Famous Quotes & Sayings

Klingenstein Fields Quotes & Sayings

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Top Klingenstein Fields Quotes

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Ray Bradbury

Memory is an illusion, nothing more. It is a fire that needs constant tending. — Ray Bradbury

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Sophie Kinsella

Me too." I agree fervently. "Every film should definitely have a message."
Which is true. I mean ... take the Lord of the Rings movies- they've got loads of messages. Like "Don't lose your ring. — Sophie Kinsella

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Ljupka Cvetanova

A blink of an eye is what separates you from reality. — Ljupka Cvetanova

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Mabel Collins

The Principle which gives life dwells in us, and without us, is undying and beneficent, is not heard or seen or smelt, but it is perceived by the man who desires perception. — Mabel Collins

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Jay Crownover

I gasped a little as he smiled at me. A real smile. One that made his sharply angled face softer, made his eyes melt like soft candy. No, my devil wasn't going to push me . . . he was going to do what devils did best. He was going to tempt me. — Jay Crownover

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Anne Tyler

If I know Mom,' she said, 'she'd have refused any surgery anyhow.'

'It's true,' Amanda said. 'Her advance directive basically asked us to put her out on an ice floe if she developed so much as a hangnail. — Anne Tyler

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Thucydides

We must not disguise from ourselves that we go to found a city among strangers and enemies, and he who undertakes such an enterprise should be prepared to become master of the country the first day he lands, or failing in this find everything hostile to him. — Thucydides

Klingenstein Fields Quotes By Daniel Kahneman

To get pleasure from eating, for example, you must notice that you are doing it. We found that French and American women spent about the same amount of time eating, but for Frenchwomen, eating was twice as likely to be focal as it was for American women. The Americans were far more prone to combine eating with other activities, and their pleasure from eating was correspondingly diluted. — Daniel Kahneman