Famous Quotes & Sayings

Sandglass Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 9 famous quotes about Sandglass with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Sandglass Quotes

Sandglass Quotes By Shaggy

Although sometimes I know it seems impossible, there ain't no need in drowning in your sorrow. If things are as bad as they can be, you can be sure there'll be a brighter tomorrow. — Shaggy

Sandglass Quotes By Jay Parini

American failures in Vietnam and Iraq suggest that it's not really possible to create and sustain a proxy government in a country far from our own borders. — Jay Parini

Sandglass Quotes By George Orwell

But they took readily to Shakespeare, as all children do when he is not made horrible with parsing and analysing. — George Orwell

Sandglass Quotes By Ralph Waldo Emerson

Give the slave the least elevation of religious sentiment, and he is not slave: you are the slave: he not only in his humility feels his superiority, feels that much deplored condition of his to be a fading trifle, but he makes you feel it too. He is the master. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

Sandglass Quotes By Terry Pratchett

Death sat in His garden, running a whetstone along the edge of His scythe. It was already so sharp that any passing breeze that blew across it was sliced smoothly into two puzzled zephyrs, — Terry Pratchett

Sandglass Quotes By Paul Bowles

Life is lived only once. And the less seriously the better. — Paul Bowles

Sandglass Quotes By Mahatma Gandhi

Outward Peace is useless without inner Peace — Mahatma Gandhi

Sandglass Quotes By Judy Dater

The older I get, the one thing I can trust in myself more than anything else is the way I feel about something. When I photograph I try to be as aware of my feelings as I can be to somehow try and get them out of me and onto the film in terms of the way I am responding or seeing the world. — Judy Dater

Sandglass Quotes By Dava Sobel

The beaches. In literally hundreds of instances, a vessel's ignorance of her longitude led swiftly to her destruction. Launched on a mix of bravery and greed, the sea captains of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries relied on "dead reckoning" to gauge their distance east or west of home port. The captain would throw a log overboard and observe how quickly the ship receded from this temporary guidepost. He noted the crude speedometer reading in his ship's logbook, along with the direction of travel, which he took from the stars or a compass, and the length of time on a particular course, counted with a sandglass or a pocket watch. Factoring in the effects of ocean currents, fickle winds, and errors in judgment, he then determined his longitude. He routinely missed his mark, of course - searching — Dava Sobel