Famous Quotes & Sayings

Dawngate Shaper Quotes & Sayings

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Top Dawngate Shaper Quotes

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By Wilt Chamberlain

Bill Russell helped make my dream a better dream because when you play with the best, you know you have to play your best. — Wilt Chamberlain

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By David Vann

A favored bit from "A Legend of Good Men"

"My mother and I each had our routines. She taught high school, took long hikes in the state parks near our house, read mystery novels, and sometimes disappeared with explanations as thin as, "I just need a few days," or "I'm going to visit a friend."
"Which friend?" I would ask.
"That's right," she would say. — David Vann

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By Karen Quan

Do you ever think of me when you look up at the moon and the stars? When you look into the horizon as the sun sets? We're looking at the same sun, and the stars may burn brighter where you are, but I can't see them, and they're still there. I spend nights trying to see the stars that you see, but I end up seeing you in the stars instead. — Karen Quan

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By Henry David Thoreau

Morning work! By the blushes of Aurora and the music of Memnon, what should be man's morning work in this world? — Henry David Thoreau

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By Tony Horton

Focus on the present moment. Stay in the moment. — Tony Horton

Dawngate Shaper Quotes By Jon Meacham

What is clear is that he was self-aware and prepared to live with unresolved contradictions, approaching the crises of life with a sense of hope tempered by a recognition that he, at least, was not fated to live to see the end of heartbreak, failure, disappointment, and death. "We have no rose without its thorn; no pleasure without alloy," he had written - as the Heart, not the Head. "It is the law of our existence; and we must acquiesce." Jefferson believed that the future could be better than the past. He knew, though, that life was best lived among friends in the pursuit of large causes, understanding that pain was the price for anything worth having. — Jon Meacham