Threave Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Threave with everyone.
Top Threave Quotes

The lambs will stop for now. But, Clarice, you judge yourself with all the mercy of the dungeon scales at Threave; you'll have to earn it again and again, the blessed silence. Because it's the plight that drives you, seeing the plight, and the plight will not end, ever. — Thomas Harris

Well ... " Enoch's voice broke into his thoughts. "What do you think?" "I want Taylor to have the pick of the litter." "In the long run, it wouldn't be a bad idea for her to have a dog. Until things simmer down, I want to hire you to guard my sister." "No need. I'm going to marry her. — Cathy Marie Hake

There's no need for us to be held back by the past or how things have been so far. The important thing is what seeds we are sowing now for the future. — Daisaku Ikeda

There's something brave and touching about game girls of all ages keeping themselves smart in hard times - one thinks of those wonderful women during World War II drawing stocking seams in eyebrow pencil up the back of legs stained with gravy browning because nylons were so hard to get hold of. — Julie Burchill

Sport is bad for you! — Wendy Lou Jones

The job of leadership today is not just to make money, it's to make meaning. — John Seely Brown

We are more speedily and fatally corrupted by domestic examples of vice, and particularly when they are impressed on our minds as from authority. — Horace

Not every man was sorry when he hurt a woman. — Sarah Addison Allen

Devotion to goal, knowing your purpose and calling helps you go through pain, hindrance and crisis — Sunday Adelaja

From 1987 to 1992, I was on the road for 40 weeks a year playing comedy clubs, and that was during the 'comedy boom.' — Andy Kindler

You can't help what you feel."
"I can try harder to feel something different. — Jeri Smith-Ready

The process of categorisation is as old as men, yet as old as man alone, for no other animal species categorises itself so neatly. Yet the ultimate, most vulnerable and weakest victim of categorisation is empathy. Categorisation is a process that destroys the very empathy that enlivens communities: the empathy that traditionally binds diverse communities together. — Joshua Krook

Heaven knows what virtue it has, this ecstatic book. — Virginia Woolf