Top 15 Shivaji Maharaj With Quotes
#1. I don't like definitions, but if there is a definition of freedom, it would be when you have control over your reality to transform it, to change it, rather than having it imposed upon you. You can't really ask for more than that.
Mark Knopfler
#2. EFT is destined to be a top healing tool for the 21st Century.
Candace Pert
#3. A clear and unified voice. In that context, this business of being biracial, of being half black and half white, is awkward.
Zadie Smith
#4. A first novel should be brash and ambitious, and announce the arrival of a new talent.
Stuart Woods
#5. Guess everything with real love is going to be super fucked up and fuck the people up until they can't be fucked no more and then some.
Alyse M. Gardner
#6. I chose the actors that I was in love with. I cannot work with people that I don't personally like a lot. They can be the best actor in the world, but if the first contact is not good, if I don't fall in love with them, then I don't want to work with them. It's impossible.
Marjane Satrapi
#7. We'd all like t'vote fer th'best man, but he's never a candidate.
Kin Hubbard
#8. A scheme is unjust when the higher expectations, one or more of them, are excessive. If these expectations were decreased, the situation of the less favored would be improved.
John Rawls
#9. In England, you laugh at yourselves; in France, we laugh at others.
Lou Doillon
#10. You can have more than one home. You can carry your roots with you, and decide where they grow.
Henning Mankell
#12. [If] there is mercy in nature, it is accidental. Nature is neither kind nor cruel but indifferent.
Richard Dawkins
#13. You ache with it all; and the more mysterious it is, the more you ache.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
#14. Is Heathcliff not here?' she demanded, pulling off her gloves, and displaying fingers wonderfully whitened with doing nothing and staying indoors.
Emily Bronte
#15. They all thought that civilized Germans would not stand for anything really rough happening." Szilard held no such sanguine view, noting that the Germans themselves were paralyzed with cynicism, one of the uglier effects on morals of losing a major war.
Richard Rhodes