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“That of all the floures in the mede, Thanne love I most these floures white and rede, Suche as men callen daysyes in her toune.”
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“I remember once I went to go see a movie, and in front of me in line there was a little boy who looked so eager to see it, like it was Christmas morning. When he got to the ticket booth it turned out there was only one ticket left; the manager was there and wanted to give it to me instead since I was famous. That's when I knew I'd hit it big.”
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“Over-confidence is as evil as undue anxiety.”
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“Dance is active meditation. When we dance, we go beyond thought, beyond mind and beyond our individuality to become one in the divine ecstasy of the union with the cosmic spirit. This is the essence of the trance dance experience.”
Source : "Interview by Chaitu of www.goatrance.free.fr". www.goagil.com.
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“I wonder if in part why so many people are angry at Microsoft is not just because their products frustrate them so much, but also because this frustration is ignored. The computer makes people feel like they are dummies, when in fact it is the computer that is stupid.”
Source : The First Monday Interview, firstmonday.org. April, 1998.
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“Disintegration---I'm taking it in stride.”
Source : Bret Easton Ellis (2010). “American Psycho”, p.395, Vintage
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“If you ever injected truth into politics you would have no politics.”
Source : Will Rogers, Bryan B. Sterling, Frances N. Sterling (1993). “Will Rogers' World: America's Foremost Political Humorist Comments on the Twenties and Thirties--and Eighties and Nineties”, p.150, Rowman & Littlefield
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“How thrilling to discover one had depths, how consoling to find them less polluted than the shallows, how encouraging to identify the enemy not as a fissure in the will but as a dead fetus in the specimen jar of the unconscious. My attention was being paternally led away from the excruciating present to the happy, healthy future that would be enabled by an analysis of the sick past, as though the priest had nothing to do but study old books and make bright forecasts, the present not worthy of notice.”
Source : "A Boy's Own Story". Book by Edmund White, 1982.