
Top 15 Hissed Over Here Crossword Quotes
#1. She clenched the blanket in her fist, and sighed, and breathed his name, and if she hasn't said it out load, he wouldn't have known what to call himself, because everything was her.
Laura Ruby
#2. History more often records the brilliant successes and spectacular defeats of contending forces than the effect of war on the common people.
Mildred Cable
#3. Lack of reciprocity ruins friendships, but makes love affairs exciting for a time.
Mason Cooley
#4. It's always nice to anticipate working in something that you know people will have an appetite for.
Harrison Ford
#6. Since Caesar, we know his historians are liars. The good writers get read. Bad history doesn't get read.
Peter Greenaway
#7. Well, I think they're going to learn that an awful lot of French people changed their minds. In 1940, the Third Republic had made a miserable mess of it.
Robert O. Paxton
#8. Even during the worst hardships, when the other things in our lives seem to fall apart, we can still find peace in the eternal love of God.
Armstrong Williams
#9. A slight touch of friendly malice and amusement towards those we love keeps our affections for them from turning flat.
Logan Pearsall Smith
#10. It's indignity you can't stand, Hannibal, you're like a cat that way.
Thomas Harris
#11. I am the keeper of the beast, though all men harbor a beast in the depths of their heart
callous, calamitous creatures, driven by deviant demands and derisive diligence.
From the short story What Rough Beast
Michael Hibbard
#12. It was striking, the character of destruction. It was always diverse
Richard Ford
#13. seven deadly sins and their division into three categories of love. Excessive Love (lust, gluttony and greed), Deficient Love (sloth) and Malicious Love (wrath, envy and pride).
Carol Lewis
#14. With one glance he had got himself trapped in the brown fundament of her eyes, he was in danger of sinking, as if into a soft, brown swamp, and he had to close his own eyes for a second to get out of it..
Patrick Suskind
#15. Since the Americans have ceased to have dyspepsia, they have lost the only thing that gave them any expression.
Edith Wharton
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top