Quotes & Sayings About Pathetic Liars
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Top Pathetic Liars Quotes

I love anything that kind of removes me from myself and employs something else. So, I love accents and I love pretending. — Jamie Bell

When I love, I love with everything within me."
Seeing him with his child, this was obvious. Did he mean ... yes, he meant exactly what he said, and it was like he wanted her to know it went much deeper than only with his child. That whatever he loved, he loved with everything inside of him. "I sense that about you, Tristan. Your actions and words are heartfelt. — Mary J. McCoy-Dressel

For better or worse, I was my father's son, and I intuited, however unclearly, that my life was inextricably bound up with his. I was who I was because of him. His blood was in my blood, his history was my history. Even my future, the person I might one day become, depended on him, because everything he'd ever seen or done or thought or felt flowed up through him and into me. — George Bishop

I am acutely aware that like a slip of paper in the wind, something in his nature eludes my grasp. — Christina Baker Kline

We never completely comprehend ourselves, but we can do far more than comprehend. — Novalis

The only reward one should offer an artist is to buy his work. — Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Characters stretching their legs in some calm haven generally don't make for interesting protagonists. — Darin Strauss

Mothers are the heart and soul of every life they touch. In them lies the beauty, depth and grandeur of life. Cherish the Children is an inspirational expression of the importance of a Mother's work. — Jane Clayson Johnson

We know what we are, that we walk like we are not long for this world, that this world has never longed for us. — Ta-Nehisi Coates

Fear does not prevent death. It prevents life. — Naguib Mahfouz

I believe movies are better, the less you know going in. — Joe Cornish

For, obviously, things were not as simple as the framers of laws had imagined them to be, and if it was of small legal relevance, it was of great political interest to know how long it takes an average person to overcome his innate repugnance toward crime, and what exactly happens to him once he had reached that point. To this question, the case of Adolf Eichmann supplied an answer that could not have been clearer and more precise. — Hannah Arendt

Tho' much is taken, much abides; — Alfred Lord Tennyson