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- It's going to come true like you knew it, but it's not going to feel like you think.
- Rosie O'Donnell, Today Show interview, 04-08-08
- I think the promise of fame and what it holds to you as a child and dreaming of it is not what it is. What it is, I'm not complaining about, but it's just different than the reality you dreamed.
- Rosie O'Donnell, Today Show interview, 04-08-08
- I'm not going to quit. Why should I quit? This country is worth fighting for.
- Hillary Rodham Clinton (1948 - ), Ellen DeGeneres interview, 04-07-08
- A well-informed mind is the best security against the contagion of folly and of vice. The vacant mind is ever on the watch for relief, and ready to plunge into error, to escape from the languor of idleness.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- The refreshing pleasure from the first view of nature, after the pain of illness, and the confinement of a sick-chamber, is above the conceptions, as well as the descriptions, of those in health.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- The world ridicules a passion which it seldom feels; its scenes, and its interests, distract the mind, deprave the taste, corrupt the heart, and love cannot exist in a heart that has lost the meek dignity of innocence.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- Virtue and taste are nearly the same, for virtue is little more than active taste, and the most delicate affections of each combine in real love.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- Poverty cannot deprive us of many consolations. It cannot rob us of the affection we have for each other, or degrade us in our own opinion, of in that of any person, whose opinion we ought to value.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- There is some comfort in dying surrounded by one's children.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
- And since, in our passage through this world, painful circumstances occur more frequently than pleasing ones, and since our sense of evil is, I fear, more acute than our sense of good, we become the victims of our feelings, unless we can in some degree command them.
- Ann Radcliffe (1764 - 1823), The Mysteries of Udolpho, 1764
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