
Top 14 Recurrent Thoughts Quotes
#1. One gets recurrent thoughts about things he had insisted upon and about matters he formed opinions!
Dada Bhagwan
#2. The danger from lightning is gone when the thunder is heard, and the worst is over when misfortune has arrived.
Ivan Panin
#3. When you're going through hard times and God seems distant, apologetics can help you to remember that our faith is not based on emotions, but on the truth, and therefore you must hold on to it.
William Lane Craig
#4. In ballet, any dancer who asks himself what step comes next must freeze. Any man who takes a sex manual to bed with him invites frigidity. Dancing, sex, writing a novel
all are a living process, quick thought, emotion making yet more quick thought, and so on, cycling round.
Ray Bradbury
#5. Do but observe our grim philosophers that are perpetually beating their brains on knotty subjects, and for the most part you'll find them grown old before they are scarcely young. And
Erasmus
#6. As an artist, I want to interpret my feelings - not run across the street and ask what my mother thinks.
Ralph Bakshi
#7. Crazy ideas sometimes work, and the technological society that we have is built on a foundation of those crazy ideas that work.
Nathan Myhrvold
#8. Often it does seem such a pity that Noah and his party did not miss the boat.
Mark Twain
#9. The inviolability of the seal of confession is so fundamental to the very nature of the sacrament that any proposal which undermines that inviolability is a challenge to the rights of every Catholic to freedom of religion and conscience.
Sean Brady
#10. Of what avail are pedigrees?
Juvenal
#11. A teacher is like the candle, which lights others in consuming itself.
Elizabeth George
#12. I could eat gazpacho three times a day.
Tory Burch
#13. She lays the book face down on her chest. Already her bedroom (no, their bedroom) feels more densely inhabited, more actual, because a character named Mrs. Dalloway is on her way to buy flowers.
Michael Cunningham
#14. The ordinary man looking at a mountain is like an illiterate person confronted with a Greek manuscript.
Aleister Crowley
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