Top 20 Terry Goodkind Wizard's First Rule Quotes
#1. I'm what is known as gradually disintegrating. I don't fear the next world, or anything. I don't fear hell, and I don't look forward to heaven.
Katharine Hepburn
#2. I think that life is just too sweet to be bitter.
Kris Carr
#3. I prefer rogues to imbeciles, because they sometimes take a rest.
Alexandre Dumas
#4. Don't write for who your reader is. Write for what your reader wants to be.
Jennifer A. Nielsen
#5. Appreciate, Let purpose inspire action, Learn with humility, Go beyond .. all in Here & Now.
Neena Verma
#6. My glass shall not persuade me I am old, So long as youth and thou are of one date; But when in thee time's furrows I behold, Then look I death my days should expiate.
William Shakespeare
#7. Man's guilt in history and in the tides of his own blood has been complicated by technology, the daily seeping falsehearted death.
Don DeLillo
#8. Sustainable development is a proven catalyst for Xerox innovation.
Anne M. Mulcahy
#9. The Wizard's First Rule: People are stupid; given proper motivation almost anyone will believe almost anything.
Terry Goodkind
#10. I farm a little plot of things to say, with not much frontage on the busy road.
Ted Kooser
#11. Take care, Seeker. You have the gift. Use it. Use everything you have to fight. Don't give in. Don't let him rule you. If you are to die, die fighting with everything you have, everything you know. That is the way of a dragon.
Terry Goodkind
#13. My personal theory is that he has a very firm grasp upon reality, it's simply not a reality the rest of us have ever met before.
Terry Pratchett
#14. You mean that it's not only what he does that makes him dangerous, but also what he feels justified in doing?
Terry Goodkind
#17. If she felt my gaze upon her, I assume she was accustomed to being stared at, just as I was used to wanting what I could not have.
Alice Hoffman
#19. Everything a human being wants can be divided into four components: love, adventure, power and fame.
Matthew Heywood
#20. A pipe is the fountain of contemplation, the source of pleasure, the companion of the wise; and the man who smokes, thinks like a philosopher and acts like a Samaritan.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton