Top 16 Primal Instinct Quotes
#1. The desire to get married is a basic and primal instinct in women. It's followed by another basic and primal instinct: the desire to be single again.
Nora Ephron
#2. It was all primal instinct. A dog doesn't know why it barks or growls. It just knows something about its environment isn't right and it reacts.
Sherrilyn Kenyon
#3. So you had to piss me off badly enough activate some primal instinct?" I clenched my jaw, grinding my teeth. "I think all you managed to 'draw out' was fuming rage. I could rip your head off right now."
"Save that for later," he waved his hand dismissively. "You have work to do right now.
M.A. George
#4. The outward work will never be puny if the inward work is great.
Meister Eckhart
#6. Many of the shows I danced in don't exist on film, but they do exist in the memories of those who were in the theater for that single moment in time. And nothing can replace that.
Chita Rivera
#8. It's very easy to resist men, isn't it? But managing to pick the right one
that is truly worthy of praise.
Meredith Duran
#9. I want to learn how to speak Italian. For years, I'd wished I could speak Italian
a language I find more beautiful than roses
Elizabeth Gilbert
#10. The world is full of novels in which characters simply say and do. There are certainly legitimate genres in which this is sufficient. But in real and lasting writing the character is.
Ruth Park
#11. Start with clothes, then move on to books, papers, komono (miscellany), and finally things with sentimental value.
Marie Kondo
#12. A man and a woman Are one. A man and a woman and a blackbird Are one.
Wallace Stevens
#14. The gentleman puts me in mind of an old hen which persists in setting after her eggs are taken away.
Fisher Ames
#15. For common instinct of our race declares
That body of itself exists: unless
This primal faith, deep-founded, fail us not,
Naught will there be whereunto to appeal
On things occult when seeking aught to prove
By reasonings of mind.
Lucretius
#16. All Being within this order, by the laws
of its own nature is impelled to find
its proper station round its Primal Cause.
Thus every nature moves across the tide
of the great sea of being to its own port,
each with its given instinct as its guide.
Dante Alighieri