Top 14 Eyedeal Quotes

#1. Humility and knowledge in poor clothes excel pride and ignorance in costly attire.

William Penn

#2. Hitting. That's what I enjoy most. Realistically, it's probably the hardest thing to do in all of sport. Think about it. You've got a round ball, a round bat, and the object is to hit it square.

Pete Rose

#3. Park was never going to love her more than he did on the day they said goodbye. And she couldn't bear to think of him loving her less.

Rainbow Rowell

#4. To rehearse imaginary conversations on paper is called literature. To do so out loud is called madness.

Philip Sington

#5. Age has a way of sobering us. Our experiences, our disappointments, and our failures have a way of shrinking our expectations. Sometimes they wound us in a way that steals our faith and bankrupts our dreams.

Ross Parsley

#6. Then the butcher, the baker and the owner of a gift shop.

Anonymous

#7. Talk about rationality can get very confusing unless the things with which rationality deals are also included.

Robert M. Pirsig

#8. As soon as you start writing about how human beings interact with each other socially, you're into politics, aren't you?

Jonathan Coe

#9. I can't see any hope but a second front. The psychological effect would be great, even if they could not wade all the way to Berlin in 15 to 20 minutes.

Bess Truman

#10. You can't pay attention to your mistakes. I made a mistake today, I made a mistake yesterday. I think it's ... very important to ignore the negative.

Jerry Rubin

#11. Flying visits don't work,' Tom said as we drove home, 'not for a place you've really loved.' I don't think he expected us to be back and around much, and maybe this was his way of saying he'd understand that too.

Ian Walthew

#12. We become our own opposition when we accept the following: procrastinating, lying to ourselves, comparing ourselves to others, and having self-doubts - in short, anything that gets in the way of our becoming who we were created to be.

Steve Harvey

#13. You say, Do you / love me, do you love me / I answer you: / I stretch your arms out / one to either side, / your head slumps forward.

Margaret Atwood

#14. An economy oriented toward production for market exchange provides the optimal conditions for long-lasting and ever-expanding productive capacity based on modern technology.

Peter L. Berger

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