Flammarion Woodcut Quotes & Sayings
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Top Flammarion Woodcut Quotes

Maybe he should have kept quiet about if he knew they couldn't stand it.
Is that what you do? — Caryl Churchill

He was far more comfortable reading about the lives and ideas of others than describing his own. — Kate Morton

Let us come to an understanding about equality; for, if liberty is the summit, equality is the base. — Victor Hugo

By accepting life's limits and inevitabilities and working with them rather than fighting them, we become free. — Epictetus

The plane took off at 8:10 in the morning - or that's when it was scheduled to take off. And that's when I believe it took off. I had been in my office at the Department of Justice. Someone told me that there had been the two strikes that occurred at the World Trade Center. — Ted Olson

A soul gives power to the mind; and the mind empowers the soul — Jeremy Aldana

Everyone gets scared, like it's some big profound statement? — Elizabeth Scott

It is only by doing things others have not that one can advance. — George S. Patton

There is no doubt that Saddam Hussein's regime is a serious danger, that he is a tyrant, and that his pursuit of lethal weapons of mass destruction cannot be tolerated. He must be disarmed. — Edward Kennedy

Of course you don't die. Nobody dies. Death doesn't exist. You only reach a new level of vision, a new realm of consciousness, a new unknown world. — Henry Miller

In any work you do, you can be profound one minute, and then you be superficial the next, and you can be smart and insightful and then insipid. There can be room for all that. — Maira Kalman

The more you pursue distractions, the less effective any particular distraction is, and so I'd had to up various dosages, until, before I knew it, I was checking my e-mail every ten minutes, and my plugs of tobacco were getting ever larger, and my two drinks a night had worsened to four, and I'd achieved such deep mastery of computer solitaire that my goal was no longer to win a game but to win two or more games in a row
a kind of meta-solitaire whose fascination consisted not in playing the cards but in surfing the streaks of wins and losses. — Jonathan Franzen