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World Quotes - Page 575

I do not like the world as it is; so I am trying to make it a little more as I want it.

I do not like the world as it is; so I am trying to make it a little more as I want it.

Helen Keller (2000). “To Love this Life: Quotations”, p.73, American Foundation for the Blind

I am thankful that in a troubled world no calamity can prevent the return of spring.

Helen Keller (2000). “To Love this Life: Quotations”, p.52, American Foundation for the Blind

The world is not always ours to understand.

Heather Graham (2009). “Dust to Dust”, p.158, MIRA

The world is full of monsters with friendly faces.

Heather Brewer (2013). “Eighth Grade Bites #1: The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod”, p.82, Penguin

There is nothing in this world that never takes a step outside a person's heart.

Haruki Murakami (2011). “1Q84: Books 1 and 2”, p.475, Random House

Baseball was a metaphor for America, both here and in terms of how it was understood by the rest of the world.

"PUM One on One with Harrison Ford". Interview with Kam William, www.pittsburghurbanmedia.com.

Fear is a message - sometimes helpful, sometimes not - but often conveying critical information about our beliefs, our needs, and our relationship to the world around us.

Harriet Lerner (2009). “The Dance of Fear: Rising Above Anxiety, Fear, and Shame to Be Your Best and Bravest Self”, p.9, Harper Collins

It is generally understood that men don't aspire after the absolute right, but only to do about as well as the rest of the world.

Harriet Beecher Stowe, Harriet Beecher STOWE (2016). “Collected Works (Complete and Illustrated Editions: Uncle Tom's Cabin, Queer Little Folks, The Chimney-Corner, ...)”, p.168, Harriet Beecher Stowe

The world does not get to be a better or a worse place; it just gets more senescent.

"Harold Bloom, The Art of Criticism No. 1". Interview with Antonio Weiss, biblioklept.org. 1991.

Underneath the shifting appearances of the world as perceived by our unreliable senses, is there, or is there not, a bedrock of objective reality?

Hans Christian Von Baeyer (2004). “Information: The New Language of Science”, p.64, Harvard University Press