalent of a bar mitzvah or a communion, the moment at which you look at yourself and announce: Today I am an adult. I can make my own decisions. — Sara Nelson

When I perform, I usually wear wigs because I love them. — Rita Ora

If you love someone who is ruining his or her life because of faulty thinking, and you don't do anything about it because you are afraid of what others might think, it would seem that rather than being loving, you are in fact being heartless. — William Wilberforce

I never give answers. I lead on from one question to another. That is my leadership. — Rabindranath Tagore

It's important to be smart, but it's also important to be active with your intelligence. The more you sit around over-thinking things, the more trouble you get into. — Alisa Valdes

Dominant feeling of the battlefield is loneliness, gentlemen. — Max Hastings

I can't think of anything more empowering than the fact that we are destined to be, do and have anything we choose. — Hal Elrod

I forgot to say - a merely curious detail - that in one of the first chapters of Sartor Resartus, when speaking about garments, Carlyle says that the simplest garment he knows of was used by the cavalry of Bolivar in the South American war. And here we have a description of the poncho as "a blanket with a hole in the middle," under which he imagines Bolivar's cavalry soldier, he imagines him - simplifying it a bit - "mother naked," as naked as when he came out of his mother's belly, covered by the poncho, with only his sword and his spear."25 — Jorge Luis Borges