Top 13 Kriers Quotes
#1. God judged it better to bring good out of evil than to permit no evil to exist.
Augustine Of Hippo
#2. If you foul up, tell the President and correct it fast. Delay only compounds mistakes.
Donald Rumsfeld
#3. The Buddha taught that most problems - if only you give them enough time and space - will eventually wear themselves out.
Elizabeth Gilbert
#4. Let us dismiss, as irrelevant to the poem per se, the circumstance ... which, in the first place, gave rise to the intention of composing a poem that should suit at once the popular and the critical taste.
Edgar Allan Poe
#5. Domain names and websites are Internet real estate.
Marc Ostrofsky
#6. I hate to see great writers like Ringel and Ansen and Jan Stuart (among many others) being put out to pastures because print media is suffering.
Alonso Duralde
#7. Maturity gives the best understanding of our human head and heart. Every decision we take seems less important after the results of the action.
Bhavik Sarkhedi
#8. If you want to tell something to an athlete, say it quickly and give no alternatives. This is a game of winning and losing. It is senseless to explain and explain.
Paavo Nurmi
#9. An assistant could be just what the witch doctor ordered.
Darren Shan
#10. Gifford presented the house to Bonaguidi as a series of 'telescopic' spaces in the landscape, and his inspiration hints at the atmosphere in the Pines at this time. A telescope is a device often used for spying: it elongates when engaged in order to capture objects in its gaze.
Christopher Bascom Rawlins
#11. We do not discuss the anatomical, physiological, and mental characteristics of man considered as an individual; but we are interested in the diversity of these traits in groups of men found in different geographical areas and in different social classes.
Franz Boas
#13. The Squire's life was quite as idle as his sons', but it was a fiction kept up by himself and his contemporaries in Raveloe that youth was exclusively the period of folly, and that their aged wisdom was constantly in a state of endurance mitigated by sarcasm.
George Eliot