Famous Quotes & Sayings

Dibbles Quotes & Sayings

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Top Dibbles Quotes

Dibbles Quotes By Erik Larson

Anyone looking up from the dock saw only beauty, on a monumental scale, while on the far side of the ship men turned black with dust as they shoveled coal - 5,690 tons in all - into the ship through openings in the hull called "side pockets." The ship burned coal at all times. Even when docked it consumed 140 tons a day to keep furnaces hot and boilers primed and to provide electricity from the ship's dynamo to power lights, elevators, and, very important, the Marconi transmitter, whose antenna stretched between its two masts. When the Lusitania was under way, its appetite for coal was enormous. Its 300 stokers, trimmers, and firemen, working 100 per shift, would shovel 1,000 tons of coal a day into its 192 furnaces to heat its 25 boilers and generate enough superheated steam to spin the immense turbines of its engines. — Erik Larson

Dibbles Quotes By Kafka, Franz

He had probably been thrown out of a wine shop, and it hadn't quite dawned on him yet. — Kafka, Franz

Dibbles Quotes By E. Stanley Jones

Nothing is ever really yours until you share it. — E. Stanley Jones

Dibbles Quotes By Dean Koontz

My guess was that when you descended to a certain depth of depravity, the Fogs could smell you as a hound, catching a murderer's spoor, could track the criminal through forest, field, and moor. — Dean Koontz

Dibbles Quotes By Anne Lamott

I was raised in a family where none of us ever raised a voice, so there was no room to express feelings of rage or even unabashed joy - a little bashed joy, here or there, or being mildly disgruntled. — Anne Lamott

Dibbles Quotes By Mona Van Duyn

The end / of passion / may refashion / a friend. — Mona Van Duyn

Dibbles Quotes By Jan-Philipp Sendker

Every life contains the seed of death, he had explained to Tin Win repeatedly in those first years of their friendship. Death, like birth, was a part of life that no one could escape. It was senseless to resist it. Far better to accept it as natural than to fear it. — Jan-Philipp Sendker