Ernest Hemingway Quotes
Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintry light.
Ernest Hemingway
Quotes to Explore
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I have just three things to teach: simplicity, patience, compassion. These three are your greatest treasures.
Lao Tzu
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To me hair dressing means shape. It's very important that the foundations should be right.
Vidal Sassoon
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You should never do anything too much. If you only eat healthy food, that is too much. Success is balance - a banker with no time with his kids, he's not successful. If he doesn't have time to walk his kids to school, that is not success - that is a mistake.
Magnus Scheving
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My goal in life was to pursue the good life.
Oleg Cassini
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You can either see yourself as a wave in the ocean or you can see yourself as the ocean.
Oprah Winfrey
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What I believe unites the people of this nation, regardless of race or region or party, young or old, rich or poor, is the simple, profound belief in opportunity for all - the notion that if you work hard and take responsibility, you can get ahead.
Barack Obama
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I think what is important for things to be funny is if you the listener, or the reader, get a chance to supply the humor of it yourself.
Ian Frazier
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I don't even know which end of a computer one is supposed to gaze into. I've never used a computer.
P. J. O'Rourke
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A mind attacked and conquered is guided easily away from the paths of its own soul.
Ayi Kwei Armah
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An editor is bound to avoid the meshes of the law, which are always infinitely more costly to companies, or things, or institutions, than they are to individuals.
Anthony Trollope
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I am practical by nature, and I'd heard that being a writer or an artist is a good way to starve! So I was an economics major at Oklahoma State, and then received an M.S. from Cornell in Agricultural Resource and Managerial Economics. I knew if I wanted to write I would do it on my own, but I knew I wouldn't make myself study economics on my own.
Ally Carter
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Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintry light.
Ernest Hemingway