Famous Quotes & Sayings

Ragucci Pols Quotes & Sayings

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Top Ragucci Pols Quotes

Ragucci Pols Quotes By James A. Moore

So is a murder rose until you decide to hold the blossom in your hand and sniff it. Perfectly inviting and even charming until the poisons burn your skull open." "By the gods, man, where do you hear about these things? — James A. Moore

Ragucci Pols Quotes By Pittacus Lore

I survived my fall down the ravine. I survived the implosion of Ashwood Estates. I wasn't even conscious then, and Malcolm said something kept us from being crushed, that it was as if some force kept us safe as the world fell down around us. Third time's the charm. — Pittacus Lore

Ragucci Pols Quotes By C.P. Snow

No one outside can tell who is right for one. There are no rules. One knows it without help. Sometimes the rest of the world thinks one is wrong, but they cannot know. — C.P. Snow

Ragucci Pols Quotes By Remy De Gourmont

Women still remember the first kiss after men have forgotten the last. — Remy De Gourmont

Ragucci Pols Quotes By William Makepeace Thackeray

If you had told Sycorax that her son Caliban was as handsome as Apollo, she would have been pleased, witch as she was. — William Makepeace Thackeray

Ragucci Pols Quotes By William Law

You have no questions to ask of any body, no new way that you need inquire after; no oracle that you need to consult; for whilst you shut yourself up in patience, meekness, humility, and resignation to God, you are in the very arms of Christ, your heart is His dwelling-place, and He lives and works in you. — William Law

Ragucci Pols Quotes By Frank Herbert

Some lies are easier to believe than the truth. — Frank Herbert

Ragucci Pols Quotes By Rose Macaulay

How far does one combine resistance to over-control with social justice, i.e. tolerable living for people in general? We are too selfish to be trusted, if left free, to give away enough to make people comfortable enough to give them a chance. Yet if all this is ordered for us, as to some extent it has to be, it so soon leads to tyranny. It is a very difficult problem. If only human beings had more pity, unselfishness, and justice and didn't need coercion to treat each other decently. — Rose Macaulay