Jon Courson Searchlight Quotes & Sayings
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Top Jon Courson Searchlight Quotes

Gardening is really an extended form of reading, of history and philosophy. The garden itself has become like writing a book. I walk around and walk around. Apparently people often see me standing there and they wave to me and I don't see them because I am reading the landscape. — Jamaica Kincaid

I think after everything in the whole process of filmmaking, temp scores are great if you use them for what they're good for, if you use them for that early stage of support for things. — Steven Price

A Oneness of all. An evolution in consciousness of us all that isn't about the egos. — Ram Dass

If I was ever to have a child, this is what I'd tell it: 'Child,' I'd say, 'don't never mess with time. Keep now now and then then. And if you ever get lost in thick smoke, child, set still till it clears. Set still till you can see where you are and where you been and where you're going, child. — Kurt Vonnegut

It's a very, very difficult space to operate in, the restaurant business-it requires a lot of human beings to intersect at just the right place to make it all work out. — Rocco DiSpirito

I've been all over the world and I've never seen a statue of a critic. — Leonard Bernstein

Molly, at the rail, her wet hair matted down, her dress torn, watching Peter intently until she knew he saw her, then mouthing something ... Fly, she was saying, Fly.
"I CAN'T," Peter shouted moving his arms helplessly. "I CAN'T, MOLLY! — Dave Barry

Heaven
Is as the Book of God before thee set,
Wherein to read His wondrous works. — John Milton

Creativity is encountering something unexpected — Simon Silva

I desire to put off my trial as long as I can till I can get my evidence ready. — William Kidd

Marx ... Lenin ... Mao Tse-Tung ... These men were animated by the love of brother and this we must believe though their ends meant the seizure of power, and the building of mighty armies, the compulsion of concentration camps, the forced labor and torture and killing of tens of thousands, even millions. — Dorothy Day