Wainwrights Beer Quotes & Sayings
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Top Wainwrights Beer Quotes

The supreme good - to examine everything - a life which was not devoted to such research would not be worth living. Happiness would thus consist in their never-ending quest. PLATO — Alexandra Stoddard

She was spoiled, but she wasn't lazy. She knew what she wanted, and because she believed absolutely that she could have everything she wanted if she tried hard enough to get it, she never stopped trying. — Cecily Von Ziegesar

Gamers are everywhere, coming in all ages and genders, and developers have grown up, too. — Warren Spector

But then he remembered what George had told him about pain. You know what you can do, even if your body says quit. It's only pain.
"It's only pain, he thought, hearing George's voice and seeing his eagle-face. If anyone would know, George would, he thought. And truly, he thought, it's the most useful one thing a body can know. — James Alexander Thom

I like old people when they have aged well. And old houses with an accumulation of sweet honest living in them are good. And the timelessness that only the passing of Time itself can give to objects both inside and outside the spirit is a continuing reassurance. — M.F.K. Fisher

Alternative descriptions of the same reality evoke different emotions and different associations. — Daniel Kahneman

And their marriage, instead of depriving her of one friend, secured her two. — Jane Austen

I think if you can describe it, you may not fully be experiencing it because it is such a personal relationship. — Hillary Rodham Clinton

ofttimes so greatly is he comforted by the desire for tribulation and adversity, through love of conformity to the Cross of Christ, that he would not be without sorrow and tribulation; for he believeth that he shall be the more acceptable to God, the more and the heavier burdens he is able to bear for His sake. This is not the virtue of man, but the grace of Christ which hath such power and energy in the weak flesh, that what it naturally hateth and fleeth from, this it draweth to and loveth through fervour of spirit. — Thomas A Kempis