Top 17 Zuleika Quotes
#1. Nonviolence is a universal law acting under all circumstances.
Mahatma Gandhi
#2. Ask yourself if you would feel comfortable giving your two best friends a key to your house. If not, look for some new best friends.
H. Jackson Brown Jr.
#3. Magic would not work on Henry. He was too stupid.
Stephen King
#4. Zuleika, on a desert island, would have spent most of her time in looking for a man's footprint.
Max Beerbohm
#5. Waiting for the winds of change to sweep the clouds away. Waiting for the rainbow's end to cast its gold your way ... You don't get something for nothing. You can't have freedom for free
Neil Peart
#6. Of comic novels that have quaffed the elixir of 'classic': Zuleika Dobson by Max Beerbohm.
Cynthia Ozick
#7. Theories without facts may be barren, but facts without theories are meaningless.
Kenneth E. Boulding
#8. From those pedestals which intersperse the railing of the Sheldonian, the high grim busts of the Roman Emperors stared down at the fair stranger in the equipage. Zuleika returned their stare with but a casual glance. The inanimate had little charm for her.
Max Beerbohm
#9. Follow your dreams and make them happen!
Zuleika Bam
#10. We believe that government works for the benefit of private life, and not the other way around.
Mitch Daniels
#11. Like Canada, we very much wanted the United Nations to be a relevant and effective body. But once those efforts failed, we no longer saw things from a multilateral perspective. For us, now, it is much more basic than that. It is about family.
Paul Cellucci
#12. I'll never be Bob Dylan. He's the master.
Neil Young
#13. When you think about new-born babies being killed in our own lifetime,' he said, 'all the efforts of culture seem worthless. What have people learned from all our Goethes and Bachs? To kill babies?
Vasily Grossman
#14. I allow no hot-beds in the gardens of Parnassus.
Charles Lamb
#15. You must come to the Vicarage, then, next week, said the vicar.
Neil Gaiman
#16. I read Zuleika Dobson with pleasure. It represents the Oxford that the two World Wars have destroyed with a charm that is not likely to be reproduced anywhere in the world for the next thousand years.
Bertrand Russell