
Top 14 Dralon Quotes
#1. A tortoise is, I suppose, a Jewish pet. It knows its place. Out on the lawn. It doesn't bark. It doesn't tear the Dralon.
Maureen Lipman
#2. Take his name.
Because I love him.
Because when I look into his eyes, nothing else exists but him.
Because even when I don't look into his eyes, nothing else exists but him.
rachels thought
Katy Evans
#3. If we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday at a time of presidential inaugurals, this is thanks to Ronald Reagan who created the holiday, and not to the Democratic Congress of the Carter years, which rejected it.
David Horowitz
#4. I like for people to figure things out for themselves. It's not like I have the right answer, but if I have a visceral reaction to something, I'm sure that other people will, too.
Charlie Kaufman
#5. When your wife calls, you have to take it, no matter what you're doing.
Ashton Kutcher
#6. Knowledge is recognition of something absent; it is a salutation, not an embrace.
George Santayana
#7. I would advise anyone who is at the start of a rest ritual like the Sabbath, to take it slowly and grow incrementally into it. Recognize that it will be hard at first. It's a discipline but then it is a true and deep joy.
Erica Brown
#8. The human race afraid of nothing, rushes on through every crime.
Horace
#9. I can't be in love with a man who lives in another world.
Paulo Coelho
#10. Jazz is a white term to define black people. My music is black classical music.
Nina Simone
#11. Humor could not flourish in a wholly serious and rational atmosphere.
Raymond Smullyan
#12. History does not record in its annals any lasting domination exercised by one people over another, of different race, of diverse usages and customs, of opposite and divergent ideals. One of the two had to yield and succumb.
Jose Rizal
#13. It didn't work. He still had wool in his teeth. I couldn't make love to him. He had bone fragments and wool in his incisors, you know?"
"Yeah, sheep remnants would be a major mood killer," Trinity agreed,
Stephanie Rowe
#14. Epicurus as a moral empiricist felt that our immediate feelings are far more cogent and authoritative guides to the good life than abstract maxims, verbal indoctrination, or even the voice of reason itself. Hence he based his ethics on nature, not on convention or on reason.
Epicurus
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top