Top 14 Delphine Seyrig Quotes
#2. Turkish opium-eaters, it seems, are absurd enough to sit, like so many equestrian statues, on logs of wood as stupid as themselves.
Thomas De Quincey
#3. The question confronting the Church today is not any longer whether the man in the street can grasp a religious message, but how to employ the communications media so as to let him have the full impact of the Gospel message.
Pope John Paul II
#4. In my mind, I'm probably the biggest sex maniac you ever saw.
J.D. Salinger
#5. It's a shame there has to be a tragedy before the best in people will finally shine.
E.A. Bucchianeri
#6. It is more important to be free than to be happy.
Tom Robbins
#7. When the tree is fallen, all goe with their hatchet.
[When the tree is fallen, all go with their hatchet.]
George Herbert
#8. If I have become so pathetically dulled that I hold freedom as my right and the privileges of liberty as my due, I can stand beside the stilled graves of a thousand soldiers fallen in defense of freedom and not feel a thing. And my most solemn prayer is that I will never be this.
Craig D. Lounsbrough
#9. There are times and places where not to be anyone is more honourable than to be someone.
Carlos Ruiz Zafon
#10. The argument of socialists, that people really want to share, beyond a reasonable level of charity, is rubbish, though it is espoused by a lot of rich, pious hypocrites who want to share only enough to avoid widespread starvation, mob violence, and government seizure of more of their incomes.
Conrad Black
#11. Wars fought over a face like this. A man would work himself into the ground for it, go down to his knees to beg to keep it, endure torture to protect it, take a bullet for it, poison his brother to possess a face like this. My
Kristen Ashley
#12. All melodious poets shall be hoarse as street ballads, when once the penetrating keynote of nature and spirit is sounded-the earth-beat, sea-beat, heart-beat, which make the tune to which the sun rolls, and the globule of blood and the sap of the trees.
Charles Ives
#14. When we are stirred to lament the loss of the gods, it is more than likely the gods who are doing the stirring.
J.M. Coetzee
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