Man Quotes (page 559)
![Terry Prachett quote: "Tell someone you are going to rob them and all that will..."](/pic/280267/600x316/quotation-terry-prachett-tell-someone-you-are-going-to-rob-them-and-all.jpg)
Like a blazing comet, I've traversed infinite nights, interstellar spaces of the imagination, voluptuousness and fear. I've been a man, a woman, an old person, a little girl, I've been the crowds on the grand boulevards of the capital cities of the West, I've been the serene Buddha of the East, whose calm and wisdom we envy. I've known honor and dishonor, enthusiasm and exhaustion....I've been the sun and the moon, and everything because life is not enough.
Antonio Tabucchi
![Warren Farrell quote: "Every day in about half the advertisements, a man sees the..."](/pic/280136/600x316/quotation-warren-farrell-every-day-in-about-half-the-advertisements-a.jpg)
![Robert A. Heinlein quote: "A slave cannot be freed, save he do it himself. Nor can you..."](/pic/280109/600x316/quotation-robert-a-heinlein-a-slave-cannot-be-freed-save-he-do-it.jpg)
Prayer that craves a particular commodity—anything less than all good, is vicious. Prayer is the contemplation of the facts of life from the highest point of view. It is the soliloquy of a beholding and jubilant soul. It is the spirit of God pronouncing his works good. But prayer as a means to effect a private end is theft and meanness. It supposes dualism and not unity in nature and consciousness. As soon as the man is at one with God, he will not beg.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
He did not know, and perhaps this doctor did. And he could not take the chance of pitting his certain ignorance against this man's possible knowledge. He was trapped as his people were always trapped, and would be until, as he had said, they could be sure that the things in the books ere really in the books.
John Steinbeck
All these, however, were mere terrors of the night, phantoms of the mind that walk in darkness; and though he had seen many spectres in his time, and been more than once beset by Satan in divers shapes, in his lonely pre-ambulations, yet daylight put an end to all these evils; and he would have passed a pleasent life of it, in despite of the devil and all his works, if his path had not been crossed by a being that causes more perplexity to mortal man than ghosts, goblins, and the whole race...
Washington Irving