Related Quotes
wind roots tree
Rochester: "I am no better than the old lightning-struck chestnut-tree in Thornfield orchard…And what right would that ruin have to bid a budding woodbine cover its decay with freshness?" Jane: "You are no ruin sir - no lighting-struck tree: you are green and vigorous. Plants will grow about your roots, whether you ask them or not, because they take delight in your bountiful shadow; and as they grow they will lean towards you, and wind round you, because your strength offers them so safe a prop. Charlotte Bronte
wind literature wave
Commerce flourishes by circumstances, precarious, transitory, contingent, almost as the winds and waves that bring it to our shores. Charles Caleb Colton
wind fire tale-of-two-cities
Then tell Wind and Fire where to stop," returned madame; "but don't tell me. Charles Dickens
wind rising sawdust
It had grown darker as they talked, and the wind was sawing and the sawdust was whirling outside paler windows. The underlying churchyard was already settling into deep dim shade, and the shade was creeping up to the housetops among which they sat. "As if," said Eugene, "as if the churchyard ghosts were rising." Charles Dickens
wind east now-and-then
The wind's in the east. . . . I am always conscious of an uncomfortable sensation now and then when the wind is blowing in the east. Charles Dickens
wind darkness woods
I kept staring into the blackness of the woods, drawn into the darkness as I always had been. I suddenly realized how alone I was. (But this is how you travel, the wind whispered back, this is how you've always lived.) Bret Easton Ellis
wind skins mortality
We are but skin about a wind, with muscles clenched against mortality. Djuna Barnes
wind hair passionate
I want to live a passionate life. I always want to feel the wind in my hair. Dave Gorman
window tapping
Someone was tapping on the window. Dave Barry
splinters fame satire
Satire recoils whenever charged too high; round your own fame the fatal splinters fly. Edward Young
splinters grain happens
This is what happens when you go against the grain of truth. You get splinters later on. Augusten Burroughs
splinters grain universe
You can't go against the grain of the universe and not expect to get splinters. C. S. Lewis
splinters woods
When you chop wood, splinters fly Joseph Stalin
splinters pieces sticks
We are nothing but a string of gut on a stick of bone riding this piece of astral soot for one piteous splinter of eternity. Peter De Vries
pieces time together trying
When you're trying to put the pieces back together again, you need a lot of time and a lot of patience, Karl Eikenberry
pieces
I must admit, maybe I am a piece of history after all. Alan Shepard
pieces film periods
Im something of a history buff. Its deliberate that a lot of my films have been period pieces. Cary Elwes
pieces
We started off with a lot of different things, pieces here and there, Charlotte Moore
pieces world degrees
The so-called language of Barbara Kruger is vernacular language. Obviously, I pick through bits and pieces of it and figure out to some degree how to objectify my experience of the world, using pictures and words that construct and contain me. Barbara Kruger
pieces language stealing
We are obliged to steal pieces of language, both visual and textual. Barbara Kruger
pieces pilots watches
I don't watch the show - only bits and pieces of all of them. The only one I sat through was the pilot. Calista Flockhart
pieces puzzle starting
We're starting to get some of the puzzle pieces together. S. Walker
pieces paper littles
What's fascinating . . .is that you could now have a business that might have been selling for $10 billion where the business itself could probably not have borrowed even $100 million. But the owners of that business, because its public, could borrow many billions of dollars on their little pieces of paper- because they had these market valuations. But as a private business, the company itself couldn't borrow even 1/20th of what the individuals could borrow. Charlie Munger