Gouch Quotes & Sayings
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Top Gouch Quotes

Please God, I'm begging you — Sarah Dessen

If he was planning to attack and ravish, he gave no indication of being in a hurry to do so. — Julia Quinn

Amusement and half pleasure, on their faces. Miller signed in and crawled through the awkward Ojino-Gouch-style airlock, seventy years out of date and hardly larger than — James S.A. Corey

Your life is a book;
it begins the day you are born,
the chapters pile up as you grow,
and the book ends as you die. — Matshona Dhliwayo

The glass I drink from is not large, but at least it is my own. — Alfred De Musset

In about 9th grade, an English teacher told me I had a talent to act. He said I should audition for a performing arts high school, so I did on a whim. I got accepted. Then I got accepted at the Julliard School, and by then, I was serious about it. — Ving Rhames

It's the willingness on the part of people who seek personal enrichment to destroy other human beings ... And because the mechanisms of governance can no longer control them, there is nothing now within the formal mechanisms of power to stop them from creating essentially a corporate oligarchic state. — Chris Hedges

I was holding the door for several girls in front of you, and I waited for you to catch up. When you reached me, you looked pleased, and a little surprised. Unlike the others, you didn't expect the door to be held for you by some random guy. You smiled up at me and said, 'Thank you. — Tammara Webber

[He] starts to talk and stops, feeling his way, as if it's all clogged up rusty inside. — Nikki Gemmell

What is life if not the shadow of a fleeting dream? — Umberto Eco

Pastor Russell lived in nearby Pittsburgh and said that there was no hell. This was terrible for we all knew that everyone but the Baptists were going there, so to believe there was no hell upset all the countryside theology. — Ammon Hennacy

For, in the majority of cases, conscience is an elastic and very flexible article, which will bear a deal of stretching and adapt itself to a great variety of circumstances. Some people by prudent management and leaving it off piece by piece like a flannel waistcoat in warm weather, even contrive, in time, to dispense with it altogether; but there be others who can assume the garment and throw it off at pleasure; and this, being the greatest and most convenient improvement, is the one most in vogue. — Charles Dickens