Amazing Nature Wallpapers With Quotes & Sayings
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Top Amazing Nature Wallpapers With Quotes

Chess players do not care about the pawns. They sacrifice the least powerful so they can hold on to their power.Your leaders play chess with your lives,but what the world does not yet know is that someone else whispers the moves as they play... — Catherine Linka

That we devote ourselves to God, is seen In living just as though no God there were. — Robert Browning

If all you have to fight with is sticks and stones,
then that's what you fight with. — Bo Demont

Heaven, the seat of bliss, Brooks not the works of violence and war. — John Milton

Separating her thighs. The scent of her arousal hardened every muscle in his body. He moved his hand down her hip and then to her hot, warm core. — Jayne Ann Krentz

The primitive tribes permitted far less individual freedom than does modern society. Ancient wars were committed with far less moral justification than modern ones. A technology that produces debris can find, and is finding, ways of disposing of it without ecological upset. And the schoolbook pictures of primitive man sometimes omit some of the detractions of his primitive life - the pain, the disease, famine, the hard labor needed just to stay alive. From that agony of bare existence to modern life can be soberly described only as upward progress, and the sole agent for this progress is quite clearly reason itself. — Robert M. Pirsig

But Eisenhower's advice was consistent, from his days as a general, to his years in the White House, to his role as veteran counselor: don't fight unless you are in it to win. Don't waste time and lives with half measures. — Nancy Gibbs; Michael Duffy

You only get one true love, one soulmate. Not everyone is lucky enough to find that person in a lifetime. — Penelope Ward

The sand doesn't care if you're made of flesh or stone. — Joaquin Lowe

I've heard people using your songs as prayer, begging god in falsetto. — Warsan Shire

It can do truth no service to blind the fact, known to all who have the most ordinary acquaintance with literary history, that a large portion of the noblest and most valuable moral teaching has been the work not only of men who did not know, but of men who knew and rejected the Christian faith. — John Stuart Mill

The contemporary art world is what Tom Wolfe would call a "statusphere." It's structured around nebulous and often contradictory hierarchies of fame, credibility, imagined historical importance, institutional affliction, perceived intelligence, wealth, and attribution such as the size of one's art collection. — Sarah Thornton