Famous Quotes & Sayings

Bill Britton Quotes & Sayings

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Top Bill Britton Quotes

Bill Britton Quotes By Jackson Browne

Doctor, my eyes cannot see the sky. Is this the prize for having learned how not to cry? — Jackson Browne

Bill Britton Quotes By Mignon McLaughlin

A car is useless in New York, essential everywhere else. The same with good manners. — Mignon McLaughlin

Bill Britton Quotes By Orson Scott Card

I always tell what I believe. Whether it's true, I'm no more sure than any man. — Orson Scott Card

Bill Britton Quotes By Joyce Meyer

God is not there just for emergencies. — Joyce Meyer

Bill Britton Quotes By Sarina Bowen

We'd been so close all those years ago. My subconscious just couldn't get over the idea that we weren't anymore. — Sarina Bowen

Bill Britton Quotes By Radclyffe Hall

As things turned out her choice had been happy, for seldom had two people loved more than they did; they loved with an ardour undiminished by time; as they ripened, so their love ripened with them. — Radclyffe Hall

Bill Britton Quotes By B.K.S. Iyengar

As breath stills our mind, our energies are free to unhook from the senses and bend inward. — B.K.S. Iyengar

Bill Britton Quotes By Marguerite Duras

A book consists of two layers: on top, the readable layer ... and underneath, a layer that was inaccessible. You only sense its existence in a moment of distraction from the literal reading, the way you see childhood through a child. It would take forever to tell what you see, and it would be pointless. — Marguerite Duras

Bill Britton Quotes By Rabindranath Tagore

Pain, which is the feeling of our finiteness, is not a fixture in our life. It is not an end in itself, as joy is. To meet with it is to know that it has no part in the true permanence of creation. It is what error is in our intellectual life. To go through the history of the development of science is to go through the maze of mistakes it made current at different times. Yet no one really believes that science is the one perfect mode of disseminating mistakes. The progressive ascertainment of truth is the important thing to remember in the history of science, not its innumerable mistakes. Error, by its nature, cannot be stationary; it cannot remain with truth; like a tramp, it must quit its lodging as soon as it fails to pay its score to the full. — Rabindranath Tagore