Top 17 Unseeable Things Quotes
#1. This stuff tastes awful; I could have made a fortune selling it in my health-food store.
Woody Allen
#4. My family would never approve of me firing a gun. They would say that guns are used for self-defense, if not violence, and therefore they are self-serving.
Veronica Roth
#5. He must have gotten all that knowledge from the newspapers. I don't see the point, collecting all that knowledge others have already discovered.
Janne Teller
#6. The whole format of entertainment that I did seems to be fading away. The music business of today is completely different when you see the videos and the music.
Bobby Vinton
#7. I just want to produce and create projects that I'm passionate about and I love.
Eve
#8. He was a sweet guy. Broken, clearly, but we all are, when you get right down to it.
Chris O'Guinn
#9. One can grow accustomed to carrying unseeable scars, as if the tattoo one wears is inked in flesh tone over flesh tone; but nevertheless one is still covered in secret, painted with secret, stained by it.
Lyndsay Faye
#10. The climate in the '50s and '60s for black performers or black people in the entertainment business was atrocious. It was atrocious.
Quincy Jones
#11. Jason: I'm all for hobbies, but you think this is the time for origami? Whatcha making, a crane?
Rachel Caine
#12. Love is a landscape the long mountains
define but don't
shut off from the
unseeable distance.
Denise Levertov
#13. It is almost always a mistake to mention Abraham Lincoln. He always steals the show.
Kurt Vonnegut
#14. People sometimes say it takes a long time to become a jazz fan, but for me it took about five seconds.
Pat Metheny
#15. For me, graffiti and the complexities with which it is either absorbed or expelled from what is going on, is a really good comparison to the way I see my work being similarly expelled or absorbed into different types of discourse.
Richard Phillips
#16. Her entire life has been devoted to healing the deepest, most invasive unseeable scar that one can ever have.
Tori Amos
#17. We instinctively wave to people on trains because trains are a metaphor for being alive: countless souls, trapped together, hurtling across the landscape, with a destination somewhere in the unseeable distance.
Nobody ever waves at buses.
Douglas Coupland