Famous Quotes & Sayings

Knicole Name Quotes & Sayings

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Top Knicole Name Quotes

Knicole Name Quotes By Paula Fox

I imagine there's a timid animal inside me ... When it's afraid, I feel it tremble. It can't hear. It only knows the fear it feels. It doesn't have memory or an idea of the future. It lives in the present - the right now - and I try to remember it is only a part of myself, a small frightened thing I can pity. When I'm able to do that, something happens. The animal grows less afraid. — Paula Fox

Knicole Name Quotes By Arthur Miller

The word "now" is like a bomb through the window, and it ticks. — Arthur Miller

Knicole Name Quotes By Daniel Wallace

Because you and Al have all the truth with you over there. Don't know what I'm talking about, I guess. My apologies to you who knows better. — Daniel Wallace

Knicole Name Quotes By Jane Goodall

There would be very little point in my exhausting myself and other conservationists themselves in trying to protect animals and habitats if we weren't at the same time raising young people to be better stewards. — Jane Goodall

Knicole Name Quotes By Eric Hobsbawm

The most lasting and universal consequence of the French revolution is the metric system — Eric Hobsbawm

Knicole Name Quotes By Sue Monk Kidd

Was it ever right to sacrifice one's truth for expedience? — Sue Monk Kidd

Knicole Name Quotes By Emma Watson

I'm a multidimensional person and that's the freedom of fashion: that you're able to reinvent yourself through how you dress and how you cut your hair or whatever. — Emma Watson

Knicole Name Quotes By Wangari Maathai

Culture is coded wisdom — Wangari Maathai

Knicole Name Quotes By Darren Lynn Bousman

I'm smart enough to realize that the world does not stop and change because I want it to. — Darren Lynn Bousman

Knicole Name Quotes By L. Frank Baum

Then why is the prison so fine, and why are you so kind to me?" he earnestly asked. Tollydiggle seemed surprised by the question, but she presently answered: "We consider a prisoner unfortunate. He is unfortunate in two ways - because he has done something wrong and because he is deprived of his liberty. Therefore we should treat him kindly, because of his misfortune, for otherwise he would become hard and bitter and would not be sorry he had done wrong. Ozma thinks that one who has committed a fault did so because he was not strong and brave; therefore she puts him in prison to make him strong and brave. When that is accomplished he is no longer a prisoner, but a good and loyal citizen and everyone is glad that he is now strong enough to resist doing wrong. You see, it is kindness that makes one strong and brave; and so we are kind to our prisoners. — L. Frank Baum