Famous Quotes & Sayings

Duhovitost Quotes & Sayings

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Top Duhovitost Quotes

Duhovitost Quotes By Gary Shteyngart

A writer or any suffering artist-to-be is just an instrument too finely set to the human condition [ ... ] — Gary Shteyngart

Duhovitost Quotes By Frederick Lenz

Anything but enlightenment is pure pain; it is the lack of enlightenment. There are joys, of course, and they should be enjoyed. There are sorrows, and they should be passed over briefly. — Frederick Lenz

Duhovitost Quotes By Dorothy Allison

Write to your fear. — Dorothy Allison

Duhovitost Quotes By Larry Wall

When I announced the development of Perl 6, I said it was going to be a community design. I designed Perl, myself. It's limited by my own brain power. So I wanted Perl 6 to be a community design. — Larry Wall

Duhovitost Quotes By Eugene O'Neill

Censorship of anything, at any time, in any place, on whatever pretense, has always been and always will be the last resort of the boob and the bigot. — Eugene O'Neill

Duhovitost Quotes By Corliss Lamont

The intuition of free will gives us the truth. — Corliss Lamont

Duhovitost Quotes By Deepak Chopra

I'm not my thoughts, I'm the thinker who has those thoughts. — Deepak Chopra

Duhovitost Quotes By Ann Druyan

This planet seems to be in such sorry shape. And I can't ever think about the rest of the universe without coming back home and thinking what the implications for life here would be if we were to really have some definitive proof of extraterrestrial life. — Ann Druyan

Duhovitost Quotes By Albert Camus

During the battle, Spartacus himself tried with frenzied
determination, the symbolism of which is obvious, to reach Crassus, who was commanding the Roman
legions. He wanted to perish, but in single combat with the man who symbolized, at that moment, every
Roman master; it was his dearest wish to die, but in absolute equality. He did not reach Crassus:
principles wage war at a distance and the Roman general kept himself apart. Spartacus died, as he wished,
but at the hands of mercenaries, slaves like himself, who killed their own freedom with his. In revenge for
the one crucified citizen, Crassus crucified thousands of slaves. The six thousand crosses which, after
such a just rebellion, staked out the road from Capua to Rome demonstrated to the servile crowd that
there is no equality in the world of power and that the masters calculate, at a usurious rate, the price of
their own blood. — Albert Camus