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Something Quotes by Kate Morton
- Will history remember us, I wonder? I do hope so - to imagine that one might do something, touch an event somehow, & thereby transcend…
- Cassandra always hid when she read, though she never quite knew why. It was as if she couldn't shake the guilty suspicion that she was…
- Cassandra's grandmother smiled then, only it wasn't a happy smile. Cassandra thought she knew how it felt to smile like that. She often did so…
- Even the most pragmatic person fell victim at times to a longing for something other.
- There’s something about hospital walls; though only made of bricks and plaster, when you’re inside them the noise, the reality of the teeming city beyond,…
- They say everyone needs something to love.
- If you don't stop apologizing, you're going to convince me you've done something wrong.
- Adults weren’t supposed to understand their children and you were doing something wrong if they did.
- Children don’t require of their parents a past and they find something faintly unbelievable, almost embarrassing, in parental claims to a prior existence.
More Something Quotes
- Flattery and deceit are the darlings of great men, and so with these men spread the butter on thick, if you want… — Pietro Aretino
- Quickly, bring me a beaker of wine, so that I may wet my mind and say something clever. — Aristophanes
- I have nothing against 3-D in theory. But I've also never run to the movies because something's in 3-D. — J. J. Abrams
- Politicians also have no leisure, because they are always aiming at something beyond political life itself, power and glory, or happiness. — Aristotle
- In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous. — Aristotle
- I think you have a passion and an obsession for something when it's not necessarily ubiquitous. — J. J. Abrams
- It is just that we should be grateful, not only to those with whose views we may agree, but also to those… — Aristotle
- Hence poetry is something more philosophic and of graver import than history, since its statements are rather of the nature of universals,… — Aristotle