Top 14 Hennebert Diane Quotes

#1. I have an independent record label called Favored Nations on which I released an album by an artist called Johnny A, who plays an arch top Gibson through a Marshall, but the tone is all in his fingers.

Steve Vai

#2. When the writer (or the artist in general) says he has worked without giving any thought to the rules of the process, he simply means he was working without realizing he knew the rules.

Umberto Eco

#3. For what were all these country patriots born? To hunt, and vote, and raise the price of corn?

Lord Byron

#4. My goal is not selling laptops. OLPC is not in the laptop business. It's in the education business.

Nicholas Negroponte

#5. Anything that is white is sweet.
Anything that is brown is meat.
Anything that is grey, don't eat.

Stephen Sondheim

#6. It's like you're born with all these blessings, only you don't realize they're blessings until you lose them. And if you're thick-headed enough, like me, you don't even realize you've lost them, not until they come back to you.

Kevin Brockmeier

#7. Most courage comes from being too tired and hungry to be afraid anymore.

Ysabeau S. Wilce

#8. Nation-building is never a 'done deal' confined to history already established.

Aberjhani

#9. Turtles are greater than baby nephews, because it's ok to drop a turtle.

Demetri Martin

#10. Today we take it for granted that war happens in smaller, poorer and more backward countries.

Steven Pinker

#11. For science must breathe the oxygen of freedom.

John Charles Polanyi

#12. The gospel at Christmas is: Christ has trampled this enemy underfoot at the cross. So for everyone who trusts in him, their sins are cast into the depths of the sea.

John Piper

#13. Klaus Mann saw very clearly how different was his own (more liberated) form of homosexuality from the same-sex attractions of his father - and that is reiterated in TM's diary queries about "how two men can sleep together".

Philip Kitcher

#14. All the trees, with all their laden branches; all the shrubs, and ferns, and grasses; the message-carrying air; all these unceasingly were active.

Herman Melville

Famous Authors

Popular Topics

Scroll to Top