Famous Quotes & Sayings

Bucks County Quotes & Sayings

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Top Bucks County Quotes

Bucks County Quotes By Harvey Pekar

I'm from the beatnik generation, where everybody wanted to be a poet or writer or something. And at that time, I was a jazz critic, and I was always thinking, theorizing about what makes great art or what's important in art. — Harvey Pekar

Bucks County Quotes By William Clay Ford Jr.

Nature is where my heart is. — William Clay Ford Jr.

Bucks County Quotes By Tony Hoare

Inside every large program is a small program struggling to get out. — Tony Hoare

Bucks County Quotes By Christopher Hitchens

Shepherds don't look after sheep because they love them - although I do think some shepherds like their sheep too much. They look after their sheep so they can, first, fleece them and second, turn them into meat. That's much more like the priesthood as I know it. — Christopher Hitchens

Bucks County Quotes By Stacia Kane

Fuck. This was bad. It had happened, hadn't it? The thing she thought would never happen, the thing she was always so careful not to have happen. She'd lost count, she'd lost track of what exactly she'd taken, and it had happened. — Stacia Kane

Bucks County Quotes By Bucky Harris

That would bring tears to the eyes of a rocking chair. — Bucky Harris

Bucks County Quotes By Britta Phillips

Before I moved to Brooklyn to pursue music, I was a high school dropout and speed freak who'd been living with her dealer boyfriend in Bucks County, Pennsylvania at 16. — Britta Phillips

Bucks County Quotes By David Ritchey

He currently lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania — David Ritchey

Bucks County Quotes By Molly Maguire McGill

The game jostled back and forth, and then came the final inning. Some player named Casey came to bat, like his teammates, looking like a rock. Lightning ripped through the air as rain came down in sheets. The scoreboard said the horses were beating the rocks by two points, but there were two men on base. If Casey hit a homerun, the rocks would beat the horses. If not, too bad for the rocks.
This man, Ben, and the two people with him looked horrified as this Casey came to bat. They had red shirts with horses painted on them. They jumped up and down for joy when they saw the final pitch, and Casey sulking back to the dugout. He had struck out. After the game, the four hiked back to a very small car. — Molly Maguire McGill