Diviani Quotes & Sayings
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Top Diviani Quotes

Nothing but an imperious intellectual and moral necessity can drive into doubt a religious mind, for it is as though an earthquake shook the foundations of the soul, and the very being quivers and sways under the shock. — Annie Besant

Shame is like the weaver's thread; if it breaks in the net, it is wholly imperfect. — Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton

No matter what you do, you're going to have people who have something to say about something you do. You can't please anybody. — Jason Aldean

There are lots of people I admire and respect, but I don't necessarily want to be like them. I'm too happy being myself. — James D'arcy

Life is more important than art; that's what makes art important. — James A. Baldwin

I'm happy to get up in the morning. I'll tell you a little secret: I still want to work in Hollywood. However, I get really excited about getting on a plane, flying to a city, and talking to a group of people about finding the gifts they already have inside. — Kim Coles

In those rare individual cases where women approach genius they also approach masculinity. — Otto Weininger

In the midst of movement and chaos, keep stillness inside of you. — Deepak Chopra

I'm definitely not a traditionalist, because a traditionalist would be going to church every Sunday. — Oprah Winfrey

History could be as arbitrary as poetry, he told himself: what is history, other than a matter of choice, the picking and choosing of certain facts out of a multitude to elicit a meaningful pattern, which was not necessarily the true one? The act of selecting facts, by definition, inherently involved discarding facts as well, often the ones most inconvenient to the pattern that the historian was trying to reveal. Truth thus became an abstract concept: three different historians, working with the same set of data, might easily come up with three different "truths." Whereas myth digs deep into the fundamental reality of the spirit, into that infinite well that is the shared consciousness of the entire race, reaching the levels where truth is not an optional matter, but the inescapable foundation of all else. In that sense myth could be truer than history. — Robert Silverberg