Top 12 Brachiopod Quotes
#1. Very few species have survived unchanged. There's one called lingula, which is a little shellfish, a little brachiopod about the size of my fingernail, that has survived for 500 million years, but it's survived by being unobtrusive and doing nothing, and you can't accuse human beings of that.
David Attenborough
#2. And thus was their burial of Apollo, god of the sun.
Kendare Blake
#3. Whatever the parents are doing, the kids will follow suit.
Bob Harper
#4. Thus one of Europe's most serious crises will be ended, and all of us, not only in Germany but those far beyond our frontiers, will then in this year for the first time really rejoice at the Christmas festival. It should for us all be a true Festival of Peace.
Adolf Hitler
#5. We love against the night, burning like stars against the darkness of bread and circuses.
David Paul Kirkpatrick
#6. The Deep Web contains shockingly valuable information. Can you imagine how cancer research would blossom if every researcher had instant access to every research paper done by every single university and research lab in the world?
John McAfee
#7. Don't imitate me / we are not two halves / of a muskmelon.
Matsuo Basho
#8. He who says o'er much I love not is in love.
Ovid
#9. Tell me what you do with the food you eat, and I'll tell you who you are. Some turn their food into fat and manure, some into work and good humour, and others, I'm told, into God. So there must be three sorts of men.
Nikos Kazantzakis
#10. What can I say? He's a man, and as my queen and bride says, men are stupid. Especially me, for having taught our son to be a man, too, who in turn taught his son. We're a plague, us men. At least we're handsome enough to keep around despite being stupid enough to tempt our women to murder us." The
R.J. Blain
#11. My main goal is to try to make fun for everyone. And to see my fans responding to it and to see them having fun is really rewarding.
Troye Sivan
#12. Lily Brown writes with and against things in poems that are coiled up tight as springs (or snakes). A believer in the power of the line, she writes, 'I think the plastics/and sink them' then 'Where is the sand/man hiding the dirt.' These terse, biting poems will make you look around and wonder.
Rae Armantrout
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