Top 15 Marcus Eli Ravage Quotes
#1. The artist expresses his love through his works. That is civilization.
Bernard Pomerance
#2. I think once I made up my mind that I was allergic to alcohol, and that's what I learned, it made sense to me. And I think it was kind of pointed out that you know if you were allergic to strawberries, you wouldn't eat strawberries. And that made sense to me.
Betty Ford
#3. Bad art is a great deal worse than no art at all.
Oscar Wilde
#4. I am passionate about informing the world about our ocean - its complexity and beauty, its value to us, and the perils that it faces.
Jim Toomey
#5. A runner is a miser, spending the pennies of his energy with great stinginess, constantly wanting to know how much he has spent and how much longer he will be expected to pay. He wants to be broke at precisely the moment he no longer needs his coin.
John L. Parker Jr.
#6. I believe he [Saddam Hussein] wants a better relationship with America.
Louis Farrakhan
#9. So far as I knew, Hallmark didn't make a "Sorry I Interrupted Your Oral Sex" card.
Joanna Wylde
#10. ... But all life turns away from its own eventual hopelessness, leaving insomnia and its night to lovers and the dying.
John McGahern
#11. Limitations are possibilities ...
Opportunities to perceive ourselves
Beyond our present selves ...
Ilchi Lee
#12. The very force of his personality both created and crippled. How much more could he have accomplished had he been kinder? But then, dynamism and kindness often don't go together ...
Louise Penny
#13. He had no breath, no being, but in hers, she was his voice; he did not speak to her. But trembled on her words; She was his sight, For his eye followed hers, and saw hers, Which colored all his objects-he had crease to live within himself; She was his life, The ocean to the river of his thoughts ...
Suzanne Enoch
#14. A people that has experienced all that the Germans have been through, naturally offers fertile soil for the extremists.
Gustav Stresemann
#15. Reade was an emancipating writer because he seemed to speak as man to man to resolve history into an intelligible pattern in which there was no need for miracles. Even if he was wrong, he was grown-up.
William Winwood Reade
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