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Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes & Sayings

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Top Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Russell Smith

One of the qualities essential to writing exciting stories, whether for page or screen, is an ability to abandon one's morality. We simply cannot be good writers and good people. One must be able to access one's darkest self, one's venality and pettiness and murderousness. — Russell Smith

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Marge Piercy

The sense of being Jewish never left me, but when my grandmother died, I rebelled against Judaism as I knew it then, which was Orthodox. I saw the rituals, a lot of them, as very male, for a long time. — Marge Piercy

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Erin Heatherton

I love lipbalms in general; they're very important! — Erin Heatherton

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Georgette Heyer

That *does* relieve my mind!'
'It might well - except that I fancy you don't care a straw how we may appear.'
'On the contrary! Think how much my credit would suffer!'
She laughed, but shook her head. 'You don't care for that either. Or - or for anything, perhaps.'
He was momentarily taken aback by this, but he replied without perceptible hesitation: 'Not profoundly.'
She frowned, turning it over in her mind. 'Well, I can understand that that must be very comfortable, for if you don't care for anybody or anything you can't be cast into dejection, or become sick with apprehension, or even get into high fidgets. On the other hand, I shouldn't think you could ever be *aux anges* either. It wouldn't do for me: it would be too flat! — Georgette Heyer

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Ashley Scott

My favorite part is the preparation because you read on the page, you get this character. — Ashley Scott

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Eric A. Johnson

Beaten paths are for beaten men. — Eric A. Johnson

Bergotte Wikipedia Quotes By Joseph Stanton

The extremity of her sensitivity
impressed a richly idle princely family,
of her discomfort, bothered as she had to be
by the absurd softness of the ample beddings,
not to mention the pillow piles aggravating
her much lamented acrophobic dis-ease.
[from the poem, Princess and the Pea] — Joseph Stanton