Frontalis Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Frontalis with everyone.
Top Frontalis Quotes

Every known thing used to be unknown
And every rock could become a stone
Someday nature will have to atone
When soul sees dead flesh leaving the bone — Munia Khan

If you go deeper and deeper into your own heart, you'll be living in a world with less fear, isolation and loneliness. — Sharon Salzberg

Music is very nebulous, and you can conjure up a lot of moods with music. But lyrics - they're a lot more tangible. They're much more specific. And you want to say something meaningful and creative and artistic and that tells a story and that takes people someplace else. — Sarah McLachlan

Encourage independence in your children by regularly losing them in the supermarket. — Erma Bombeck

Oh gosh, well, you know, growing up in the '70s being a young boy there, you know, there were still exploitation movies, where, you know, were, you know, still opened up every week and, you know, played - sometimes they would play it at the local, you know, mall theater. — Quentin Tarantino

Michael literally couldn't remember the last time he had seen his parents. — James Dashner

Dip your pen into your arteries and write. — William Allen White

I would rather believe for something great and receive half of it, than to believe for nothing and receive all of it! — Joel Osteen

It is also true that the less possible it becomes for a man to acquire a new fortune, the more must the existing fortunes appear as privileges for which there is no justification. Policy is then certain to aim at taking these fortunes out of private hands, either by the slow process of heavy taxation of inheritance or by the quicker one of outright confiscation. A system based on private property and control of the means of production presupposes that such property and control can be acquired by any successful man. — Friedrich August Von Hayek

It is for the most part in our skill in manners, and in the observations of time and place and of decency in general, that what is called taste by way of distinction consists; and which is in reality no other than a more refined judgment. — Edmund Burke

The very odd thing about sagas [ ... ] is that they very rarely mention dry mouths and full bladders. — David Gemmell