Biscuit Hammer Quotes & Sayings
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Top Biscuit Hammer Quotes

If it's making a galloping noise, it's probably a horse, not a zebra. — Kelly Williams Brown

Someone has said that culture is what remains with you after you have forgotten all you have read, and I believe there is much truth in that. — Louis L'Amour

Beatrice did something to him, reduced him to his basic animal self, but he needed to purge his out of control feelings, not amplify them. — Audra North

Phidias and the achievements of Greek art are foreshadowed in Homer: Dante prefigures for us the passion and colour and intensity of Italian painting: the modern love of landscape dates from Rousseau, and it is in Keats that one discerns the beginning of the artistic renaissance of England. Byron was a rebel and Shelley a dreamer; but in the calmness and clearness of his vision, his perfect self-control, his unerring sense of beauty and his recognition of a separate realm for the imagination, Keats was the pure and serene artist, the forerunner of the pre-Raphaelite school, and so of the great romantic movement of which I am to speak. — Oscar Wilde

The clerk in the Tank involuntarily applauded. Becoming immediately sensible of the impropriety, he poked the fire, and extinguished the last frail spark for ever. — Charles Dickens

Poetry heals the wounds inflicted by reason. — Novalis

I can feel myself dying inside. — Trey Parker

I am telling you that your perception of ultimate reality is more limited than you thought, and that Truth is more unlimited than you can imagine. — Neale Donald Walsch

Davy Crockett and James Bowie got what was coming to them," Mom said. "for stealing this land from the Mexicans" - and — Anonymous

The purest evil that human efforts could attain, in other words, was probably achieved by those men who made their wills the same and who made their eyes see the world in the same way, men who went against the pattern of life's diversity, men whose spirits shattered the natural wall of the individual body, making nothing of this barrier, set up to guard against mutual corrosion, men whose spirit accomplished what flesh could never accomplish. — Yukio Mishima