Top 22 Died The Same Day Quotes

#1. I realize it's impossible to have any sympathy, I mean, true sympathy, for people that are famous.

Bill Murray

#2. Dad's especially need to remember that what they say to their daughters is written in Sharpie. It can't be erased.

Sue Enquist

#3. Hope was supposed to be a good thing, but it was starting to feel like every other four-letter word you're not supposed to say.

Elizabeth Scott

#4. The gospel beckons our sin-sick souls to simple trust in Christ, the only One who is truly radical enough.

David Platt

#5. I have a strong memory of the day I was told that my father had a weak heart and that he had to go to the hospital. He died when I was nine years old on the same day that Franklin Roosevelt died; it was his 45th birthday.

Alan J. Heeger

#6. I loved and protected my own children like a fierce mama bear, but one of them died anyway. It was a dark day when I realized that part of my responsibility in Casey's death was that I did not love all the children of the world in that same real, not abstract, way.

Cindy Sheehan

#7. Insurance - an ingenious modern game of chance in which the player is permitted to enjoy the comfortable conviction that he is beating the man who keeps the table.

Ambrose Bierce

#8. Nothing in politics is ever so good or as bad as it first appears.

Edward Boyle, Baron Boyle Of Handsworth

#9. All is the same
time has gone by
some day you come
some day you'll die
someone has died
long time ago.

Cesare Pavese

#10. There are those photographers who have made a whole career doing commercial work but have never had a museum show, and then there are others who've only had museum shows but couldn't survive for five seconds in the real world of photography. But I've done absolutely everything.

Duane Michals

#11. I don't think I have dreams anymore. I think they all died the same day I did, back on that sunny afternoon in spring.

J.T. Geissinger

#12. Things That Don't Matter When You've Lived the Same Day Six Times and Died on at Least Two of Them: Lunch meats and their relative coolness.

Lauren Oliver

#13. Cop families have guns in their houses.

Amy Carlson

#14. If you aren't sure who you are, you might as well work on who you want to be.

Robert Breault

#15. He is at once a great lazybones, pitifully ambitious, and famous for unhappiness; for his entire life he has had practically nothing but half-baked ideas. The sun of laziness, which ceaselessly glows within him, vaporizes him and gnaws away that half-genius that heaven bestowed upon him.

Charles Baudelaire

#16. Meanwhile, in a final insult of fate, the Queen and Cardinal Pole died on the same day in November 1558, Pole the victim of an exceptionally vicious influenza epidemic.

Diarmaid MacCulloch

#17. We are in a position, as musicians, to touch the souls of those who listen.

Spencer W. Kimball

#18. Nature! We are surrounded by her and locked in her clasp: powerless to leave her, and powerless to come closer to her. Unasked and unwarned she takes us up into the whirl of her dance, and hurries on with us till we are weary and fall from her arms.

Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

#19. Our relationship died the same day Lily did; we just let our love stay on life support a little longer, but I'm pulling the plug.

Danielle Jamie

#20. Abandoned homes become magnets for vandalism and crime. They drag down the property values of neighboring homes.

Eric Schneiderman

#21. He sat in the same place as the day died, looking at the dull houses opposite, and thinking, if the disembodied spirits of former inhabitants were ever conscious of them, how they must pity themselves for their old places of imprisonment.

Charles Dickens

#22. Britain in 1939 and 1940 really thought they were going to lose the war. It looked like they were going to lose. There was bombing every day, and people were literally starving.

Graham Moore

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