Top 16 Ellen Brody Quotes

#1. Lady Liberty has an unacceptable history.

Delano Johnson

#2. I first decided to become an actor at school. A teacher gave us a play to do and that had a major impact. At first, I wanted to work in the theatre, but there was something about the ambience of film, especially American films, that always attracted me.

Jean Reno

#3. I want you to be weak. As weak as I am.

Milan Kundera

#4. Art may make a suit of clothes, but nature must produce a man.

David Hume

#5. The past always seems better when you look back on it than it did at the time. And the present never looks as good as it will in the future.

Peter Benchley

#6. I'd been listening to African-American music since the first record I ever bought, which was by Sam Cooke. And it sounds more like my private thoughts that I never thought I would be able to articulate - I never thought I would be able to express publicly.

David Toop

#7. But you shouldn't forget. The little stuff. Even a handshake? That's something special. Meaningful. Value it, even if you get it every day.

Wildbow

#8. He closed his eyes and sank into the warm dusk that separates consciosness and sleep, where reality bends and sways to the wind of thought, and where creativity blossoms in its freedom from boundaries and all things are possible.

Christopher Paolini

#9. I got lost in my doodles, and started daydreaming.

Cara Lynn Shultz

#10. The price of love is always just above that what your heart can afford

Colin Tegerdine

#11. Mistletoe. I surmount all obstacles.

Vanessa Diffenbaugh

#12. Who knows the life which does not burn its own time moments?

Sorin Cerin

#13. Ellen Brody:
Wanna get drunk and fool around?

Brody:
Oh Yeah.

Peter Benchley

#14. [Blood upon killing Levasseur] 'I think that cancels the articles between us,' he said.

Rafael Sabatini

#15. Victory carries a moral burden the vanquished never know, and as an architect of momentous events, Lawrence would be uniquely haunted by what he saw and did during the Great Loot.

Scott Anderson

#16. It appeared clear to me - partly because of the lies that filled my history textbooks - that the intent of formal education was to inculcate obedience to a social order that did not deserve my loyalty. Defiance seemed the only dignified response to the adult world.

Timothy B. Tyson

Famous Authors

Popular Topics

Scroll to Top