Myndir Til Quotes & Sayings
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Top Myndir Til Quotes

There's no beauty without some sadness or damage, or at least the potential of damage. If something's unbreakable, you can't love it because it doesn't need your love. It's the thing that don't last that really move us. — Rory Dunlop

When an Italian marries a Greek, you get the union of two lots of people who believe themselves to be the creators of modern civilization — Joe Novella

Everyone's an equal shareholder. Birth shares are inalienable, and death duties are unavoidable. The estate tax is one hundred per cent. In between, you can buy and sell and earn as much as you like. — Ken MacLeod

God doesn't ordain stupidity. — Shannon L. Alder

Tell him he can have my title, but I want it back in the morning. — Jack Dempsey

God, don't let me die. I have so much left to do. — Huey Long

She would give him one more chance, Phasma decided. One last chance for FN-2187 to decide his fate. — Greg Rucka

Motivation comes from within each individual. It's a personal thing. It's pride, guts, desire, whatever you want to call it; some people have it in their bellies, and some don't. — Mike Ditka

Billions of people have traveled and continue to travel the other path, and it grows wider every year ... The trouble is that on this wide path, you don't end up at awesome. You just end up at old. This path is called 'average'. — Jon Acuff

Ego cannot bring anything extraordinary into the world; the extraordinary comes only through egolessness. And so is the case with the musician and the poet and the dancer. So is the case with everybody. — Rajneesh

Kill an unborn baby and you still couldn't de-fetus — Celph Titled

I'm convinced my mother only had sex eight times. — Linda Fiorentino

What has always attracted me in life is poetry. Any genre can have poetry. For me, poetry contains truth. — Jean Marais

I like babies in moderation, but twins three times in succession is TOO MUCH. I told Mrs. Hammond so firmly, when the last pair came. — L.M. Montgomery

Plentitude, when too plentitudinous, was worst than destitution, for obviously what could one do, if there was nothing one could not? — Stanislaw Lem