Wesleys Md Quotes & Sayings
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Top Wesleys Md Quotes

Watch anyone enter their arena of real mastery and you see it, the growing bigger than themselves. Love that. — Peter Heller

This was the most important discovery I had ever made in my life. It was a discovery which has irrevocably changed my whole life's direction. It immediately elevated me to the status of one of the world's leading anthropologists. — Donald Johanson

I love you. And if I have to let you go to make you happy, I'll do it. — Kristin Hannah

Propaganda is a soft weapon; hold it in your hands too long, and it will move about like a snake, and strike the other way. — Jean Anouilh

A racist is a man who believes in history, genetics, and his eyes! — Tom Anderson

Life is rarely about what happened; it's mostly about what we think happened. — Chuck Klosterman

The measure of love is to have no mean, the end to be everlasting. — John Lyly

The purpose of art is delectation. — Nicolas Poussin

I never pretend to be so superior a being as to be above having and indulging a hobby horse [her journal writing], and while I keep mine within due bounds and limits, nobody, I flatter myself, would wish to deprive me of the poor animal: to be sure, he is not formed for labour, and is rather lame and weak, but then the dear creature is faithful, constant, and loving, and though he sometimes prances, would not kick anyone into the mire, or hurt a single soul for the world
and I would not part with him for one who could win the greatest prize that ever was won at any races. — Fanny Burney

Tell me one thing, Father. Suppose I hadn't been your son, suppose you just knew me, knew the same about me you know now, would you have looked forward to seeing me, to having me live under your roof?'
'Naturally, it wouldn't have been the same.'
'No. And if you had just been a fellow human and not my father, then I wouldn't have come to see you. But doesn't that mean it's nothing but a convention that binds us together? We are father and son, and so we have to show affection for each other, and if we don't we feel guilty. But why? Is there any reasonable basis for believing that affection hinges on biology? We don't feel obligated to be fond of a neighbor or a colleague, do we? — Kjell Askildsen