Karolou 8 Quotes & Sayings
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Top Karolou 8 Quotes

If I am intuitively led to buy and read a book, what that means is that there is something there that will help me grow spiritually. — Echo Bodine

It was a bright day, but cold, and the whores had emerged, working the Combat Zone, looking cold and bizarre in their miniskirts, boots, and blond wigs. Being seductive at twenty degrees was heavy going, I thought. Being horny at twenty degrees wasn't all that easy either. — Robert B. Parker

But there's also an upside-down sort of happiness, a black happiness, that comes from doing evil to others. — Amos Oz

People are too prone to think that the actual is the limit of possibility. They believe that all that has been done is all that can be done. — Helen Keller

Poetry is the elder sister of history, the mother of language, the ancestress of civilization. — Orson F. Whitney

For thousands of years, there have been lies about being gay or not being gay. If you know they're lies, you're free. — Don Miguel Ruiz

You're a doormat. You always consider everyone before yourself, and until you learn to be a bit more selfish people will always wipe their feet on you. — Lesley Pearse

If you break someone's leg, shouldn't you have to be the crutch for a while? — Jon Stewart

I don't have to tell you what your temper's like right now, do I? It's the scent of stupidity. — Veronica Rossi

If those who wrote and ratified the 14th Amendment had imagined laws restricting immigration - and had anticipated huge waves of illegal immigration - is it reasonable to presume they would have wanted to provide the reward of citizenship to the children of the violators of those laws? Surely not. — George Will

It's really about, oh come on, this guy wouldn't say that or he wouldn't do that, you know, it's about the characters, about the story, about the situation. — Walter Hill

You may trust to the truth of my sympathy; but you must remember that I am engaged in the investigation of enormous religious and moral questions, in the history of nations; and that your feelings, or my own, or anybody else's, at any particular moment, are of very little interest to me,
not from want of sympathy, but from the small proportion the individuality bears to the whole subject of my enquiry. — John Ruskin