Famous Quotes & Sayings

Hermetists Quotes & Sayings

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Top Hermetists Quotes

Hermetists Quotes By Rigoberto Gonzalez

One of the things I'm constantly telling my students is that they're never going to write a poem everyone gets, or if they do, they've failed. They should leave someone behind every time. — Rigoberto Gonzalez

Hermetists Quotes By Gottfried Leibniz

There are also two kinds of truths: truth of reasoning and truths of fact. Truths of reasoning are necessary and their opposite is impossible; those of fact are contingent and their opposite is possible. — Gottfried Leibniz

Hermetists Quotes By David Milne

Well, we are expanding in all of our segments of the market. — David Milne

Hermetists Quotes By George Washington

Firearms stand next in importance to the Constitution itself. — George Washington

Hermetists Quotes By Mary-Louise Parker

I don't put myself out there, so people aren't necessarily familiar with me or my face. — Mary-Louise Parker

Hermetists Quotes By Karina Halle

Life is full of hard choices.
I chose you. — Karina Halle

Hermetists Quotes By Joseph Addison

Every one knows the veneration which was paid by the Jews to a name so great, wonderful, and holy. They would not let it enter even into their religious discourses. What can we then think of those who make use of so tremendous a name, in the ordinary expression of their anger, mirth, and most impertinent passions? — Joseph Addison

Hermetists Quotes By Marguerite Yourcenar

He, too, had dreamed dreams. Folk are usually content to draw from such visions portents which sometimes prove true, since they reveal the sleeper's secrets; but he surmised that these games the mind plays when left to itself can indicate to us chiefly the way in which the soul perceives things. Accordingly, he sought to enumerate the qualities of substance as seen in dream: lightness, impalpability, incoherence, total liberty with regard to time; then, the mobility of forms which allows each person in this state to be several people, and the several to reduce themselves to one; last, the sense of something akin to Platonic reminiscence, but also the almost insupportable feeling of necessity. Such phantom categories strongly resemble what Hermetists clam to know of existence beyond the grave, as if the world of death were only continuing for the soul the awesome world of night. — Marguerite Yourcenar