
Top 14 Thorleif Egeli Quotes
#1. Professor Feynman?" "Hey! Why are you bothering me at this time in the morning?" "I thought you'd like to know that you've won the Nobel Prize." "Yeah, but I'm sleeping! It would have been better if you had called me in the morning." - and I hung up.
Richard Feynman
#2. But I needed to build up my loneliness tolerance, was all. The loneliness became like a friend, my constant companion. I could depend on it, and only it.
Jessica Knoll
#3. On Christ's attitude toward His disciples: If I gave away My big all to get to you, can you give away your little all to follow Me?
Timothy Keller
#4. Good Governance cannot remain merely a philosophy. Concrete steps have to be taken for realizing its goals.
Narendra Modi
#5. And as he spoke he wept.
Three times he tried to reach arms round that neck.
Three times the form, reached for in vain, escaped
Like a breeze between his hands, a dream on wings.
Virgil
#7. If you smile, even if you're feeling bad, the action of the muscles will trick your brain into thinking you're happy
Candace Bushnell
#8. We had high and boisterous winds last night and this morning: the Indians continue to purchase repairs with grain of different kinds.
Meriwether Lewis
#9. The blues is an art of ambiguity, an assertion of the irrepressibly human over all circumstances, whether created by others or by one's own human failing.
Ralph Ellison
#10. Melancholy redeems this universe, and yet it is melancholy that separates us from it.
Emile M. Cioran
#11. The long term sustainable growth in job creation comes from the private sector. It is important that the Obama administration partner with the private sector and come up with the best possible ideas for creating jobs.
Valerie Jarrett
#12. Human beings have only that confusing mass of chemically driven neurological storage to rely on. They're all subjective and emotion-tinged. How can they trust any of their memories?
Dan Simmons
#13. I feel like a nuclear missile. Point me in that direction, I'll go.
George Dzundza
#14. A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and many others; the pains and pleasures of his species must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is the imagination.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
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