Shikai Borage Quotes & Sayings
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Top Shikai Borage Quotes

People need gods. They need faith. They need to believe in something bigger than themselves. It gives them succor when the world around them seems to be collapsing. They don't want truth. Those who desire it can seek it out. — James Berardinelli

I know that the right kind of political leader for the Labour Party is a desiccated calculating machine. — Aneurin Bevan

Why did all the hot guys have to be such jerks, and why did I still want to sleep with them? — Tara West

Don't solicit for your sister, it's not nice. Unless you get a good percentage of her price. — Tom Lehrer

The disciple is one who, intent upon becoming Christ-like and so dwelling in his "faith and practice," systematically and progressively rearranges his affairs to that end. — Renovare

Humanity without religion is equivalent to a slave without its chains. To end human fear is to end human faith. Beyond the dread of death humanity has no need for delusions of an afterlife. A single human mind void of religion can accomplish more than a thousand thoughtful of God. — C.J. Anderson

All of them were shriveled, desiccated, bone-thin and skeletal, every jaw cruelly broken, opening and closing in mute entreaty, the teeth clacking together like macabre wind chimes as they pendulated in the lurching trees. — Edward M. Erdelac

Finally, the cold was a major factor - as stated previously, initially no one wanted to leave the warmth of the interior of the ship to sit in a boat, out on the dark ocean, in the freezing cold. Without a sense of urgency, who could blame them? Ironically, — Henry Freeman

Female players lose sight of the game. — Habeeb Akande

Darkness is the world governed by Satan
Light is the world governed by God.
Which world will your live in ? — Lailah Gifty Akita

One of the reasons that art is important to me is sometimes it actually feels more coherent than life. It orders the chaos. — Jeffrey Eugenides

The wooing of the Earth thus implies much more than converting the wilderness into humanized environments. It means also preserving natural environments in which to experience mysteries transcending daily life and from which to recapture, in a Proustian kind of remembrance, the awareness of the cosmic forces that have shaped humankind. — Rene Dubos