Dernelle Xing Quotes & Sayings
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Top Dernelle Xing Quotes

If only he had more humor, more life in him; that was what was needed here. Grim places needed lightening, not solemnity, — George R R Martin

One might almost say that works of literature are like artesian wells, the deeper the suffering, the higher they rise.) — Marcel Proust

This book is not a polemic treatise but a powerful, well-researched account that sensitizes any reader to the ways in which in-difference permits brutality and genocide. — John M Swomley

I thought I might like to farm. But I didn't know the economics of it. Teachers basically steered me away from it. — Glen Taylor

God is not the source of any form of worship that does not exalt and lift up the name of Jesus! — Ed Stetzer

People who offer you conflict may be offering you the opportunity for growth. Seek these people out. These are the people who can show you that you can do it for yourself. You can be a big circle. — Kaleel Jamison

You are whatever you love. You are, at your very essence, not what you think, but what you love...We are all compelled not by what we believe is right, but by what we love the most. You are not driven by duties, you are not driven by doctrines; you are driven by what you ultimately desire - and maybe you don't actually really love whatever you think you love. — Ann Voskamp

Nothing forces us to know What we do not want to know Except pain — Aeschylus

The weapons that were once outside sharpening themselves on war are now indoors there, in the fortress, fragile in glass cases; Why is it (I'm thinking of the careful moulding round the stonework archways) that in this time, such elaborate defences keep things that are no longer (much) worth defending? — Margaret Atwood

A mother's happiness is like a beacon, lighting up the future but reflected also on the past in the guise of fond memories. — Honore De Balzac

Erik was one of those inadequate people who were so scared by life that they preferred to live under harsh authority, to be told what to do and what to think by a government that allowed no dissent. They were foolish and dangerous, but there were an awful lot of them. — Ken Follett