Takachiho Quotes & Sayings
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Top Takachiho Quotes

Raising a family is difficult enough. But it's even more difficult for single parents struggling to make ends meet. They don't need more obstacles. They need more opportunities. — Bill Richardson

Under standing orders from General Lee, the Army of Northern Virginia enslaved any and all black persons it could seize - in Virginia, Maryland, even Pennsylvania during the Gettysburg Campaign. It made no distinctions between those who had escaped during the war, those born free, or those freed before the war under the laws of Southern states. If they were black, the men in gray took them as property. — T. J. Stiles

Unless criticism refuses to take itself quite so seriously or at least to permit its readers not to, it will inevitably continue to reflect the finicky canons of the genteel tradition and the depressing pieties of the Culture Religion of Modernism. — Leslie Fiedler

Your numbness is something perhaps you cannot help. It is what the world has done to you. But your coldness. That is what you do to the world. — Lorrie Moore

Don't even try your bullshit with us...! You psycho idiot, certifiable, father-complex, bitch! — Haruka Takachiho

People should never be a destination, but rather a partner for the road. — Ruth Cardello

Wealth, beauty, and fame are transient. When those are gone, little is left except the need to be useful. — Gene Tierney

We've got a third, first and a pole; I don't think you could ask for much more than that. Hopefully we can finish it off [tonight]. — Kevin Harvick

How can it hurt so much to love someone? — Tracy March

Two world wars in twenty-one years, and the universal dread of nuclear incineration. This time God has given us John Paul II, — Fulton J. Sheen

Stop talking to me. I'm trying to channel my head-crackin' mamma jamma. — Kristen Ashley

For life is terribly deficient in form. Its catastrophes happen in the wrong way and to the wrong people. There is a grotesque horror about its comedies, and its tragedies seem to culminate in farce. — Oscar Wilde

The individual cannot think and communicate his thought, the governor and legislator cannot act effectively or frame his laws without words, and the solidity and validity of these words is in the care of the damned and despised litterati ... when their very medium, the very essence of their work, the application of word to thing goes rotten, i.e. becomes slushy and inexact, or excessive or bloated, the whole machinery of social and of individual thought and order goes to pot. — Ezra Pound