Frankenstein Dehumanisation Famous Quotes & Sayings
9 Frankenstein Dehumanisation Famous Sayings, Quotes and Quotation.
It's hard for the White House to regain momentum if the Congress is in disarray. It ties up the Republicans in Congress and limits their ability to execute any White House agenda.— Calvin Jillson

The regenerate man's desires are rectified; they are set on God himself, and the things above ... Before, he saw no beauty in Christ, for which he was to be desired; but now he is all he desires, he is altogether lovely ... regenerating grace sets the affections so firmly on God, that the man is disposed, at God's command, to quit his hold of every thing else, in order to keep his hold of Christ ... If the stream of our affections were never thus turned, we are, doubtless, going down the stream into the pit.— Thomas Boston

The Cross is a gibbet - rather an odd thing to make use of as a talisman against bad luck, if that is how we regard it. Or is it, instead, a cynical reminder that Virtue usually gets pilloried whenever it makes one of its occasional appearances in this world?— Denis Johnston

The first memory I have was my sisters dancing to the radio when they played records by Benny Goodman and Harry James and of the sort. But the record that got me was a record by Derek Sampson, who was a young guy, called 'Boogie Express,' and it was boogie-woogie. Really, it was on fire, and that got me.— Jerry Leiber

When you talk of revolution ... you never talk of the day after.— Storm Jameson

When I have brown hair I feel the most like myself, but I don't feel glamorous. It's a disgusting thing to admit.— Sarah Paulson

Love from the heart shows itself in meekness and not in tumultuous drumbeats.— Kristian Goldmund Aumann

Storytellers continue their narratives late into the night to forestall death and to delay the inevitable moment when everyone must fall silent. Scheherazade's story is a desperate inversion of murder; it is the effort, throughout all those nights, to exclude death from the circle of existence.— Michel Foucault
