Sinbad Magi Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Sinbad Magi with everyone.
Top Sinbad Magi Quotes

If you wanted to kill me, why haven't you smothered me in my sleep?" "No sport in that." She gestured towards the ceiling. "Can I expect to be strung up on that bar and gutted like a deer?" He looked up at the bar and frowned. "Too much sport. Lots of heave-hoeing. Big mess to clean up after. Instead, why don't you just drink the poison-laced whiskey?" He extended the glass toward her again and when she didn't move he said, "No? Okay then." He shot the drink. She might not want the edge taken off but he sure as hell did. — Sandra Brown

Pages and pages and pages with words all over the pages. My goodness, what fun. What fun to write whatever words occur. — Jonah Winter

People's lives take them strange places. They do strange things, and ... well, sometimes they can't talk about them. — Alan Moore

Ye whose clay-cold heads and luke-warm hearts can argue down or mask your passions
tell me, what trespass is it that man should have them? ... If nature has so wove her web of kindness, that some threads of love and desire are entangled with the piece
must the whole web be rent in drawing them out? — Laurence Sterne

If we wait until our lives are free from sorrow or difficulty, then we wait forever. And miss the entire point. — Dirk Benedict

You're not only the spotlight in which you perform, but the shadows where you practice. — Debby Ryan

I've been an actor for 14 years now and a lot of that time was spent in theatre and television. Then I moved to L.A. to try and build upon that and it's starting to pay off! — David Oyelowo

Most people who have failed miserably in life itself have one last resort left available to them, they become a politician. — Peter F. Hamilton

Selfishness is not a virtue. Altruism is not a moral weakness. Taxation is the price we pay for civilization. — Darryl Cunningham

For you know we do not mind our dress
When we are going home — Emily Dickinson

In the creation of comedy, it is paradoxical that tragedy stimulates the spirit of ridicule; because ridicule, I suppose is an attitude of defiance: we must laugh in the face of our helplessness against the forces of nature - or go insane — Charlie Chaplin

But that is the dual gift of love, isn't it? The joy of greeting and the sorrow of good-bye. — Patricia Briggs