Famous Quotes & Sayings

Whoadies Quotes & Sayings

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Top Whoadies Quotes

Whoadies Quotes By Paul McCartney

Painting is a magical process that I like, where you conjure something out of nothing; you get a little idea that leads you through ... You can go into a trance while you're doing it, so it's a nice contrast to real life. — Paul McCartney

Whoadies Quotes By June Jordan

And if i
if i ever let love go
because the hatred and the whisperings
become a phantom dictate i o-
bey in lieu of impulse and realities
(the blossoming flamingos of my
wild mimosa trees)
then let love freeze me
out.
(from i must become a menace to my enemies) — June Jordan

Whoadies Quotes By Plato

Love is an intermediate state between possession and deprivation. — Plato

Whoadies Quotes By Laurie Boris

This Mr. Right." Freddie leaned forward and rested his hands, still flushed from washing dishes, on his knees. "It has been months and months, and you are still ashamed to introduce us? He must be Mr. Wrong-But-It-Feels-So-Right. — Laurie Boris

Whoadies Quotes By Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Even people who are entirely strange and indifferent to one another will exchange confidences if they live together for a while, and a certain intimacy is bound to develop. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Whoadies Quotes By Faith Hunter

I could be patient. I could. If they'd hurry up. — Faith Hunter

Whoadies Quotes By Hamilton Basso

(Vice President) Garner has taken his personal smallness, his lack of generosity, and forged it into a political principle. He has no imagination, no convictions, and he substitutes political cynicism for social understanding. — Hamilton Basso

Whoadies Quotes By Jess Walter

He thought it might be the most intimate thing possible, to fall asleep next to someone in the afternoon. — Jess Walter

Whoadies Quotes By Mircea Eliade

My religion: Very seldom do I feel a need for the presence of God. I don't pray and I don't know how to pray. When I enter a church, I try to pray, but I can't tell if I succeed or not. But often I have religious "attacks": the desire for isolation, for contemplation far from other people. Despair. The desire (and the hope) for asceticism. — Mircea Eliade