Top 16 Dornford Quotes
#1. The Breed never dies. Sapper, Buchan, Dornford Yates, practitioners in that school of Snobbery withViolence that runs like a thread of good-class tweed through twentieth-century literature.
Alan Bennett
#2. could hear them breathing and an unfamiliar scent filled the air, something brisk and fresh, that brought with it a chill that
Robert J. Crane
#3. Nothing had changed in my routine, except that when I went down the chippy and got me special fried rice, it would be wrapped in a newspaper that had my picture all over it.
Robbie Fowler
#4. It's not until you become seriously ill and you nearly die and you're at home for 6 months, that you suddenly stop to realize that this isn't the way I intended it to be in the beginning. Everything that you've done falls away and start wondering why you went through all that rock business stuff.
Chris Rea
#5. I am most proud of the development of the characters as personalities that game players could relate to and care about.
Roberta Williams
#6. the progress of which mankind is so proud, may well be known to the gods by another name.
Dornford Yates
#8. These rare senses and powers of reasoning were given to be used freely, but not audaciously, to discover, not to pervert the truth.
William John Wills
#9. I think it's never mono-causal why you fall in love with something that you want to do.
Robert Schwentke
#10. In the end, though, it's all about giving back the teeth that the current 'sweetie-vamp' craze has, by and large, stolen from the bloodsuckers. It's about making them scary again.
Stephen King
#11. Whoever won the war, would revise the history.
Toba Beta
#12. When a writer admits that he has an affection for something which he has written, it is high time to pray for his soul.
Dornford Yates
#13. To all the fantasy owners who drafted me: You're welcome.
Peyton Manning
#15. Each atom of the Holy Spirit is intelligent, and like all other matter has solidity, form, and size, and occupies space.
Orson Pratt
#16. Every fine story must leave in the mind of the sensitive reader an intangible residuum of pleasure, a cadence, a quality of voice that is exclusively the writer's own, individual, unique.
Willa Cather
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