Famous Quotes & Sayings

Horwood Springs Quotes & Sayings

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Top Horwood Springs Quotes

Horwood Springs Quotes By Lori Petty

The first things I did was I was a writer, painter, and photographer, and we grew up very poor, so even though I could get into any college I wanted, there was no way to pay for it. — Lori Petty

Horwood Springs Quotes By Todd Stocker

Preparation is the pressure valve on a busy schedule. — Todd Stocker

Horwood Springs Quotes By Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe

Architecture is a language. When you are very good, you can be a poet — Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe

Horwood Springs Quotes By Rosamund Hodge

You were sent here to die. You were the one that was not needed, was not wanted, and they sent you here because they knew you would never come back. — Rosamund Hodge

Horwood Springs Quotes By George Clooney

It's not about an opening weekend. It's about a career, building a set of films you're proud of. Period. — George Clooney

Horwood Springs Quotes By Leelee Sobieski

If only I could find a guy who wasn't in his 70s to talk to me about white cranes, I'd be madly in love. — Leelee Sobieski

Horwood Springs Quotes By Jason E. Hodges

I was a poet. I had no expectations other than creating a world of art with words that would live on long after I was gone. — Jason E. Hodges

Horwood Springs Quotes By Salman Rushdie

For to the arguments of great thinkers there is no end, the idea of argument itself being a tool to improve the mind, the sharpest of all tools, born of the love of knowledge, which is to say, philosophy. — Salman Rushdie

Horwood Springs Quotes By Fyodor Dostoyevsky

I can't bear the thought that a man of lofty mind and heart begins with the ideal of the Madonna and ends with the ideal of Sodom. — Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Horwood Springs Quotes By Wayne Rogers

Do we need Medicare reform? Yes we do. — Wayne Rogers

Horwood Springs Quotes By Jon McGregor

The architecture student from number eleven presses his face to the glass and looks at the way the light falls through the water, he thinks about a place where he worked in the spring, an office where they had a stack of empty watercooler bottles against the window, and how he would sit and watch the sun mazing its way through the layers of refraction, the beauty of it, he called it spontaneous maths and he wanted to build architecture like he that, he looks at the row of houses opposite and he pictures them built entirely of plastic and glass, he imagines how people's lives might change if their dwellings shook with endless reflections of light, he does not know if it's possible but he thinks it's a nice idea — Jon McGregor