Top 16 Quotes About Getting Back On The Horse
#1. Mountains are pretty at a distance, but my advice is to never let them get to be more than scenery.
Mark Lawrence
#2. This is all you have to do. Sit down once a day to the novel and start working without internal criticism, without debilitating expectations, without the need to look at your words as if they were already printed and bound. The beginning is only a draft. Drafts are imperfect by definition.
Walter Mosley
#3. There has to be innate circuitry that does the learning, that creates the culture, that acquires the culture, and that responds to socialization.
Steven Pinker
#4. If your dreams and goals get derailed, they're not dead. Derailed simply means off-track. Pick 'em up and put 'em back on again.
Dan Pearce
#5. The sadness of the heart rises to the face, and in the eyes may be read the history of that which passes in the soul.
Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra
#6. When is a Beryl not a Beryl? 'When it's a Claudia,' he said.
Stephen King
#7. When you read great literature, you become a thousand men and yet still be yourself.
C.S. Lewis
#8. If we can send a person to the moon, we can send someone with AIDS to the moon, and then someday we can send everybody with AIDS to the moon.
Sarah Silverman
#9. Only an idiot would trust a Kelpie this close to the water. Getting on its back with the scent of the sea in the air would be a fast, painful means of suicide, and I'm not a fan of pain.
Seanan McGuire
#10. Everything comes back to the horse, which is why I love it. You put your ego aside, and you concentrate on getting the best performance out of this creature.
Edie Campbell
#11. It is. I'm your boyfriend now, which
means there's no room for your hipster admirer. He'll just have to lick his wounds while we lick other things.
Kylie Scott
#12. The darkest sky is filled with stars, that the sun casts its warmth on the coldest day.
Susan Beth Pfeffer
#13. Too much alcohol hampers people's ability to parent. That's why I've chosen to remain childless.
Kyra Davis
#14. On November 18 of alternate years Mr Earbrass begins writing 'his new novel'. Weeks ago he chose its title at random from a list of them he keeps in a little green note-book. It being tea-time of the 17th, he is alarmed not to have thought of a plot to which The Unstrung Harp might apply.
Edward Gorey
#16. All religion relates to life, and the life of religion is to do good
Emanuel Swedenborg