Tilda Swinton Quotes
Quotes to Explore
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Im attracted to things that are challenging and fun and interesting, and it certainly seems that audiences enjoy them as well.
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I was two when we left Indiana, and I don't really remember it that well.
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If this ever changing world in which we live in makes you give in and cry, say live and let die.
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Please come to Destination I'm not doin well Exclamation
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Shawty Imma only tell you this once, you the illest And for your loving Imma die hard like Bruce Willis
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Oliver: Fear is the natural state of anything that dies.
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Once you start messing with psychological well-being, we get more and more messed up.
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Since things neither exist nor do not exist, are neither real nor unreal, are utterly beyond adopting and rejecting - one might as well burst out laughing.
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As she left my room I knew I should shut up. But you know when you should shut up because you really should just shut up...but you keep on and on anyway? Well, I had that.
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I basically don't do that well with children, although my sister says I'm a great aunt.
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As Shakespeare says, if you're going to do a thing you might as well pop right at it and get it over.
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The future belongs to the competent. It belongs to those who are very, very good at what they do. It does not belong to the well meaning.
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Well, subconsciously I suppose some things must stick but I'm not influenced consciously by them.
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I can't really characterize any country, except to say that we work well with a number of our foreign counterparts.
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On a film set everyone is very cool. Well, blase really.
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I don't work well outside the lines; my report card once read, "doesn't play well with others."
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Well, you're expelling us aren't you?" said Ron. "Not today, Mr. Weasley." Snape looked as though Christmas had been canceled.
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You can't sweeten the well by painting the pump.
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Children are not vessels to be filled but lamps to be lit.
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The English people believes itself to be free; it is gravely mistaken; it is free only during election of members of parliament; as soon as the members are elected, the people is enslaved; it is nothing. In the brief moment of its freedom, the English people makes such a use of that freedom that it deserves to lose it.
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Men would never be superstitious, if they could govern all their circumstances by set rules, or if they were always favoured by fortune: but being frequently driven into straits where rules are useless, and being often kept fluctuating pitiably between hope and fear by the uncertainty of fortune's greedily coveted favours, they are consequently for the most part, very prone to credulity.
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I am once more seated under my own vine and fig tree ... and hope to spend the remainder of my days in peaceful retirement, making political pursuits yield to the more rational amusement of cultivating the earth.
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Before we belonged to anyone else, we were each other's.
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Well the truth is, everybody, when they die, leaves a void that cannot be filled.