Pbocchurch Quotes & Sayings
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Top Pbocchurch Quotes

There was something factitious and brittle and thereby utterly feminine about her charm which made me want to crush her, even to crunch her. She had a slight cast in one eye which gives her gaze a strange concentrated intensity. Her eyes sparkle, almost as if they were actually emitting sparks. She is electric. And she could run faster in very high-heeled shoes than any girl I ever met. — Iris Murdoch

I'm not a historian, and I wouldn't want to be. I want to change the world. Attack the elite. Overturn the hierarchy. Look at my stories and you'll notice that the villains are always, always, those in power. The heroes are the little people. I hate the establishment. Always have, always will. — Terry Deary

I can tan quickly. What takes people hours to do, I can tan in half an hour. — George Hamilton

The horror of a death without dignity has so much implications for the people who are left behind. — Brendan Gleeson

The most important thing that happens within Christian spirituality is when a person falls in love with Jesus. — Donald Miller

The zip on the pitch is very zippy — David Pleat

While we are reading, we are all Don Quixote. — Mason Cooley

Because a soul never truly loses hope until hope has turned to ashes, or has been buried six feet underground. — Tiffanie DeBartolo

I ask myself: Is he or she the main character in his or her life? What is her motive? Or is she a secondary character in her own tale? Is she in the process of editing herself out of her story, because her husband, her career, her children or her job are consuming her entire text?" Max Jordan's eyes widened. "I've got about thirty thousand stories — Nina George

Going to work is probably my favorite thing to do. I do that five days a week for probably ten hours a day, but it doesn't even feel like work and it shouldn't. When you enjoy a job so much like I do, it's not work, it's play. — Kelli Berglund

The Giraffe took the horse's head and led him along on the most level parts of the road towards the railway station, and two or three chaps went along to help get the sick man into the train. — Henry Lawson