Frommel Travel Quotes & Sayings
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Top Frommel Travel Quotes

To abandon language is to stop/creating a place other than your own life/in which to live. It is to enter/the terrible certainty of the flesh. Even god/is only possible through language. — Jude Nutter

...Perhaps New York's unintentional beauty is much richer and more varied than the excessively strict and composed beauty of human design. But it's not our European beauty. It's an alien world. — Milan Kundera

Determine value apart from price; progress apart from activity; wealth apart from size. — Charlie Munger

Clearly his next tat needed to be more along the lines of a donkey. 'Cuz he was acting like an ass.
-Rehv's thoughts — J.R. Ward

Yes, word had gotten around about my amusing little defeathering trick (note: made the chicken naked). Apparently we couldn't just eat the poor thing and be done with it. Apparently we had to knit cunning lil' sweaters for it so it could squawk around the yard, feeling fancy. — Cate Tiernan

WHAT COMES FROM THE HEART TOUCHES THE HEART. — Lester Swan

I think everything I do is my early work. I can't wait to get on to the later stuff. — Joseph Fiennes

Inside joke is like a symbol of friendship without having to do the work required of an actual friendship. So — Gillian Flynn

Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away(Matthew 24:35 NIV). — Euginia Herlihy

I promise to be as careful as a pussycat walking up a slippery roof, — Carolyn Keene

In World War One it was the propaganda of our side that first made "propaganda" so opprobrious a term. Fouled by close association with "the Hun," the word did not regain its innocence - not even when the Allied propaganda used to tar "the Hun" had been belatedly exposed to the American and British people. Indeed, as they learned more and more about the outright lies, exaggerations and half-truths used on them by their own governments, both populations came, understandably, to see "propaganda" as a weapon even more perfidious than they had thought when they had not perceived themselves as its real target. Thus did the word's demonic implications only harden through the Twenties, in spite of certain random efforts to redeem it. — Edward L. Bernays

Goddamn it, do it yourself. You're five hundred years old and you can't use a telephone? Read the directions. What are you, an immortal idiot? — Anne Rice

Good-humor makes all things tolerable — Henry Ward Beecher

Change seems recognizable only after it's happened, like putting one's foot down for a familiar stair - and it's not there. — Gloria Steinem