Famous Quotes & Sayings

Keiner Von Quotes & Sayings

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Top Keiner Von Quotes

Keiner Von Quotes By Jacob De Jager

Inactives-those whose feet are not placed on the path which leads to eternal life. — Jacob De Jager

Keiner Von Quotes By Alan W. Watts

[I]t is rather the past and the future which are the fleeting illusions, and the present which is eternally real. We discover that the linear succession of time is a convention of our single-track verbal thinking, of a consciousness which interprets the world by grasping little pieces of it, calling them things and events. But every such grasp of the mind excludes the rest of the world, so that this type of consciousness can get an approximate vision of the whole only through a series of grasps, one after the other. — Alan W. Watts

Keiner Von Quotes By Eric Metaxas

Glory, glory, said the Bee, Hallelujah, said the Flea. Praise the Lord, remarked the Wren. At springtime all is born-again. — Eric Metaxas

Keiner Von Quotes By Elle Fanning

I would love to go to Paris. I have to go to Paris. I would love to go there, that's like my dream. — Elle Fanning

Keiner Von Quotes By John Gay

But his kiss was so sweet, and so closely he pressed, that I languished and pined till I granted the rest. — John Gay

Keiner Von Quotes By Elizabeth Janeway

As long as mixed grills and combination salads are popular, anthologies will undoubtedly continue in favor. — Elizabeth Janeway

Keiner Von Quotes By Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Love me sweet
With all thou art
Feeling, thinking, seeing;
Love me in the Lightest part,
Love me in full Being. — Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Keiner Von Quotes By Truth Devour

Lying down gazing at the cerulean blue-black sky, she slid her hands down to intertwine her fingers with his. "I love you," she whispers. — Truth Devour

Keiner Von Quotes By Marston Bates

All children are curious and I wonder by what process this trait becomes developed in some and suppressed in others. I suspect again that schools and colleges help in the suppression insofar as they meet curiosity by giving the answers, rather than by some method that leads from narrower questions to broader questions. It is hard to satisfy the curiosity of a child, and even harder to satisfy the curiosity of a scientist, and methods that meet curiosity with satisfaction are thus not apt to foster the development of the child into the scientist. I don't advocate turning all children into professional scientists, although I think there would be advantages if all adults retained something of the questioning attitude, if their curiosity were less easily satisfied by dogma, of whatever variety. — Marston Bates