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Bottorff 2005 Quotes & Sayings

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Top Bottorff 2005 Quotes

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Nicole Krauss

He could hear Donald saying something else but it didn't matter anymore what, because then and there it occurred to him that maybe the emptiness he'd been living with all this time hadn't really been emptiness at all, but loneliness gone unrecognized. How can a mind know how alone it is until it brushes up against some other mind? A single mark had been made, another person's memory imposed onto his mind, and now the magnitude of his own loss was impossible for Samson to ignore. It was breathtaking. He sank to his knees ... It was as if a match had been struck, throwing light on just how dark it was. — Nicole Krauss

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Kin F. Kam

To all the defiant stoics, laughing and fighting lonesome battles in the face of adversity. — Kin F. Kam

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Santosh Kalwar

Love is in constant motion, it is the energy which was created when you were born and it will never be destroyed. — Santosh Kalwar

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Thomas Starr King

A visit to New Hampshire supplies the most resources to a traveler, and confers the most benefit on the mind and taste, when it lifts him above mere appetite for wildness, ruggedness, and the feeling of mass and precipitous elevation, into a perception and love of the refined grandeur, the chaste sublimity, the airy majesty overlaid with tender and polished bloom, in which the landscape splendor of a noble mountain lies. — Thomas Starr King

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Pete Wentz

Fall Out Boy never pretended that we were anything but pop-rock. — Pete Wentz

Bottorff 2005 Quotes By Lewis Spence

I should add, however, that, particularly on the occasion of Samhain, bonfires were lit with the express intention of scaring away the demonic forces of winter, and we know that, at Bealltainn in Scotland, offerings of baked custard were made within the last hundred and seventy years to the eponymous spirits of wild animals which were particularly prone to prey upon the flocks - the eagle, the crow, and the fox, among others. Indeed, at these seasons all supernatural beings were held in peculiar dread. It seems by no means improbable that these circumstances reveal conditions arising out of a later solar pagan worship in respect of which the cult of fairy was relatively greatly more ancient, and perhaps held to be somewhat inimical. — Lewis Spence