Famous Quotes & Sayings

Goosebumps Song Quotes & Sayings

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Top Goosebumps Song Quotes

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Roustam Tariko

I believe in emotional branding. — Roustam Tariko

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Ella Henderson

I always feel like when I've listened to a great song I know it, 'cuz it's the only time I'll ever get goosebumps or something like that. — Ella Henderson

Goosebumps Song Quotes By John Dryden

Shakespeare was naturally learned; he needed not the spectacles of the books to read nature; he looked inward, and found her there. — John Dryden

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Henry Rollins

You can still function as a living ruin. — Henry Rollins

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Marsha Mason

The idea of being a single woman in Hollywood is a very peculiar thing. — Marsha Mason

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Michael Gungor

If leading worship is just about bringing a group of people into a room so we can get goosebumps and sing songs together, there's not much value in that. But if leading worship is a means to an end, that we leave this place as a different kind of people, as part of a new humanity that God wants to create ... then that matters. — Michael Gungor

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Socrates

It is not difficult to avoid death, gentlemen of the jury; it is much more difficult to avoid wickedness, for it runs faster than death. — Socrates

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Geoff Johns

'The New 52,' I was really excited that new people got to jump in on books. In particular, on 'Aqua Man.' — Geoff Johns

Goosebumps Song Quotes By James Gray

I think I'm a very American director, but I probably should have been making movies somewhere around 1976. I never left the mainstream of American movies; the American mainstream left me. — James Gray

Goosebumps Song Quotes By Tobias Wade

Although it was only a single instrument, each note had the peculiar echoed quality of a thousand harmonics voiced together. There was a whisper behind the strongest note and a shout beneath the softest, and they sang of far off places in long forgotten times. There were no words, but the images of ancient pride, noble heritage, and castles in the sand were imagined from the progression. This was the song that would be played at the birth of a nation, full of hope and promise of better days ahead. This was the song of the end of days with all love and longing lost beyond recall or desire. Farris could see this song playing at her wedding, or her funeral, as a herald of joy and sorrow. She found tears in her eyes and heard herself laugh, and she couldn't say why she was doing either. Her skin was tense and covered with goosebumps, and she shivered with pleasure. — Tobias Wade