Famous Quotes & Sayings

Subliterary Quotes & Sayings

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Top Subliterary Quotes

Subliterary Quotes By Olivia Sudjic

No order, no pattern, just chaos. Lots of little universes separated by invisible screens . . . — Olivia Sudjic

Subliterary Quotes By Gena Showalter

Hate is like drinking a vial of poison and expecting it to harm the other person, You're not hurting the guy, only yourself. — Gena Showalter

Subliterary Quotes By Margaret Atwood

The subliterary fiction she was churning out was many decades away from being in any way respectable. There was a small group that confessed to reading The Lord of the Rings, though you had to justify it through an interest in Old Norse. — Margaret Atwood

Subliterary Quotes By Barton Gellman

The NSA's business is 'information dominance,' the use of other people's secrets to shape events. — Barton Gellman

Subliterary Quotes By Hazrat Inayat Khan

The mystery of sound is mysticism; the harmony of life is religion. The knowledge of vibrations is metaphysics, the analysis of atoms is science, and their harmonious grouping is art. The rhythm of form is poetry, and the rhythm of sound is music. This shows that music is the art of arts and the science of allsciences; and it contains the fountain of all knowledge within itself. — Hazrat Inayat Khan

Subliterary Quotes By Dorothy Malone

I never turned down a mother role. — Dorothy Malone

Subliterary Quotes By Tony Hsieh

The ultimate definition of success is: you could lose everything that you have and truly be okay with it. Your happiness isn't based on external factors. — Tony Hsieh

Subliterary Quotes By Big Sean

I work really hard - that doesn't mean I deserve anything, but it's really cool to see the positive reaction people give to something you worked so hard on. It's one of the best feelings. — Big Sean

Subliterary Quotes By William Alexander, 1st Earl Of Stirling

There whil'st the world prov'd prodigal of breath, the headless trunks lay prostrated in heaps; this field of funerals sacred unto death, did paint out horror in most hideous shapes: whil'st men unhors'd, horses unmast'red, stray'd, some call'd on those whom they most dearly lov'd, some rag'd, some groan'd, some sigh'd, roar'd, promis'd, pray'd, as blows, falls, faintness, pain, hope, anguish mov'd. — William Alexander, 1st Earl Of Stirling