Yeats The Second Coming Quotes & Sayings
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Top Yeats The Second Coming Quotes

The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere The ceremony of innocence is drowned W. B. Yeats 'The Second Coming — Rennie Airth

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold
The Second Coming — Wb Yeats

After twenty centuries of stony sleep, what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches toward Bethlehem to be born?
W.B. Yeats - from 'The Second Coming — W.B.Yeats

He still wondered what it would be like to be so intriguing that people would actually care if he disappeared. — Adam Langer

May we be enlightened by a ray of the light that comes from Bethlehem, the light of He who is 'The Greatest' and made himself small. — Pope Benedict XVI

It takes truth to live with a swiftly changing world. Nothing less than truth can survive. You cannot survive with anything less than truth. — L. Ron Hubbard

He is the kind of guy girls have an infatuation for, including me back when I saw guys as something else other than a threat. — Jessica Sorensen

His latest job [My Dad] had been as a truck driver, picking up and delivering diapers. For months, he had complained bitterly about the odor and the mess, saying it was the worst job in the world. But now that he had lost it, he seemed to want it back. — Howard Schultz And Dori Jones Yang

There's a confidence you find when you finally feel right in your body. — Ariel Winter

The Tea Party has an important voice in the country and now they have a voice in the U.S. Senate. — Mike Lee

We must change life,' the poet [Rimbaud] had written, and so the Situationists set out to transform everyday life in the modern world through a comprehensive program that included above all else the construction of 'situations'
defined in 1958 as moments of life 'concretely and deliberately constructed by the collective organization of a unitary ambiance and a play of events'
but that also necessary entailed the supersession of philosophy, the realization of art, the abolition of politics, and the fall of the 'spectacle-commodity economy. — Tom McDonough