Famous Quotes & Sayings

Rugrats Clown Quotes & Sayings

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Top Rugrats Clown Quotes

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Brad Garrett

Broadway was without doubt the hardest I ever worked in my life and the highest highs I've ever had as an actor. The unadulterated fear was on a level that was hard to explain. — Brad Garrett

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Gary Snyder

Poetry a riprap on the slick rock of metaphysics — Gary Snyder

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Alexandra Horowitz

The result of these walks on my head is tangible: they refined what I can see. — Alexandra Horowitz

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Jayde Scott

Cass had a few points but, really, a vampire? Who believed in such a myth? What was Cass suggesting anyway? That I grab my rosary and head for the nearest church begging for holy water? Line my door and windows with salt? Sleep with a wooden stake under my pillow? Hang garlic bulbs from my bedroom door? Why was I even considering these options? — Jayde Scott

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Susan Jacoby

Real-life discussions involve a great many bores and boors who have never learned that the art of conversation demands listening as well as talking. — Susan Jacoby

Rugrats Clown Quotes By Arthur Schopenhauer

That the objective world would exist even if there existed no conscious being certainly seems at the first blush to be unquestionable because it can be thought in the abstract, without bringing to light the contradiction which it carries within it. But if we desire to realize this abstract thought, that is, to reduce it to ideas of perception, from which alone (like everything abstract) it can have content and truth, and if accordingly we try to imagine an objective world without a knowing subject, we become aware that what we then imagine is in truth the opposite of what we intended, is in fact nothing else than the process in the intellect of a knowing subject who perceives an objective world, is thus exactly what we desired to exclude. For this perceptible and real world is clearly a phenomenon of the brain; therefore there lies a contradiction in the assumption that as such it ought to exist independently of all brains. — Arthur Schopenhauer