
Top 13 Whizzkids Summer Quotes
#1. They are the troublers, they are the dividers of unity, who neglect and don't permit others to unite those dissevered pieces which are yet wanting to the body of Truth.
John Milton
#2. He swatted at her with his book. "Shut up and read, will you?"
He lay back down and closed his eyes. Emma glanced over to check that he was smiling, and smiled too.
David Nicholls
#3. If you never asked, you were never disappointed.
If you didn't rely on someone, they could never let you down.
If you never admitted how desperately you wanted something, it didn't hurt so much when it was taken away.
Virginia Kantra
#4. Nothing to be done about it except give her a reproachful look. I did this. It made no impression whatever, and she proceeded.
P.G. Wodehouse
#5. In the article of death, and at the day of judgment, the soul needs something more substantial than ceremonies and rituals to lean upon.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
#6. Thanks to the circus between my ears, I can seize upon the smallest disquieting observation and from it extrapolate a terror of cataclysmic proportions.
Dean Koontz
#7. Success will be when every child in the world has access to a service like Childline and knows that someone who cares is just a phone call away
Jeroo Billimoria
#8. An architect's most useful tools are an eraser at the drafting board and a wrecking ball at the site.
Frank Lloyd Wright
#9. The world is divided into men who have wit and no religion and men who have religion and no wit.
Avicenna
#10. There's a great Lebanese restaurant a few blocks over. They have the best shawarma in the world."
"What's shawarma?"
"You know what a gyro is?"
"No."
"Same thing.
Huston Piner
#11. Sometimes I think I'm a one-trick pony because I'm not very inventive about new ways of telling stories.
Sara Paretsky
#12. Many of America's historical cornbreads were staple breads for people who didn't have many other options.
Jeremy Jackson
#13. A horse is freedom so indominable that it becomes useless to imprison it to serve man: it lets itself be domesticated, but with a simple, rebellious toss of the head-shaking its mane like an abundance of free-flowing hair-it shows that its inner nature is always wild, translucent and free.
Clarice Lispector
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