Rustiadi Quotes & Sayings
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Top Rustiadi Quotes

There are also dozens and dozens of success stories; many couples have emailed me with their original posts. I love reading these stories, but confess I am not as interested in drawing them as the unfinished, elusive ones. — Sophie Blackall

An infinite advertising budget cannot counteract products that are disconnected from our biological heritage. — Gad Saad

Loss doesn't feel redeemable. But for me one consoling aspect is the recognition that, in this at least, none of us is different from anyone else: We all lose loved ones; we all face our own death. — Meghan O'Rourke

I was obliged to stand there, holding the leash of this creature for their welcoming publicity shots, implying that this was some kind of image the decided to have of me. — Barbara Steele

I love to read theories without ever using them when working ... The paradoxical fact in the aesthetic is that theories are also true in reverse. — Ernst Haas

Whether written in the stars of the pages of a journal, a dream still blossoms from the heart of the person who possesses the pen. — Rhonda Laurel

You painted a naked woman because you enjoyed looking at her, put a mirror in her hand and you called the painting "Vanity," thus morally condemning the woman whose nakedness you had depicted for you own pleasure. — John Berger

Theories that go counter to the facts of human nature are foredoomed. — Edith Hamilton

I'm a huge, huge fan of almost everything British. I love 'The Office' - I was a faithful follower of that show before the American version. — Brad Paisley

The one badge of Christian discipleship is not orthodoxy but love. — Billy Graham

If you wish to avoid an unpleasant story you had best put this book down — Lemony Snicket

After the Battle of Waterloo, Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington - who managed to defeat Napoleon by the skin of his teeth - surveyed the blood-soaked cornfields of Belgium and wrote in a letter, "Nothing except a battle lost can be half as melancholy as a battle won. — Chris Pourteau

The postulate of national unity that informs the North American Constitution has determined the invariable rule that no territory shall be admitted as a state until the Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-Celtic elements have obtained definitive ascendancy. The racial, religious, and cultural elements are primordial in considering the possibility of admission of a community to statehood or as a province. — Pedro Campos

...the city of Naples was like this: wonderful from a distance, but when seen close up, it was fragmentary, indefinable, and coarse... — Franco Di Mare