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P1603 Quotes & Sayings

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Top P1603 Quotes

P1603 Quotes By Peter Ustinov

By increasing the size of the keyhole, today's playwrights are in danger of doing away with the door. — Peter Ustinov

P1603 Quotes By Laura Schaefer

My heart like gravy or a growing vine the ocean reef, the new bird's song Who needs to hear a word a whisper forever forever or never never ask no questions, it will be tomorrow soon. — Laura Schaefer

P1603 Quotes By John Banville

Yet even without saying, each knew what the other was thinking, and, more acutely, what the other was feeling
this is a further effect of our shared sorrow, this empathy, this mournful telepathy. — John Banville

P1603 Quotes By Charles Dickens

There lives at least one being who can never change-one being who would be content to devote his whole existence to your happiness-who lives but in your eyes-who breathes but in your smiles-who bears the heavy burden of life itself only for you. — Charles Dickens

P1603 Quotes By Amanda Lance

Hadley Grayson is my lightning, my speed, my hearts, my candy.
I've never tried any of my own products and I'm glad I haven't.
It might have reduced my tolerance for happy. — Amanda Lance

P1603 Quotes By Cate Blanchett

Before having children, I think I probably approached work very differently, and you become much more economical and pragmatic about your relationship to it. — Cate Blanchett

P1603 Quotes By Gary Hume

I want to paint something that's gorgeous, something that's perfect. So that it's full of sadness. — Gary Hume

P1603 Quotes By Adam Clymer

When I came back to Washington to be The Times' chief congressional correspondent in 1991, I was looking for a book subject, and Ted Kennedy stood out for two reasons. — Adam Clymer

P1603 Quotes By Samar Sudha

In Relationships, there shouldn't have space for Egoism — Samar Sudha

P1603 Quotes By Erich Fromm

If we analyze religious or political doctrines with regard to their psychological significance we must differentiate between two problems. We can study the character structure of the individual who creates a new doctrine and try to understand which traits in his personality are responsible for the particular direction of his thinking.
[ ... ] The other problem is to study the psychological motives, not of the creator of a doctrine, but of the social group to which his doctrine appeals. The influence of any doctrine or idea depends on the extent to which it appeals to psychic needs in the character structure of those to whom it is addressed. Only if the idea answers powerful psychological needs of certain social groups will it become a potent force in history. — Erich Fromm