Hagelberg Postcards Quotes & Sayings
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Top Hagelberg Postcards Quotes

You have no choice but to live in the present, if you're really being open to events and people as they come along. — Gloria Steinem

While Terrorism is a war that starts developing within the mind,
Religion is a war that antagonizes our conscience, but
Love is alway a war within the heart.....
Lori F.5/2002 Share The Peace! — Lori Foroozandeh

If you are ever tempted to experiment with the alluring offerings of Lucifer first calmly analyze the inevitable consequences of such choices and your life will not be shattered. You cannot ever sample those things that are forbidden of God as destructive of happiness and corrosive to spiritual guidance without tragic results. — Richard G. Scott

Gratitude is the heart's memory. French Proverb — Candy Paull

My parents were really political. The news was very important in our home. We basically had dinner every night while watching the news, and then we'd discuss it with our parents. — Al Franken

Strange things blow in through my window on the wings of the night wind and I don't worry about my destiny. — Carl Sandburg

I love you', I tell her. 'I don't face fancy shit inside me or other pretty words to say, but know that, no matter what, I love you. — Katie McGarry

Did I do this on purpose? What do you think? Or did I do this accidentally? — Bret Easton Ellis

I'm not always a smiley kind of guy. — Bernie Sanders

A vast dawning entirety lies before the soul, our senses lose themselves in it as do our eyes and oh! we long to make the oblation of all our being and to be filled utterly with the bliss of a single large and glorious feeling. - And oh! when we hurry after it, when There becomes Here, all is as it was and we stand in our poverty, in our narrowness, and the soul in us parches for the elusive freshening. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

I would say there are different kinds of poems. There are things that poets in the history of poetry hit upon when they're very young that can never be outdone and it's a remarkable, strange experience when you think of say Arthur Rimbaud who write poetry between the ages of 17 and 21 whose career was over by the time he was 22. — Edward Hirsch