Alice Cullen famous quotes

Last updated: Sep 5, 2024

  • The life each of us lives is the life within the limits of our own thinking. To have life more abundant, we must think in limitless terms of abundance.

  • "Nought usually comes at the beginning," Ralph said. "Not necessarily," said Sibyl. "It might come anywhere. Nought isn't a number at all. It's the opposite of number." Nancy looked up from the cards. "Got you, aunt," she said. "What about ten? Nought's a number there - it's part of ten." "Well, if you say that any mathematical arrangement of one and nought really makes ten - " Sibyl smiled. "Can it possibly be more than a way of representing ten?"

  • Remarriage is or is not approved in shastra; I have no authority to speak on this subject. But I surely cannot go on without saying this much, that remarriage has helped a great deal in stopping crime in Fiji.

  • Going home, it's what everybody's trying to do from the day they're born to the day they die, but going home together - that's marriage.

  • I majored in illustration at the Rhode Island School of Design, although I never had any intention of being an illustrator and didn't take any classes in illustration there. It was just that the illustration degree had no requirements.

  • Just think of the illimitable abundance and the marvelous loveliness of light, or of the beauty of the sun and moon and stars.

  • I think it's very attractive when people cook. So I don't wear sweatpants. When you dress sexy to cook, too, it's like, damn, I got a girl who can cook and look like that? And I always have really cute aprons.

  • A very small offence may be a just cause for great resentment: it is often much less the particular instance which is obnoxious to us than the proof it carries with it of the general tenor and disposition of the mind from whence it sprung.

  • I like to play table tennis, spend time with my kids.

  • ... it struck me as so hard to believe I was really getting what I wanted; it was always easier to feel the lack of something than the thing itself.