Quotes about echoes
echoes empty empty-words
Empty words almost echo within themselves Cecelia Ahern
echoes doctors land
If thou couldst, doctor, cast The water of my land, find her disease, And purge it to a sound and pristine health, I would applaud thee to the very echo, That should applaud you again. William Shakespeare
echoes occur
It echoes what is about to occur with Anakin. George Lucas
echoes
It echoes really well in the Freehold Raceway Mall.
echoes quality transition
I use the echo effect a lot when I DJ because it allows for smooth transitions, especially at different BPMs. It also adds a studio quality to live DJ performances. DJ Jazzy Jeff
echoes listening answers
I have sometimes sat alone here of an evening, listening, until I have made the echoes out to be the echoes of all the footsteps that are coming by and by into our lives. "Jerry, say that my answer was, 'RECALLED TO LIFE. Charles Dickens
echoes magic black
Any effects created before 1975 were done with either tape or echo chambers or some kind of acoustic treatment. No magic black boxes! Alan Parsons
echoes pace pieces
In comics the reader is in complete control of the experience. They can read it at their own pace, and if there's a piece of dialogue that seems to echo something a few pages back, they can flip back and check it out, whereas the audience for a film is being dragged through the experience at the speed of 24 frames per second. Alan Moore
echoes sound perfume
Perfumes, colours and sounds echo one another. Charles Baudelaire
echoes long dying
The old echoes are long in dying. Charles Henry Parkhurst
echoes credit money-talks
Money talks — but credit has an echo.
echoes participants
I was with them for all of it, but more like an echo than a participant. Aimee Bender
echoes tyranny chamber
Tyranny sets up its own echo-chamber. Bruce Chatwin
echoes way one-way
One way poetry connects is across time. . . . Some echo of a writer's physical experience comes into us when we read her poem. Jane Hirshfield
echoes brooklyn sound
I remember when I was 5 living on Pulaski Street in Brooklyn, the hallway of our building had a brass banister and a great sound, a great echo system. I used to sing in the hallway. Barbra Streisand
echoes voice space
The people did not elect me. I speak with one voice that may echo other people, but I am part of a group of people. That's not distancing yourself from a community, that's also allowing the space for others to speak for themselves. Edwidge Danticat
echoes whispering world
The melancholy ghosts of dead renown, Whispering faint echoes of the world's applause. Edward Young
echoes silence cadence
Poetry is a projection across silence of cadences arranged to break that silence with definite intentions of echoes, syllables, wave lengths. Carl Sandburg
echoes sound infinite
Poetry is a tracing of the trajectories of a finite sound to the infinite points of its echoes. Carl Sandburg
echoes soul doubt
All the things that have ever deeply possessed your soul have been but hints of it, tantalizing glimpses, promises never quite fulfilled, echoes that died away just as they caught your ear. But if it should really become manifest - if there ever came an echo that did not die away but swelled into the sound itself - you would know it. Beyond all possibility of doubt you would say 'Here at last is the thing I was made for.' C. S. Lewis
echoes soul aging
Our echoes roll from soul to soul, And grow for ever and for ever. Alfred Lord Tennyson
echoes keys one-day
Seated one day at the organ, I was weary and ill at ease, and my fingers wandered idly over the noisy keys. It seemed the harmonious echo from our discordant life. Adelaide Anne Procter
echoes existence fill pattern sprung traveling
If the universe sprung into existence and then expanded exponentially, you get gravitational waves traveling through space-time. These would fill the universe, a pattern of echoes of the inflation itself. Neil Turok
echoes people poetry
From it's inception Beat poetry was hailed as "something NEW" and "like all good spontaneous jazz, newness is acceptable and expected - by hip people who listen." But the newness of jazz has in it the echoes of J. S. Bach. Allen Ginsberg
echoes emotions intent kinds music piece scene
We look for the right piece of music that emotionally echoes the intent of the scene where it's going to be placed. And we look for all different kinds of music that echoes all different emotions and attitudes.
echoes bird utterance
With mimicry, with praises, with echoes, or with answers, the poets have all but outsung the bell. The inarticulate bell has found too much interpretation, too many rhymes professing to close with her inaccessible utterance, and to agree with her remote tongue. The bell, like the bird, is a musician pestered with literature. Alice Meynell
echoes glowing voice
Leaves glowing in the sun, zealous hum of bumblebees, From afar, from somewhere beyond the river, echoes of lingering voices And the unhurried sounds of a hammer gave joy not only to me. Before the five senses were opened, and earlier than any beginning They waited, ready, for all those who would call themselves mortals, So that they might praise, as I do, life, that is, happiness. Czeslaw Milosz
echoes sound seems
The sound must seem an echo to the sense. Alexander Pope
echoes silence arches
Outside the arch, always there seemed another arch. And beyond the remotest echo, a silence. E. M. Forster
echoes giving secret
Jazz is the music of the body. The breath comes through brass. It is the body's breath, and the strings' wails and moans are echoes of the body's music. It is the body's vibrations which ripple from the fingers. And the mystery of the withheld theme, known to jazz musicians alone, is like the mystery of our secret life. We give to others only peripheral improvisations. Anais Nin
echoes pounds sound
End rhymes are not enough. Every word-sound in a poem should find an echo in another, neighbouring word's sound to achieve what Ezra Pound called melopoeia. (This is something like what the Welsh call Cynghanned.)
echoes applause platitudes
applause, n. The echo of a platitude. Ambrose Bierce
echoes reactions
Most of your reactions are echoes from the past. You do not really live in the present.