Mary Ezra Mahoney Quotes & Sayings
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Top Mary Ezra Mahoney Quotes

That's one form of magic, of course."
"What, just knowing things?"
"Knowing things that other people don't know. — Terry Pratchett

Only on the assumption of belief in the validity of values is the attempt to espouse value-judgments meaningful. However, to judge the validity of such values is a matter of faith . — Max Weber

I just couldn't live without dogs. — Tara Reid

I never learned how to take the beautiful thing in my imagination and put it on paper without feeling I killed it along the way. I did, however, learn how to weather the death, and I learned how to forgive myself for it. — Ann Patchett

Melody is the essence of music. — Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

I think it's prima facie evidence for the existence of God because for me to grow up and actually end up working with Glen Campbell is almost unbelievable. — Jimmy Webb

I know my self worth. I'm the one making the deposits. — Cora Blu

Divinity lies all around us, but society remains too hidebound to accept that fact ... The mother sea and the fountain-head of all religions lies in the mystical experiences of the individual. — William James

Did you hear how his head bounced down the steps? Thud, splat, thud, splat. — Nalini Singh

Sex - the poor man's polo. — Clifford Odets

The goal is justice, the method? is transparency. It's important not to confuse the goal and the method. — Julian Assange

But I do mean to say, I have heard her declare, When at the same moment she had on a dress Which cost five hundred dollars, and not a cent less, And jewelry worth ten times more, I should guess, That she had not a thing in the wide world to wear! — William Allen Butler

Silence holds the door against the strife of tongue and all the impertinences of idle conversation. — James Hervey

For people who like that sort of thing, that's the sort of thing they like. — William F. Buckley Jr.

On the theory of the soul's mortality, the inferiority of women's capacity is easily accounted for: Their domestic life requires no higher faculties either of mind or body. This circumstance vanishes and becomes absolutely insignificant, on the religious theory: The one sex has an equal task to perform as the other: Their powers of reason and resolution ought also to have been equal, and both of them infinitely greater than at present. — David Hume