Top 14 Grepolis Intel Quotes
#1. We shouldn't be so dependent on foreign oil.
Jon Corzine
#2. I've stopped acting, but I don't think I've finished using my voice. I could, and probably will, record the whole of Shakespeare's sonnets. They live at the side of my bed and are my constant companions.
Peter O'Toole
#3. Every man depends on the quantity of sense, wit, or good manners he brings into society for the reception he meets with in it.
William Hazlitt
#4. No, it wasn't quite true that John had no conscience at all. Everyone had one. But there were many voices in his head that had an easier time reaching him: his ambition, his desire for fame and success - and for revenge.
Cornelia Funke
#5. But I wish they would make a musical of some kind. I miss musicals so much. You don't see them anymore.
Dick Van Dyke
#6. Great Drew, you're sitting here about to beg Daisy's forgiveness & you wont even give your own father the time of day. Mother Teresa once said, "You only love Christ as much as the person you love the least." Sometimes I can't stand that woman.
Lisa Samson
#7. Women, by their nature, are not exceptional chess players: they are not great fighters.
Garry Kasparov
#9. Another part of what gave me a questioning, rabble-rousing, activist heart and soul is that when all these heavy events went down, my parents did not shelter the kids from it.
Jello Biafra
#10. Without the Indian Subcontinent, in other words, there could not have been a Vietnam in any cultural or aesthetic sense.
Robert D. Kaplan
#11. Not every story lends itself tonally to humor, so you have to navigate that territory properly. You can put a humorous spin on anything, really, if you know what you're doing, but it's not always desirable to have your reader laughing on every page.
Kevin Keck
#12. He reminded me of someone who put your fingers in the door and smiled and talked to you while he smashed them.
Janet Fitch
#13. The best way is always the simplest. The attics of the world are cluttered up with complicated failures.
Henry Ford
#14. From this point of view, science - the real game in town - is rhetoric, a series of efforts to persuade relevant social actors that one's manufactured knowledge is a route to a desired form of very objective power.
Donna J. Haraway
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