
Top 16 Ernst Udet Quotes
#1. Sometimes we exist long enough to lead the next generation; other times, only to plant a seed and let its resonations of our time here on Earth ripple into new waves.
A.J. Darkholme
#2. It is as though horror has frozen the blood in my veins, paralyzed my arms, and torn all thought from my brain with the swipe of a paw. I sit there, flying on, and continue to stare, as though mesmerised, at the Cauldron on my left.
Ernst Udet
#3. I'm not a braggart, but when I was a little girl people used to come from all over Hollywood to hear me sing.
Etta James
#4. If you look at most beauty advertisements, you would think that makeup is only for beautiful women in their early twenties.
Isabella Rossellini
#5. When a man marries a woman, they become one-the trouble starts when they try to decide which one.
Croft M. Pentz
#6. No straight lines make up my life; And all my roads have bends; There's no clear-cut beginnings; And so far no dead-ends.
Harry Chapin
#7. To be a great pilot you have to make a pact with the devil, but don't let him swallow you up.
Ernst Udet
#8. The roar of adrenaline drowned out the self-critical voices that tend to make creative play such work for adults.
Chris Baty
#9. What the Vatican did will be indelibly and eternally engraved in our hearts. Priests and even high prelates did things that will forever be an honor to Catholicism.
Israel Zolli
#10. The first step in achieving prosperity and wealth is learning to appreciate what you already have.
Samuel Richardson
#11. Sometimes, Freud argued, people need a history enema.
Tom Keneally
#12. Capitalism sounds good in theory but it just doesn't work.
Edward Abbey
#13. Even the smallest achievements pave a way to great success.
Mary Kay Ash
#14. In fiction, the actions of a villain, even when unspeakable, can be cathartic to read about. They let us experience darkness, but add a safe remove.
Cassandra Clare
#15. Each reader needs to bring his or her own mind and heart to the text.
Dean Koontz
#16. The greatest part of mankind ... are given up to labor, and enslaved to the necessity of their mean condition; whose lives are worn out only in the provisions for living.
John Locke
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