Related Quotes
spoiled amazing-experiences direct
Elizabeth Banks I'm actively looking for things to direct again. I had such an amazing experience on this. I really am spoiled.
spoil win
John Kosmina We didn't want to spoil a party, we just wanted to win a game.
spoil swallow taste
Larry Csonka Don't swallow any of that. It'll spoil the taste of the bourbon.
spoil word
Jim Messina We've put the word out for a lot of our friends in Hawaii, but we're not going to spoil the surprise,
spoiled destruction
Stanley Kubrick All my life I've always spoiled the things that meant the most to me.
spoiled pleasure describing
Stendhal Pleasure is often spoiled by describing it.
spoiled spoilers being-spoiled
Melissa McBride I don't like spoilers. I don't like things being spoiled.
spoiled
Petra Stunt No one ever talks about the good in me; they just say that I'm spoiled.
winter darkness scrooge
Charles Dickens Darkness is cheap, and Scrooge liked it.
winter age lapland
Charles Caleb Colton Cheerfulness ought to be the viaticum vitae of their life to the old; age without cheerfulness is a Lapland winter without a sun.
winning race looks
Charles Caleb Colton If we look backwards to antiquity it should be as those that are winning a race.
wine order water
Charles Caleb Colton In order to try whether a vessel be leaky, we first prove it with water before we trust it with wine.
wings gone originality
Charles Caleb Colton All the poets are indebted more or less to those who have gone before them; even Homer's originality has been questioned, and Virgil owes almost as much to Theocritus, in his Pastorals, as to Homer, in his Heroics; and if our own countryman, Milton, has soared above both Homer and Virgil, it is because he has stolen some feathers from their wings.
wind literature wave
Charles Caleb Colton Commerce flourishes by circumstances, precarious, transitory, contingent, almost as the winds and waves that bring it to our shores.
wind fire tale-of-two-cities
Charles Dickens Then tell Wind and Fire where to stop," returned madame; "but don't tell me.
winning race obstacles
Charles Dickens Ride on! Ride on over all obstacles and win the race.
wine paris six
Charles Dickens Along the Paris streets, the death-carts rumble, hollow and harsh. Six tumbrils carry the day's wine to La Guillotine.