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Suffragists Change Quotes & Sayings

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Top Suffragists Change Quotes

Suffragists Change Quotes By Alonzo King

So many dancers feel that what they look like is more important than who they are. This is a real danger for dancers who focus for years on appearances and think of themselves as merely a body. The choreographer can't work with them in the realm of ideas. It's a huge problem if they haven't been connecting internally. If they've decided that what's inside is of little value, they can only try to approximate some kind of look. — Alonzo King

Suffragists Change Quotes By James Patterson

This time I wouldn't forget him, because I couldn't ever forgive him - for breaking my heart twice. — James Patterson

Suffragists Change Quotes By Liz Thebart

[...] we grieved for both our lives, in which we were both more dead than alive. — Liz Thebart

Suffragists Change Quotes By Annie Dillard

By dipping us children in the Bible so often, they hoped, I think, to give our lives a serious tint, and to provide us with quaintly magnificent snatches of prayer to produce as charms while, say, being mugged for our cash or jewels. — Annie Dillard

Suffragists Change Quotes By L.Joe

Composing music is what makes me happy. — L.Joe

Suffragists Change Quotes By Jennifer A. Nielsen

Tomorrow we will rejoin the war. So it's time to decide who you are. Will you be carried off by this wind coming at us, or stand and face it? — Jennifer A. Nielsen

Suffragists Change Quotes By Fyodor Dostoyevsky

For the limited 'ordinary' person there is, for example, nothing easier to imagine himself to be unusual and original person, and to take enjoyment in this without hesitation. Some of our young ladies need only have their hair cut short, put on some blue spectacles and call themselves nihilists in order to be instantly persuaded that, having donned the spectacles, they have at once begun to possess their own 'convictions'. Some men need only feel a drop of some universally human and good-natured feeling within their hearts in order to be instantly persuaded that no one feels as they do, that they are in the vanguard of public enlightenment. Others need only accept some idea by word of mouth or read a page of something without beginning or end in order to instantly believe that this 'their own idea' and has been conceived within their own brains. — Fyodor Dostoyevsky