Baublebar Farah Quotes & Sayings
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Top Baublebar Farah Quotes
Maybe death is the great equalizer, the one big thing that can finally make strangers shed a tear for one another — Morrie Schwartz.
But truth is not the only merit that a metaphysic can possess. It may have beauty, and this is certainly to be found in Plotinus; there are passages that remind one of the later cantos of Dante's Para- diso, and of almost nothing else in literature. Now — Bertrand Russell
The word book acted as a transient stimulus — Charlotte Bronte
A father is a person who give you feather to further. — Ernest Eddison
It is very foolish to ignore the past. The man who does ignore it, and assumes that our problems are quite new, and that therefore the past has nothing at all to teach us, is a man who is not only grossly ignorant of the Scriptures, he is equally ignorant of some of the greatest lessons even in secular history. — D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
The WWII generation shares so many common values: duty, honor, country, personal responsibility and the marriage vow For better or for worse
it was the last generation in which, broadly speaking, marriage was a commitment and divorce was not an option — Tom Brokaw
Well that was decided. This was more than a silly schoolgirl crush. This was a deeply disturbing infatuation. — S. Walden
Don't try to be an artist. Find the thing within you that needs to be expressed. You might find it is art. — Duane Michals
She tried to walk more slowly up the hill. God, her mind was racing, racing in neutral, — Edward St. Aubyn
Contradictions, in any communication, are the first stepping stones of mistrust — Paul Babicki
It is ... easy to be certain. One has only to be sufficiently vague. — Charles Sanders Peirce
Criticism occupies the lowest place in the literary hierarchy: as regards form, almost always; and as regards moral value, incontestably. It comes after rhyming games and acrostics, which at least require a certain inventiveness. — Gustave Flaubert
Is this not the very thing that drives an adventurous man to navigate uncharted oceans, to traverse continents and mountains, to pilot virgin estuaries and hidden coves - this promise of inscribing a name steadfast upon what he finds? There are few parcels of earth left to be claimed; yet even as the known world shrinks, the heavens grow ever more infinite. An explorer of the skies need never leave his home or fret over the swiftness of other expeditions; he might give whatever name he chooses to any new thing that wanders into his view. — John Pipkin