
Top 15 The Premature Burial Quotes
#1. There just didn't seem to be anything to hold on to. We weren't going anywhere, and we weren't pulling away. We were just floating, suspended in liquid. And I guess I want more. And I don't know what he wants.
Augusten Burroughs
#2. I also found it funny to think about blackness as the second person. That was just sort of funny. Not the first person, but the second person, the other person.
Claudia Rankine
#3. Foresight turns out to be a critical adaptive strategy for times of great stress.
Jamais Cascio
#4. A few generations living and dying without a sky, and enclosed spaces lost the atavistic terror of premature burial.
James S.A. Corey
#5. eyes. "I'm so sorry. Let me get you a napkin," a deep, worried voice said. Two patrons rushed over and shoved napkins in her direction. "Are you okay?" an
Melissa Foster
#6. Life is here to be enjoyed, your smile and your happiness makes it even better.
Jim Jensen
#7. I'm too shy for personal appearances, and I've found out that anytime I talk about my writing, I can't do any writing for many weeks afterward.
Anne Tyler
#9. You can be a complainer. Or you can be an achiever. But you can't be both
Robin Sharma
#10. It's always good to work where you're wanted. The times I've been where I wasn't wanted - that's just never a good experience.
John Kapelos
#11. When a customer asks what no one else has ever asked, pay close attention.
Ron Kaufman
#12. I was matter, like everything else. I could feel the slow decay of my body, the absolute certainty of death. Every heartbeat spelt out a new proof of mortality. Every moment was a premature burial.
Greg Egan
#13. Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted.
Albert Einstein
#14. Booming and yet muffled, croaking, like an amplified premature burial, it called out "Merriiiiinnnnnn!" And then the massive and shiveringly hollow jolt of a single sledgehammer blow against the bedroom wall. "God
William Peter Blatty
#15. Our suicidal poets (Plath, Berryman, Lowell, Jarrell, et al.) spent too much of their lives inside rooms and classrooms when they should have been trudging up mountains, slogging through swamps, rowing down rivers. The indoor life is the next best thing to premature burial.
Edward Abbey
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