Veida Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Veida with everyone.
Top Veida Quotes

She had been married to a man who had never bored her and these people bored her very much — Ernest Hemingway,

I grew up in a small town about 40 miles outside London, but it was a fairly cosmopolitan household. — Jacqueline Bisset

There doesn't seem to be no need for no one to be contrary when there's flowers an' such like, — Frances Hodgson Burnett

I like your eyes when you get mad," I said. "They glow like embers. — William Hjortsberg

I don't usually feel, and so I don't know how to respond to a real feeling in my body instead of a manufactured one. — Lauren Blakely

He was not for that moment a human being, but a frenzied creature possessed by rage, turned into an animal. All that could be seen in him was the urge to hurt, and it was, as it always will be, the most dreadful sight in the world. — Susan Cooper

Sometimes I wanted to peel away all of my skin and find a different me underneath. — Francesca Lia Block

Passing beneath the dance hall, thinking again of this book, I realized suddenly that our life had come to an end: I realized that the book I was planning was nothing more than a tomb in which to bury her - and the me which had belonged to her. That was some time ago, and ever since I have been trying to write it. Why is it so difficult? Why? Because the idea of an "end" is intolerable to me. — Henry Miller

It goes like this," Max interrupted. "Boys are told since they're little that pretty things are good. Pretty things equal happy things. So when we grow up and see a shiny pretty thing, we're drawn like moths to a flame. We keep flying toward the light until it's too late. You know, like that Sleeping Beauty chick with the spinning wheel?" I chuckled. "Are you seriously comparing us to a Disney princess? — Rachel Van Dyken

Like a pianist runs her fingers over the keys, I'll search my mind for what to say. Now, the poem may want you to write it. And then sometimes you see a situation and think, 'I'd like to write about that.' Those are two different ways of being approached by a poem, or approaching a poem. — Maya Angelou