Wilfred Burchett Quotes
Collection of top 21 famous quotes about Wilfred Burchett
Wilfred Burchett Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Wilfred Burchett quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
As in all his subsequent dealings with France, Ho Chi Minh's demands were a model of modesty.
— Wilfred Burchett
Please do not understand me too quickly.
— Andre Gide
The last cobwebs
of fog in the
black firtrees are flakes
of white ash in the world's hearth. — Denise Levertov
of fog in the
black firtrees are flakes
of white ash in the world's hearth. — Denise Levertov
Ho joined the French socialist party, the first Vietnamese to be a member of a French political party.
— Wilfred Burchett
The task of building a great university is never simple.
— Henry Rosovsky
Heartmating hesitating unafraid
— John Berryman
It's hard to force creativity and humor.
— Al Yankovic
Hiroshima does not look like a bombed city. It looks as if a monster steamroller had passed over it and squashed it out of existence.
— Wilfred Burchett
My anger with the US was not at first, that they had used that weapon - although that anger came later.
— Wilfred Burchett
Never trust anyone whose TV is bigger than their book shelf
— Emilia Clarke
I love writing songs and being a musician, but you can't really buy the feeling of connecting with people.
— Michael Kiwanuka
Just one small thing had changed, such a small thing really. What difference could it make, the era in which we are born?
— Andrew Sean Greer
Could anything justify the extermination of civilians on such a scale?
— Wilfred Burchett
The most terrifying thing was how trusting people were.
— Stephen King
Vietnamese must be made to feel that they are racial inferiors with no right to national identity.
— Wilfred Burchett
Ho, or Nguyen Ai Quoc, thus became the first Vietnamese communist and a founding member of the French Communist party, born out of the split.
— Wilfred Burchett
The police chief of Hiroshima welcomed me eagerly as the first Allied correspondent to reach the city.
— Wilfred Burchett
Philosophy seems to me on the whole a rather hopeless business.
— Bertrand Russell