
Top 14 Eatingis Quotes
#1. I am conscious that meat eatingis not in accordance with the finer feelings,and I abstain from it whenever I can.
Albert Schweitzer
#2. She'd call us her bee-utiful girls and take us for hot chocolate on Mondays, because Fridays didn't deserve all the attention. It was funny. I used to think of myself as a Monday and Ellen as a Friday. But Mondays and Fridays were just twenty-four-hour stretches of time with different names.
Julie Murphy
#4. I knew it was easier to drill things in than to take them out.'
'It's like a screw!' Craig-Vyvyan shouted.... 'If you pull off it's head, you never get it out.
Mark Helprin
#5. Telling a lie is called wrong. Telling the truth is called right. Except when telling the truth is called bad manners and telling a lie is called polite.
Judith Viorst
#6. Would we, if we could, educate and sophisticate pigs, geese, cattle? Would it be wise to establish diplomatic relation with the hen that now functions, satisfied with mere sense of achievement by way of compensation? I think we're property.
Whitley Strieber
#7. I love the French for their sarcasm, their irony. I love them for their bad moods.
Marjane Satrapi
#8. Reduce inflammation to treat the root of many issues. If your gut isn't working right it can cause so many other issues.
Jay Woodman
#9. They had drifted apart, as people do when they promise to stay in touch; the ones who are going to stay in touch don't need to promise.
Edward St. Aubyn
#10. You can live well here. Compared to the top 40 metro areas in the nation, Charlotte has the 12th lowest cost of living.
Harry Hoover
#11. Long works are too often like long sermons which end in fatigue.
Francis Grierson
#12. When you're my age and you see a story, you better go for it pretty quickly. I'd just like to get a few more novels under my belt.
John Le Carre
#13. Gratitude is a powerful catalyst for happiness.
It's the spark that lights a fire of joy in your soul.
Amy Collette
#14. The real end of the world is the destruction of the spirit; the other kind depends on the insignificant attempt to see whether after such a destruction the world can go on.
Karl Kraus
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