Absently In A Sentence Quotes & Sayings
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Top Absently In A Sentence Quotes

In a world in which everything is subject to the passing of time, art alone is both subject to time and yet victorious over it. — Andre Malraux

Unless a man feels he has a good enough memory, he should never venture to lie. — Michel De Montaigne

Eisenhower, his science adviser James Killian, and others in the White House didn't want to be reminded that the rocket was the same damn Jupiter-C that could have placed a satellite in orbit more than a year before Sputnik. The Army was told to keep that information quiet - in fact, to change the name of the rocket, and Jupiter-C became Juno 1. — Alan Shepard

God's self-revelation to humanity does not occur from the centers of world power but in the margins of society. — Miguel A. De La Torre

Those are some of the most powerful people in the world, and you swamped them in sewage! If you had real friends, they'd have told you that you're an idiot for even thinking about doing that!"
Tom bristled, indignant. "My friends do tell me I'm an idiot. All the time! — S.J. Kincaid

The reason I shift gears constantly, why I'm doing an opera, why I've done essays, why I've written poetry for years that nobody wanted, why I do short stories and novels and screenplays ... is so I will have new ways of failing. This means becoming a student again. — Ray Bradbury

Writers don't like to write letters. Too much like work. — Mari Sandoz

They were drunk on youth, fueled by greed, and higher than kites. — Jordan Belfort

The reasons for food insecurity are many and varied. But part of the problem is the global farming systems. — Marcus Samuelsson

I'll die for stifled love, by all that's true. — Geoffrey Chaucer

I started acting in my parents living room when I was five years old. — Megan Gallagher

Isn't that part of love, I wanted to ask, carrying someone else's ghosts for them? — Tiffany Baker

It does not, however, seem impossible that by an attention to breed, a certain degree of improvement, similar to that among animals, might take place among men. Whether intellect could be communicated may be a matter of doubt: but size, strength, beauty, complexion, and perhaps even longevity are in a degree transmissible ... As the human race could not be improved in this way, without condemning all the bad specimens to celibacy, it is not probable, that an attention to breed should ever become general. — Thomas Malthus