Top 13 Bizzell Memorial Library Quotes
#1. The wicked can have only accomplices, the voluptuous have companions in debauchery, self-seekers have associates, the politic assemble the factions, the typical idler has connections, princes have courtiers. Only the virtuous have friends.
Voltaire
#2. I c-can promise it," he said. "It's what I d-do, remember? I m-make magic happen."
Katie smiled. "That's not magic. That's orgasms."
"Same thing.
Ruthie Knox
#3. It is extremely difficult to get movies that cost more than $40 million to be made these days.
Neil Jordan
#4. I know what it's like to miss someone. To feel like you're just ... wandering around, lost.
Julie Kagawa
#5. America is the first great experiment in Protestant social formation. Protestantism in Europe always assumed and depended on the cultural habits that had been created by Catholic Christianity.
Stanley Hauerwas
#6. The work of bestial degradation, begun by the victorious Germans, had been carried to its conclusion by the Germans in defeat.
Primo Levi
#7. But no matter what the outcome, how the friends turn out in the end, it should not stop you from making new friends. Once bitten, twice shy should not be applied to friendship.
Rita Zahara
#8. I'm very much disciplined because I'm more mature. When I was young I just wanted to live, I could jump, I could run, I was quick and I was relentless.
Bernie Mac
#9. It is by a process of simplification carried constantly further and further that happiness is won.
John Cowper Powys
#10. And the rose like a nymph to the bath addrest,
Which unveiled the depth of her glowing breast,
Till, fold after fold, to the fainting air,
The soul of her beauty and love lay bare.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
#11. There is no such thing as doing nothing. There is no such thing as neutral or uninvolved. At every moment, social life involves all of us.
Allan G. Johnson
#12. To marry a woman you love and who loves you is to lay a wager with her as to who will stop loving the other first.
Alfred Capus
#13. I heard a bustling rumor like a fray,
And the wind blows it from the Capitol.
William Shakespeare
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