Great Gatsby Extravagance Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Great Gatsby Extravagance with everyone.
Top Great Gatsby Extravagance Quotes

A woman may be beautiful but have poor character. A man may be a business genius, making money left and right, but lack common courtesy, sensitivity, and compassion. — Myles Munroe

Governments understand that help is power. That is why governments offer as much help to as many people as they can ... — Neale Donald Walsch

I just drove past Brad Paisley jogging down the side of the road. I rolled down the window and screamed RUN FORREST RUN. I live for ... .. little moments ... ..like that. — Taylor Swift

Families were nothing more than hope cast out in a wide net, everyone wanting only the best. — Emma Straub

You are absolutely amazing,' he breathed into her ear, but she didn't have the breath to respond to his words. She gasped heavily as their faces drew closer. He leaned down towards her, and she felt so drawn to him that she leaned up to meet him. She had no idea what was going on, but in spite of Uche's presence, she decided to follow her heart under the clear cold stars. Next thing, her unprepared body was rising gently, gradually standing on her tingling toes in order to meet his face. He was so tall that she barely reached his shoulders... — Nick Nwaogu

Could there ever be a wise man without the wisdom or life or without the death of illusion? — Sorin Cerin

deep well. Either the — Lewis Carroll

You can't get good at anything unless you do it day in and day out, over and over. — Steven Soderbergh

The invention of photography. For whom? Against whom? — Jean-Luc Godard

[A]s Agatha Swanburne once said, 'To be kept waiting is unfortunate, but to be kept waiting with nothing interesting to read is a tragedy of Greek proportions. — Maryrose Wood

The trouble with Hooker is that he's got his headquarters where his hindquarters aught to be. — Abraham Lincoln

One common fate we both must prove; You die with envy, I with love. — John Gay

Don't most astrophysicists now predict some "end of the line" - an end to it all? Not just the death of things, but the annihilation of everything. Some great contraction, or collapse. Or, perhaps, some vast dissipation into eternal emptiness. Maybe it's all swallowed up by an immense black hole, which then swallows itself. But, whatever the case, their extinction is inevitable and absolute. So complete as to erase any and all evidence that this reality - this existence - ever took place. So complete that, perhaps, for all intents and purposes, it never really did.
(attrib: F.L. Vanderson) — Mort W. Lumsden

I am an isolationist. — Ethel Waters