Stirred Up Quotes
Collection of top 64 famous quotes about Stirred Up
Stirred Up Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Stirred Up quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Periods of tranquility are seldom prolific of creative achievement. Mankind has to be stirred up.
— Alfred North Whitehead
Here and there, a form stirred feebly, victim of war's sorcery, struggling against the enchantment of death.
— Diana Gabaldon
The sight of the fair young girl, as frank and wholesome as the Sierra breezes, had stirred his volcanic, untamed heart to its very depths.
— Arthur Conan Doyle
From the air the Mexican landscape looks as if it had been stirred with a giant spoon.
— Biloine W. Young
The evening uneven sea glimmered with slices of dairy moon, the surface waves a shifting brew of dark tea stirred by an atmospheric spoon.
— Neale Osborne
His memories were too sad, his hopes too thin. To have to say things on paper seemed a terrible task, for it stirred the memories.
— Larry McMurtry
If Scripture were to describe the downfall of an empire in the style adopted by political historians, the common people would not be stirred.
— Baruch Spinoza
The sea waves stirred before me
they dashed against the rocks
Like a mermaid rising from its depths
curled white sea foam were her locks ... — Giselle V. Steele
they dashed against the rocks
Like a mermaid rising from its depths
curled white sea foam were her locks ... — Giselle V. Steele
I've been going through some personal things that have stirred up a lot of old wounds.
— Bradford Cox
There is life in the ground; it goes into the seeds and also when it is stirred up goes into the man who stirs it.
— Charles Dudley Warner
A sound like a sound of thunder rolled,
And the heart of a nation stirred — William Ross Wallace
And the heart of a nation stirred — William Ross Wallace
It not in our power not to be stirred mentally by our appetites but it is in our power to translate them or not to translate them into actions.
— Eustace Mandeville Wetenhall Tillyard
Her sexuality wasn't coy or cute. She wasn't saucy; she was feral. Her very presence on the earth stirred me.
— C.D. Reiss
If O.J. had been accused of killing his black wife, you would not have seen the same passion stirred up.
— Al Sharpton
American public opinion is like an ocean, it cannot be stirred by a teaspoon.
— Hubert H. Humphrey
A single glass of champagne imparts a feeling of exhilaration. The nerves are braced; the imagination is stirred, the wits become more nimble.
— Winston Churchill
That's the positive aspect of trade I suppose. The world gets stirred up together. That's about as much as I have to say for it.
— Isabel Hoving
Life is a stew, and pot is poop.If someone stirred even a teeny-bit of poop in the stew, would you really want to eat it?
— Maria Semple
Anarchy is like custard cooking over a flame; it has to be constantly stirred or it sticks and gets heavy, like government.
— Tom Robbins
It is wonderful how the mind is stirred and quickened into activity by brisk bodily exercise.
— Pliny The Younger
Stirred up pride is poison to the soul.
— Evinda Lepins
Shadows were too black, and when a breeze stirred the trees, the shadows changed in a disquieting way.
— Stephen King
A background of wrath, which can be stirred up to the murderous infernal pitch, does lie in every man.
— Thomas Carlyle
Something stirred beneath my skin, some being inside I'd only suspected existed, demon or angel, I couldn't say.
— Ellen Hopkins
In my opinion, if you really want to know, half of the nastiness in the world is stirred up by people who aren't using their true egos.
— J.D. Salinger
Stirred him so bone deep it was like he'd found a part of him he hadn't even realized was missing.
— Sarah J. Maas
True saving faith involves "the whole personality": the mind is instructed, the emotions are stirred, and the will then acts in obedience to God.
— Warren W. Wiersbe
Well, we ought to be stirred, even to tears, by society's ills.
— George McGovern
Darkening sea full of stirred silt and clouds of minute
— Dean Koontz
As for the subject matter in my painting ... it is very often an incidental thing in the background, elusive and unclear, that really stirred me.
— William Baziotes
You have stirred the soil with your plow, my friend. It will never be the same again.
— Martha Ostenso
Stirred with passion, steamed with love, laced with humor and served with a smile. On the road. No sugar. No milk. Horn OK Please *Smack!!*
— Kartik Iyengar
Only a mind that is deeply stirred can utter something noble and beyond the power of others.
— Seneca.
A young man is stirred and stimulated by the consciousness of how much depends upon his own exertions: a young girl is oppressed by it.
— Elizabeth Missing Sewell
They groaned, they stirred, they all uprose, Nor spake, nor moved their eyes; It had been strange, even in a dream, To have seen those dead men rise.
— Samuel Taylor Coleridge
If the solar winds have stirred far off in the velvety night then showers of light
gold and violet. rose and green
paint the sky. — Kathleen Valentine
gold and violet. rose and green
paint the sky. — Kathleen Valentine
I'm not bitter, just not stirred well!
— Vaibhav Wadhwa
I thought my fire was out,
and stirred the ashes ... .
I burnt my fingers. — Antonio Machado
and stirred the ashes ... .
I burnt my fingers. — Antonio Machado
It was not a wave but a smooth rolling swell that seemed to come up from the deeps, as if something vast down there had stirred itself.
— John Banville
No man had ever heard a nightingale, When once a keen-eyed naturalist was stirred To study and define
what is a bird. — Emma Lazarus
what is a bird. — Emma Lazarus
Something was jigging and worrying in his brain; it felt like a hive of bees, stirred up by a stick.
— Dorothy L. Sayers
Seemed our house stirred up troubles enough to keep a radio soap show in daily episodes forever.
— Allan Gurganus
Suddenly I found myself face to face with the young man whose personality had so strangely stirred me.
— Oscar Wilde
The hippo of recollection stirred in the muddy waters of the mind.
— Terry Pratchett
The varicolored cloud dust that the sun has stirred up in the sky was settling by slow degrees.
— Zora Neale Hurston