Scrubs Intern Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Scrubs Intern with everyone.
Top Scrubs Intern Quotes

Of course I knew what time you would get here, girl. Just as I know what time Goodfellow will knock over my nineteenth-century French mantle clock." Puck jerked up at this, bumping a table and sending a clock crashing to the floor. "To the second," the Clockmaker sighed, closing his eyes. — Julie Kagawa

You're right. Everyone in this room with a pulse is starting to smell really good. Okay. Back in the box, better safe than sorry. — Jeaniene Frost

On the left hand path we take the direct route, which is much more strenuous, much more dangerous, and much more likely to cause you to fall. — Zeena Schreck

I don't write about myself. I'm never in my books. — Susan Straight

A book, a poem, a play - they start as fantasms but they end up as things, like a box of crackers or an automobile tire. — Arthur Miller

Even the great Thomas Paine, a friend to Franklin and Jefferson, repudiated the charge of atheism that he was not afraid to invite. Indeed, he set out to expose the crimes and horrors of the Old Testament, as well as the foolish myths of the New, as part of a vindication of god. No grand and noble deity, he asserted, should have such atrocities and stupidities laid to his charge. Paine's Age of Reason marks almost the first time that frank contempt for organized religion was openly expressed. It had a tremendous worldwide effect. His American friends and contemporaries, partly inspired by him to declare independence from the Hanoverian usurpers and their private Anglican Church, meanwhile achieved an extraordinary and unprecedented thing: the writing of a democratic and republican constitution that made no mention of god and that mentioned religion only when guaranteeing that it would always be separated from the state. — Christopher Hitchens

Five decades ago, as India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, began visibly ailing, the nation and the world were consumed by the question: 'After Nehru, who?' The inexpressible fear lay in the subtext to the question: 'After Nehru, what?' — Shashi Tharoor

The young man only looks to the future because he has lived little; the old man looks to the past because he has little left to live. — Fennel Hudson

The essential is to think that anything you are doing has to become the occasion for slashing. You must examine this well. — Miyamoto Musashi

Share your joy with everyone in your world. — Louise Hay

Things come to you in life when you're prepared for them, when you're ready for them. — Martha Plimpton