Boxleitner Gilbert Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Boxleitner Gilbert with everyone.
Top Boxleitner Gilbert Quotes
The third peculiarity of aerial warfare was that it was at once enormously destructive and entirely indecisive. — H.G.Wells
The more clearly you become conscious of the frailty, vanity and dream-like quality of all things, the more clearly will you also become conscious of the eternity of your own inner being; because it is only in contrast to this that the aforesaid quality of things becomes evident, just as you perceive the speed at which a ship is going only when looking at the motionless shore, not when looking into the ship itself. — Arthur Schopenhauer
All vampires smoke. Smoking's high on the list of Things You Take Up To Pass The Time. — Glen Duncan
Your first time?" the Hauptman gently asked. I nodded. "You'll get used to it," he went on, "but maybe never completely." He — Jonathan Littell
However dark and profitless, however painful and weary, existence may have become, life is not done, and our Christian character is not won, so long as God has anything left for us to suffer, or anything left for us to do. — Frederick William Robertson
A fly is as untamable as a hyena. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
When it comes to details, more is not necessarily better. — Donna Levin
Confidence, not paper or digital money, is the key currency in a capitalist system. — Mal Fletcher
I think the birds in the area are dying laughing watching me try not to crash. — Cynthia Hand
I do not know which makes a man more conservative - to know nothing but the present, or nothing but the past. — John Maynard Keynes
So with Easter. It was fun, as a child, to bound down the stairs to find seasonal sweet-treats under each plate, but again, with the passing of time, and the shadow of death over our broken family circle, I've seen Easter as highest necessity. If hope is to flourish, it had better be true. — Gerhard E Frost
He knew that his absence bound her to him in a manner more complete and humiliating than his presence could enforce. He was giving her time to attempt an escape, in order to let her know her own helplessness when he chose to see her again. She would know that the attempt itself had been of his choice, that it had been only another form of mastery. Then she would be ready either to kill him or to come to him of her own will. The two acts would be equal in her mind. He wanted her brought to this. He waited. — Ayn Rand