Famous Quotes & Sayings

Garrity Flashlights Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 5 famous quotes about Garrity Flashlights with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Garrity Flashlights Quotes

Garrity Flashlights Quotes By Kamel Daoud

I know this from the hollow sound that persists after the men's prayer, and from their faces pressed against the window of supplication. And from their coloring, the complexion of people who respond to fear of the absurd with zeal. As for me, I don't like anything that rises to heaven, I only like things affected by gravity. I'll go so far as to say I abhor religions. All of them! Because they falsify the weight of the world. Sometimes I feel like busting through the wall that separates me from my neighbor, grabbing him by the throat, and yelling at him to quit reciting his sniveling prayers, accept the world, open his eyes to his own strength, his own dignity, and stop running after a father who has absconded to heaven and is never coming back. Have a look at that group passing by, over there. Notice the little girl with the veil on her head, even though she's not old enough to know what a body is, or what desire is. What can you do with such people? Eh? — Kamel Daoud

Garrity Flashlights Quotes By W.B.Yeats

O bid me mount and sail up there
Amid the cloudy wrack,
For Peg and Meg and Paris' love
That had so straight a back,
Are gone away, and some that stay
Have changed their silk for sack. — W.B.Yeats

Garrity Flashlights Quotes By Bernard Cornwell

You won't regret the men you never killed, but you will regret the women you passed up. — Bernard Cornwell

Garrity Flashlights Quotes By Pema Chodron

Welcome the present moment as if you had invited it. It is all we ever have so we might as well work with it rather than struggling against it. We might as well make it our friend and teacher rather than our enemy. — Pema Chodron

Garrity Flashlights Quotes By Abbas Kiarostami

Using non-actors has its own rules and really requires that you allow them to do their own thing. — Abbas Kiarostami