
Top 17 Heathcliff Catherine Love Quotes
#1. Come in! come in !' he sobbed.
'Cathy, do come. Oh do -once more! Oh! my heart's darling! hear me this time - Catherine, at last!
Emily Bronte
#2. The greatest punishment we could invent for her was to keep her separate from him ...
Emily Bronte
#3. It is the English, not their Government; for if they were not blind cowards, they would lynch Chamberlain and Halifax and all the other smarmy traitors.
Enoch Powell
#4. Stop the words now. Open the window in the center of your chest, and let the spirits fly in and out.
Rumi
#6. In this chapter, we'll picture these rule-making and rule-breaking parts of you as humans. Tiny humans. We'll call them the Dictator and the Wild Child.
Martha N. Beck
#7. I grew up with my mom; it was just the two of us.
Kat Edmonson
#8. I really believe musical form will go on. There's got to be a way of making musical form in cinema live again.
Baz Luhrmann
#10. But most of those to whom Ender's Game feels most important are those who, like me, feel themselves to be perpetually outside their most beloved communities, never able to come inside and feel confident of belonging.
Orson Scott Card
#11. The only happy people I know are the ones who are working well at something they consider important. ABRAHAM MASLOW
Mark Sanborn
#12. The habits of craft, developed day in and day out over a working lifetime, create moments of astonishment, sublime and magical effects, precisely because the writer is not thinking overtly about making art.
Philip Gerard
#13. Every pizza is a personal pizza if you try hard and believe in yourself.
Bill Murray
#14. He is more me than I am' Catherine to Heathcliff
Emily Bronte
#15. Design. Story. Symphony. Empathy. Play. Meaning. These six senses increasingly will guide our lives and shape our world.
Daniel H. Pink
#16. Gratitude is like a magnet; the more grateful you are, the more you will receive to be grateful for.
Iyanla Vanzant
#17. The 2 timeless drivers that underpin the behavior of every generation: the need to belong and the need to be significant. The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.
Ludwig Wittgenstein
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