Ertl Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Ertl with everyone.
Top Ertl Quotes
I don't think that I ever believed that poetry would be a career. I have always thought of poems as something more private than professional ... I would never introduce myself as a poet. I will always have some other thing that I am. — Dana Goodyear
The only limitations you have are the ones that you accept. — Lester Levenson
He was inordinately proud of England and he abused her incessantly. — H.G.Wells
It was not always easy because I was always an individual and found it difficult to be one of a group. One person who was very supportive was my father. My mother was great but my father really recognised my individuality and supported me in that. — Sharon Stone
I held her against me, wishing with all my heart for time to stop, now and forever. — Nicholas Sparks
All impediments in fancy's course Are motives of more fancy. — William Shakespeare
But true giving is not an economic exchange; it is a generative act. It does not subtract from what we have; it multiplies the effect we can have in the world. Many — Kent Nerburn
What we live is what we believe. Everything else is just so much religious talk. — Vance Havner
I love you, my brother, whoever you are - whether you worship in a church, kneel in your temple, or pray in your mosque. You and I are children of one faith, for the diverse paths of religion are fingers of the loving hand of the one supreme being, a hand extended to all, offering completeness of spirit to all, eager to receive all. — Kahlil Gibran
The fanatic is incorruptible: if he kills for an idea, he can just as well get himself killed for one; in either case, tyrant or martyr, he is a monster. — Emile M. Cioran
Some people do crossword puzzles. I do books. — Betty Smith
And I think that I'd be a natural for scoring horror movies. — Jim Coleman
From ignorance our comfort flows, the only wretched are the wise — Samuel Johnson
Joy is that paradox where a man so trusts, is so enraptured, as to be caught up and lost in the other, while at the same time, being utterly known by the other, thus utterly himself. — Geoffrey Wood
