
Top 14 Sleepers Sofa Quotes
#1. You don't become a teacher to make a world of money. You become a teacher to make a world of difference.
Charles M. Blow
#2. You'll pardon me," said Beatrice, "if I fail to appreciate sarcasm and all the other brilliant nuances of your no doubt famous wit, Mr. Constant[ ... ]
Kurt Vonnegut
#3. A moral dilemma can be large or small, important or inconsequential, urgent or secondary. One thing is certain: moral dilemmas are ever present.
Michael J. Marx
#4. I don't understand how anybody's still a Democrat or a Republican. I don't know what they're basing it on.
Lewis Black
#5. If we are mark'd to die, we are enow
To do our country loss; and if to live,
The fewer men, the greater share of honour.
God's will! I pray thee; wish not one man more.
Henry VIII Of England
#6. Biographers, by their very nature, want to know everything about everybody, dead or alive.
Catherine Drinker Bowen
#8. Everything I'm doing now is something I did before, only it's bigger now.
Meredith Brooks
#9. Baseball is the greatest sport in the world. It is the cleanest, besides affording more people the right kind of amusement than any other. I do not say that because I have made my living at it. I say it from the heart.
Charles Comiskey
#10. And I never felt this way with anyone else. Like I'm falling every time I'm around you, like I can't catch my breath, and I feel alive - not just standing around and letting my life walk past me. There's been nothing like that with anyone else.
Jennifer L. Armentrout
#11. It's no wonder most religions are born in the desert, because when men lay beneath that boundless night sky and look up at the infinite expanse of creation they have an uncontrollable urge to put something in the way .
Terry Pratchett
#12. Most businesses would profit greatly from just applying Change Management 101 well.
Paul Gibbons
#13. Poetry is a serious business; literature is the apparatus through which the world tries to keep intact its important ideas and feelings.
Mary Oliver
#14. About as genuine as tea made from a bit of paper which once lay in a drawer beside another piece of paper which had been used to wrap up a few tea leaves from which tea had already been made three times.
Soren Kierkegaard
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