Famous Quotes & Sayings

Slackeye Slim Quotes & Sayings

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Top Slackeye Slim Quotes

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Douglas Harding

It was a vast emptiness vastly filled, a nothing that found room for everything -- room for grass, trees, shadowy distant hills, and far above them snow-peaks like a row of angular clouds riding the blue sky . I had lost a head and gained a world. — Douglas Harding

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Josh Turner

I feel like the live record thing is something that I've been getting used to as the years go by and with this being my second one, I'm continuing to learn what works and what doesn't work. A live record is an example of that authenticity and that realness that you find in imperfection and you can hear that in this record. — Josh Turner

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Chip Heath

An old advertising maxim says you've got to spell out the benefit of the benefit. In other words, people don't buy quarter-inch drill bits. They buy quarter-inch holes so they can hang their children's pictures. — Chip Heath

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Edward Einhorn

I do think that theater is a great venue for science fiction, and not just adaptations but also original work. I also think some of the greatest classics of theater have elements of SF, but in theater, as in publishing, sometimes people make arbitrary distinctions. — Edward Einhorn

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Carl Spitteler

At my father's request I took up the study of law at the University of Zurich In 1863. — Carl Spitteler

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Arthur Schopenhauer

To desire immortality for the individual is really the same as wanting to perpetuate an error forever. — Arthur Schopenhauer

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Lisa Fantino

It is the things we can't afford to lose that make us fight until we win."
~ Shrouded in Pompei — Lisa Fantino

Slackeye Slim Quotes By Dava Sobel

But I do not think it necessary to believe that the same God who gave us our senses, our speech, our intellect, would have put aside the use of these, to teach us instead such things as with their help we could find out for ourselves, particularly in the case of these sciences of which there is not the smallest mention in the Scriptures; and, above all, in astronomy, of which so little notice is taken that the names of none of the planets are mentioned. Surely if the intention of the sacred scribes had been to teach the people astronomy, they would not have passed over the subject so completely. — Dava Sobel