Famous Quotes & Sayings

Coinestar Quotes & Sayings

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Top Coinestar Quotes

the countless unnamed jewels of Mars, — Edgar Rice Burroughs

There is only one spot in me that is as warm and placid as those cattle, and that is the part that knows quite surely that I will always be cold, that there will always be a wind hunting through me, and that I will always be hurrying before the coming darkness in search of a place that is not there. — Peter S. Beagle

We do what we enjoy, even if it is act of evil. — M.F. Moonzajer

I wouldn't mind producing a movie with a music storyline, but acting in one is too close to home. — Garth Brooks

It is not in our choice to spread the gospel or not. It is our death if we do not. — Peter Forsyth

Fanny was upset when Crittenden criticized Florence Nightingale, the celebrated British nurse of the Crimean War, saying, he thought it a very unwomanly thing for a gentle lady to go into a hospital of wounded men. — Doris Kearns Goodwin

After I have photographed the way I like to, I feel as I might if I had been making love all day, marvelous and exhausted and wanting to collapse on the floor in a heap. That's why I can't photograph just anybody, and why it's so hard to photograph people on assignment; it's like going to bed with someone not of my choosing. — Eva Rubinstein

We can hardly call a beggar an obstacle to generosity. — Dalai Lama

Everybody wants to save the world but nobody wants to help mom with the dishes. — P. J. O'Rourke

Having grown up in the theater family, having done a huge amount of acting from a very little boy to precocious teenager in Shakespeare festivals that my father produced, I went off to college and fell in with the theater gang. I was already an experienced actor. I became a kind of campus star. I heard all this applause and laughter. — John Lithgow

Most do not fully see this truth that life is difficult. Instead they moan more or less incessantly, noisily or subtly, about the enormity of their problems, their burdens, and their difficulties as if life were generally easy, as if life should be easy. They voice their belief, noisily or subtly, that their difficulties represent a unique kind of affliction that should not be and that has somehow been especially visited upon them, or else upon their families, their tribe, their class, their nation, their race or even their species, and not upon others. — M. Scott Peck