John Keats Quotes
Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong,And doubly sweet a brotherhood in song.
John Keats
Quotes to Explore
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I have experienced a murderer among my friends. Many, many years ago. At close range I have seen the impact of it. I knew the victim, I went to the funeral, I have been to the house, to the specific room where the killing took place, and I was stunned by it. It's such a blow.
Karin Fossum
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College inspired me to think differently. It's like no other time in your life.
Larisa Oleynik
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Anything you want to know, you go to Quora and get it. And at the same time, give people a platform that is easy to use for sharing the knowledge.
Adam D'Angelo
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With every story that TV covers, somebody - some corporation, some shareholders - are making money. That's true whether covering Libya, Iraq, the tsunami in Japan, Osama bin Laden, whatever story there is. That day, the shareholders are making money off it. Every newspaper that's sold, somebody's making a dime.
Nancy Grace
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I never put out a history, I put out a dramatic history.
Oliver Stone
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I've sat down and written with a more or less supportable or insupportable idea or thing to say, and it ends. When it's not 200 pages, people want to call it a story. I guess they're entitled to do that. In my view, if it were a supportable idea, it would have gone 200 pages, and it didn't.
Padgett Powell
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I've been trying to get into the Royal Box in New York for years. They say I'm too dirty, my material is too blue. But I think Redd, the whites and blue can be a nice combination.
Redd Foxx
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I don't kick dressing room doors, or the cat - or even journalists
Arsene Wenger
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My production got better, songs, lyrics, everything; the sound, the quality, everything.
Ty Dolla Sign
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Grief and disappointment give rise to anger, anger to envy, envy to malice, and malice to grief again, till the whole circle be completed.
David Hume
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Robots have a rich and storied history in movies.
John Podhoretz
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Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong,And doubly sweet a brotherhood in song.
John Keats