Lydia Millet Quotes
Collection of top 32 famous quotes about Lydia Millet
Lydia Millet Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Lydia Millet quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Love of knowledge can draw on its credit indefinitely ... love of knowledge is iron-clad.
— Lydia Millet
The gun is mightier than the pen, was our true opinion, and the RPG is mightier still.
— Lydia Millet
We are kites in this world God is holding the string.
— Kishore Bansal
Life is for trying. Don't you see?
— Lydia Millet
One man's weakness is another man's mercy.
— Lydia Millet
Freudian Slip: When You Mean One Thing And Say Your Mother.
— Lydia Millet
Suffering itself is beloved: love and suffering are far closer to each other than love and pleasure.
— Lydia Millet
Aw, group hug! No one's a mindless robot anymore. Score!
— Lydia Millet
Although she didn't have the plumbing, she deluded herself that she was the modern W.C. (about Margaret Thatcher, M.T.)
— Lydia Millet
If I survived the Marines, I can survive Ali.
— Chuck Wepner
You cannot be a powerful and life-changing presence to some people without being a joke or an embarrassment to others.
— Mark Manson
We're so many, we're so hard to distinguish from each other, but we long to be distinguished ...
— Lydia Millet
Suffering ignites the spark of contact with the sublime and offers proof of humanity ...
— Lydia Millet
I think the idea of getting out of a traffic jam and getting out of work each week and going and doing all this stuff would be really exhausting.
— Paul McCartney
Nice day for a funeral.
— Anthony Horowitz
You don't see a fish in a chair often.
— Lydia Millet
Helplessness was the one true fountain of youth.
— Lydia Millet
We all have our skill sets, right?
— Lydia Millet
I think TV promulgates the idea that good art is just art which makes people like and depend on the vehicle that brings them the art.
— David Foster Wallace
I'm learning a lot about myself being alone, and doing what I'm doing.
— Chantal Kreviazuk
Called by the sirens and followed by an albatross.
— Lydia Millet
Men from children nothing differ.
— William Shakespeare