Closed Windows Quotes
Collection of top 22 famous quotes about Closed Windows
Closed Windows Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Closed Windows quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Sports and entertainment have always been windows of opportunity for African Americans, when other doors were closed.
— Lynn Swann
If you are not reading and thinking, it means that your windows looking to the ocean are closed!
— Mehmet Murat Ildan
I'm the sort of person who doesn't write in ink. I only write in pencil, so it can be rubbed out.
— Ian McKellen
One swallow never makes a summer.
— John Heywood
Baby," I said, smiling until I felt my face might snap in two, "I'm a sure thing tonight.
— C.D. Reiss
Once the windows of the mind are opened, they can never be closed. Let the fresh breeze of thoughts come in now.
— Sohail Mahmood
You never know the hurt others endure in this world behind the closed windows of their life, or the joy a simple act of kindness can bring.
— Jennifer Skiff
Students learn best not by reading the Great Books in a closed room but by opening the doors and windows of experience.
— Thomas Ehrlich
I've spent a lot of time trying to understand how all the big cosmetics companies get away with the placebo science and unscientific claims.
— Chris Toumazou
By then there had been other men. She'd flung herself at other closed windows. The windows never broke, but her heart, at the end, was in splinters.
— Rebecca Makkai
To go through life without love is to travel through the world in a carriage with closed windows.
— Ivan Panin
Mistakes from the past can never be repaired. Do your best in the present, to be a good person in the future.
— Sylvia L'Namira
It has made me what I am. When every door is closed, one learns to climb through windows. Human nature, I suppose.
— Frances Hardinge
I am in the interesting position of being sometimes skimmed by the critics and called literature and sometimes called historical fiction.
— Philippa Gregory
It is sheer laziness not compressing thought into a reasonable space.
— Winston Churchill