
Top 15 Hellevator The Undertaker Quotes
#1. The problem with opportunity cost is that opportunity cost is divided among many, many things.
Dan Ariely
#2. Have you asked yourself why you protect me? Are you as messed up about all this as me?
Zoe Forward
#4. Some of us believe that God is almighty, and can do everything; and that he is all wise, and may do everything; but that he is all love, and will do everything - there we draw back.
Julian Of Norwich
#5. A normally constituted truth lives, let us say, as a rule seventeen or eighteen, or at most twenty years - seldom longer.
Henrik Ibsen
#6. I don't recommend trying to cram a lot of long opening-move variations into your head. The main idea behind any opening is to get a strong pawn center and give your pieces a lot of scope so that you cramp your opponent's position and can attack weaknesses in his game.
Bobby Fischer
#7. I have never seen a man as fond of virtue as of women.
Confucius
#8. Time is a keyhole, he thought as he looked up at the stars. Yes, I think so. We sometimes bend and peer through it. And the wind we feel on our cheeks when we do - the wind that blows through the keyhole- is the breath of all the living universe.
Stephen King
#9. No horror on earth or elsewhere could equal watching your own offspring open his mouth and have nothing come out.
David Foster Wallace
#10. Politics hates a vacuum. If it isn't filled with hope, someone will fill it with fear.
Naomi Klein
#12. Rhyme is bullshit. Rhyme says that everything works out in the end. All harmony and order. When I see a rhyme in a poem, I know I'm being lied to. Go ahead, laugh! It's true - rhyme's a completely bankrupt device. It's just wishful thinking. Nostalgia.
Tobias Wolff
#13. Ideally, I would create a book so interdependent and self-sustaining in its parts, so wondrously connected word by word and paragraph by paragraph, so charged with the joy of language, that it would actually float three or four inches above any table where you try to set it down.
Peter Straub
#14. Eggs is a kind of a plucky, brave 11-year-old boy who thinks he is a boxtroll. And he's kind of one of these mythological feral children who are raised in isolation of humanity and, by virtue of that, have a deeper connection to humanity because they've been raised away from the poisons of society.
Isaac Hempstead-Wright
#15. The modern state appeals to morality, to religion, and to natural law as the ideological foundation of its existence. At the same time it is prepared to infringe any or all of these in the interest of self-preservation.
J.M. Coetzee
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