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Trayon Sallis Quotes & Sayings

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Top Trayon Sallis Quotes

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Ludivine Sagnier

I hate to recreate the whole world into my imagination. — Ludivine Sagnier

Trayon Sallis Quotes By H.P. Lovecraft

I am, indeed, an absolute materialist so far as actual belief goes; with not a shred of credence in any form of supernaturalism - religion, spiritualism, transcendentalism, metempsychosis, or immortality. — H.P. Lovecraft

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Jimi Hendrix

I wanted to be listened to. I don't know if they were or not, though. — Jimi Hendrix

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Terence McKenna

Human beings are co-partners with deity in the project of being. This is the basis of all magic. — Terence McKenna

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Arthur Penrhyn Stanley

I think in reality the Japanese have to make changes in monetary policy, otherwise we're still going to be dealing with some upward pressure on the yen against the dollar. — Arthur Penrhyn Stanley

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Adam Gopnik

That people don't speak in theories, that the theories they employ change, flexibly, and of necessity, from moment to moment in conversation, that the notion of limiting conversation to a rigid rule of theoretical constancy is an absurd denial of what conversation is. — Adam Gopnik

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Woody Allen

You are much more dependent on luck than you think. People say if you want to have a good relationship, you have to work at it. But you never hear it about anything you really like, about sailing or going to soccer games. — Woody Allen

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Ian McEwan

He knew these last lines by heart and mouthed them now in the darkness. My reason for life. Not living, but life. That was the touch. And she was his reason for life, and why he must survive. — Ian McEwan

Trayon Sallis Quotes By Winton Porter

That's what coming face-to-face with six months in the woods will do to you: as soon as you realize you have the chance to be a different person, you become one. You can forget who you are. This is no accident when you've spent miles wondering, with every labored step, Who is this person who has decided to try this?--wondering who you are. You have nothing but time to answer the question, to give a new account of yourself. Your only witness might be a blanket of cool moss on a sunny day, or a panorama of endless mountains, or a young doe gazing by the Trail. You've yet to discover that the journey is the destination. So you lose yourself, then you find yourself again, farther along. — Winton Porter