The Bills Famous Famous Quotes & Sayings
15 The Bills Famous Famous Sayings, Quotes and Quotation.
Then there's no point in our being logical, is there?" said Jonathan...— John Bellairs
"What do you mean?" said Lewis and Mrs. Zimmerman at the same time.
"I mean," he said patiently, "that we're no good at that sort of game. Our game is wild swoops, sudden inexplicable discoveries, cloudy thinking. Knights' jumps instead of files of rooks plowing across the board. So we'd better play our way if we expect to win.

The human eye is restricted to see the useen, because there's a price to be paid to the rulers of this image and if this image is seen by you, you'll dare not divulge it to others, for others must pay a price— Michael Bassey Johnson

One thing about being famous is the people around you, you pay all their bills so they very rarely disagree with you because they want you to pick up the check.— Charles Barkley

Wild Bill was a strange character, add to this figure a costume blending the immaculate neatness of the dandy with the extravagant taste and style of a frontiersman, you have Wild Bill, the most famous scout on the Plains.— George Armstrong Custer

I may have invented Control-Alt-Delete, but Bill Gates made it famous— David Bradley

You fainted and I caught you. It was the first time I'd supported a human. You had such heavy bones. I put myself between you and gravity. Impossible.— Elizabeth Knox

A man is not moral because he is obedient through fear or ignorance. Morality lives in the realm of perceived obligation ...— Robert Green Ingersoll

Expression is like a step taken in the fog— Maurice Merleau Ponty
no one can say where, if anywhere, it will lead.

Writing is done by someone. It is not, like some mythical goddess, a skill that springs forth, full grown from the genes of inspiration ...— Leonard Bishop

Our leaders will serve the common good with better laws and better actions only when we serve it first, by casting better votes.— Alan Keyes

I read a page of Plato's great work. I can no longer understand anything, because behind the words on the page, which have their own heavenly brightness, to be sure, there shines an even brighter, an enormous, dazzling -why- that blots out everything, cancels out, destroys all meaning. All individual intelligence. When one has understood, one stops, satisfied with what one has understood. I do not understand. Understanding is far too little. To have understood is to be fixed, immobilized. It is as though one wanted to stop on one step in the middle of a staircase, or with one foot in the void and the other on the endless stair. But a mere why, a new why can set one off again, can unpetrify what was petrified and everything starts flowing afresh. How can one understand? One cannot.— Eugene Ionesco

I invented it, Bill made it famous.— David Bradley

You know, I don't read the blogs, or go on the internet, and I really just don't know what people are saying because ... well I guess I'm afraid to.— Ron Perlman

The small irritations or indignities that we experience are nothing compared to what a previous generation experienced. It's one thing for me to be mistaken for a waiter at a gala [an alleged incident that Mrs. Obama had just recounted to the interviewer]. It's another thing for my son to be mistaken for a robber and to be handcuffed, or worse, if he happens to be walking down the street and is dressed the way teenagers dress.— Barack Obama
