Famous Quotes & Sayings

Gilles Bensimon Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 7 famous quotes about Gilles Bensimon with everyone.

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

Top Gilles Bensimon Quotes

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Johann Kaspar Lavater

Too much gravity argues a shallow mind. — Johann Kaspar Lavater

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Beth Revis

But i don't care. Because we can say them or not; it doesn't matter. What is in our heats is real whether we name it or let it exist only in darkness and silence. — Beth Revis

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Melissa Marr

Images cluttered the pages, but one tattoo set her nerves on edge; inky black eyes surrounded by wings likes shadows coalescing.
Mine. The thought, the need,
the reaction was overpowering.
Leslie looked up. "This one." she said. "I need this one.
But the image is more than just tempting art, and it draws her into a world of shadows and desire- into the world of Faerie. — Melissa Marr

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Anne Elisabeth Stengl

I'm worthless," Lionheart says. "I couldn't save her. I couldn't redeem my honor." "You never can," the Prince replies. He takes Lionheart by the shoulders and forces him to sit up, to face him. "But do you think my grace insufficient to forgive you? — Anne Elisabeth Stengl

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Lauren Willig

If I stay in academia, I might end up going someplace random. — Lauren Willig

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Zelda Popkin

Of all the deprivations which afflict humankind, none is more dreadful than loneliness. A corrosive, it eats the heart out. People were meant to live by twos, with someone close with whom to share good and bad, to hear breathing in the dark room at night. Being alone is the one unnatural act. — Zelda Popkin

Gilles Bensimon Quotes By Richard Brautigan

Once, while cleaning the trout before I went home in the almost night, I had a vision of going over to the poor graveyard and gathering up grass and fruit jars and tin cans and markers and wilted flowers and bugs and weeds and clods and going home and putting a hook in the vise and tying a fly with all that stuff and then going outside and casting it up into the sky, watching it float over clouds and then into the evening star.
(from Trout Fishing on the Bevel, page 21) — Richard Brautigan