Pocius Katherine Quotes & Sayings
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Top Pocius Katherine Quotes

If a dog will not come to you after having looked you in the face, you should go home and examine your conscience. — Woodrow Wilson

Moammar Gadhafi is the man that killed those Americans over Lockerbie, Scotland. Moammar Gadhafi is also the man that bombed that cafe in Berlin and killed those Marines. And you want to know why Moammar Gadhafi started cooperating on his nuclear program? Because we got rid of Saddam Hussein. And so he got scared that he would be next, and that's why he started cooperating. — Marco Rubio

But my dad also was a remarkable man, a good person, a principled individual, a man of integrity. — Sidney Poitier

I give you my drunk permission to ignore whatever the sober me tells you. You should like the drunk me better, anyway, because I like you more than the sober me does. — R.K. Lilley

No one can draw more out of things, books included, than he already knows. A man has no ears for that to which experience has given him no access. — Friedrich Nietzsche

In appreciating our neighbor, we're participating in something truly sacred. — Fred Rogers

The study of the errors into which great minds have fallen in the pursuit of truth can never be uninstructive ... No man is so wise but that he may learn some wisdom from his past errors, either of thought or action, and no society has made such advances as to be capable of no improvement from the retrospect of its past folly and credulity. — Charles Mackay

I have a unique history. There's no way to ever separate what your life would have been like if you had taken a different path. You have to embrace what is yours, and if you don't like it, you have to decide to change it. — Eve Plumb

There are two things that make
the conscious world move,
decision and desire. — Toby Barlow

Children, to be illustrious is sad. — Howard Nemerov

Good God!" she cried. She rolled off him, tugging down her clothing. "Are you mad?"
He blinked and dragged in air. "Well, yes," He said thickly. "Lust does that to a man."
"You thought we would
you would
do ... that in public?"
"I wasn't thinking about where we were." He said.
Her eyes widened.
"I'm a man," he said with what he was sure must be, in the circumstances, saintly patience. "I can do one or the other. Lovemaking or thinking. But not both at the same time."
She stared at him for a moment. Then she drew up her knees and folded her arms upon them and buried her face in her folded arms.
She did not pick up the rifle and knock him on the head with it.
Perhaps all was not lost.
"Somewhere else then?" He said hopefully. — Loretta Chase