Famous Quotes & Sayings

Glidescope Quotes & Sayings

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Top Glidescope Quotes

Glidescope Quotes By Bob Menendez

I don't believe that, with the click of a mouse, you should be able to buy unlimited amounts of ammunition. — Bob Menendez

Glidescope Quotes By Ken Blackwell

Traditional marriage in the platform is the essential building block to our civilization. — Ken Blackwell

Glidescope Quotes By Brian Tracy

You can NEVER rise higher than your expectations of yourself. Expect the BEST! — Brian Tracy

Glidescope Quotes By Benjamin Disraeli

Mediocrity can talk, but it is for genius to observe. — Benjamin Disraeli

Glidescope Quotes By Lemony Snicket

With a library it is easier to hope for serendipity than to look for a precise answer. — Lemony Snicket

Glidescope Quotes By Kathleen Founds

I got used to birds: small black birds flying up from behind a building like God had tossed up a handful of currants, birds squalling in the parking lot of the grocery store (drowning the hum of industrial refrigerators), chachalacas -brown robed nuns to the spangled disco dancer peacocks - cackling in the dust of our yard. I got used to the chatters, squeaks, squalls, peeps, calls that sounded like bitter laughter, whistles, flutes, calls that sounded like souls ascending to heaven. I got used to dust and flatness, to sunsets like pink water pouring from the sky, flooding the earth with orange soda. I got used to wind: the hot, cruel wind of afternoon, the merciful magnolia breeze of night. I got used to it. But then I had to go. — Kathleen Founds

Glidescope Quotes By Georges Bernanos

The expression 'to lose one's faith', as one might a purse or a ring of keys, has always seemed to me rather foolish. It must be one of those sayings of bourgeois piety, a legacy of those wretched priests of the eighteenth century who talked so much.

Faith is not a thing which one 'loses', we merely cease to shape our lives by it. That is why old-fashioned confessors are not far wrong in showing a certain amount of scepticism when dealing with 'intellectual crises', doubtless far more rare than people imagine. An educated man may come by degrees to tuck away his faith in some back corner of his brain, where he can find it again on reflection, by an effort of memory: yet even if he feels a tender regret for what no longer exists and might have been, the term 'faith' would nevertheless be inapplicable to such an abstraction, no more like real faith, to use a very well-worn simile, than the constellation of Cygne is like a swan. — Georges Bernanos