Famous Quotes & Sayings

Telus Quotes & Sayings

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Top Telus Quotes

Telus Quotes By Mary Jo White

The 1993 Trade Center bombing was obviously frightening. It could have been much worse than it was. — Mary Jo White

Telus Quotes By Petra Hermans

Because of my serious attitude
I am able to change
the message into a word
and the word
in just : One Letter!
Religious Leader Petra Cecilia Maria Hermans
Religion of Blue Circle
October 8, 2016 — Petra Hermans

Telus Quotes By Maurice Merleau Ponty

We do not have the right to level out all experience into a single world. — Maurice Merleau Ponty

Telus Quotes By Elizabeth Taylor

My forties are the best time I have ever gone through. — Elizabeth Taylor

Telus Quotes By Dudley Moore

I haven't had that many women - only as many as I could lay my hands on. — Dudley Moore

Telus Quotes By H.M. Ward

The way I see it, we're all a little bit crazy, and that's what makes life interesting. — H.M. Ward

Telus Quotes By David Maraniss

I said that I'm only there to write the truth, I'm not going to cover anything up, but I'll put everything in context and get as close to the truth of this person as I can. — David Maraniss

Telus Quotes By Eric Dane

I go eat a sandwich for lunch and have a milk shake and miss going to the gym for 10 days, and somebody snaps a picture of me on the beach, and all of a sudden, I've lost it. Why do I need to be perfect all the time? — Eric Dane

Telus Quotes By Maxim Gorky

But silence is terrible and painful only to those who have said all and have nothing more to speak of; but to those who never had anything to say
to them silence is simple and easy ... — Maxim Gorky

Telus Quotes By William Laws

From: The Crown of Telus
She opened her eyes, saw the crown sitting on her bedside table, and wished that it was all a dream. The crown of Trist was nothing special. It had no gemstones, no gold or silver filigree; instead it was simple, a metal circlet with four points and some inlay around a scratched and dented band.
"It's a working man's crown," she remembered her father holding the symbol of power out to her when she younger. "See the inlay? Three moons, one for each of our gods, over an oak which represents the mighty forests of the north, a shock of wheat for the Plainsmen to the south, a ship for the Gheltes to the west, and a hashap flower for the spice in the east. Nothing more. We don't need anymore."
Tears welled in her eyes. A working man's crown. Nothing fancy or bejeweled, a symbol of the power that guides the land and cares for its people.
This was going to be the first day she wore it as queen. — William Laws