Judgment Quotes (page 19)
![Edgar Rice Burroughs quote: "If I had followed my better judgment always, my life would..."](/pic/244742/600x316/quotation-edgar-rice-burroughs-if-i-had-followed-my-better-judgment.jpg)
![Hippocrates quote: "The art is long, life is short, opportunity fleeting,..."](/pic/244661/600x316/quotation-hippocrates-the-art-is-long-life-is-short-opportunity.jpg)
Stop…stop, that’s the next generation of fans… How dare you pass judgment on those 12-year-old girls who like vampires! They need to be encouraged because in six years they’ll be 18-year-old girls who like vampires and are into all sorts of goth-permissive and whatnot. Don’t Poo-poo it. There’s a plan, and it’s working.
Kevin Smith
The fire. The odor of burning juniper is the sweetest fragrance on the face of the earth, in my honest judgment; I doubt if all the smoking censers of Dante's paradise could equal it. One breath of juniper smoke, like the perfume of sagebrush after rain, evokes in magical catalysis, like certain music, the space and light and clarity and piercing strangeness of the American West. Long may it burn.
Edward Abbey
I couldn't make any judgment on the Summa, except to say this: I read it for about twenty minutes every night before I go to bed. If my mother were to come in during this process and say, 'Turn off that light. It's late,' I with a lifted finger and broad bland beatific expression, would reply, 'On the contrary, I answer that the light, being eternal and limitless, cannot be turned off. Shut your eyes,' or some such thing.
Flannery O'Connor
![Stephen Covey quote: "When air is charged with emotions, an attempt to teach is..."](/pic/239634/600x316/quotation-stephen-covey-when-air-is-charged-with-emotions-an-attempt-to.jpg)
![Robert Louis Stevenson quote: "I feel very strongly about putting questions; it partakes too..."](/pic/238727/600x316/quotation-robert-louis-stevenson-i-feel-very-strongly-about-putting.jpg)
Here, I could see, was choice matter on which the expert and art critic could exercise their knowledge and judgment. As I had neither, I made an experiment or two, and was able to inform the readers of the paper that if you walked briskly past the picture, winking both eyes as fast as possible, you really got a sort of impression of movement and activity, of ships and boats coming into the harbour and sailing out of it, of sails lowered and hoisted, of an uncertain background, now obscured,...
Arthur Machen