2f95c01
|
I want to marry you because I'm with you, Kat. I will be in love with you. That's not going to change today or two weeks from now. I will be just as in love with you in twenty years as I am today.
|
|
jennifer-l-armentrout
lux
origin
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
f563867
|
So I was thinking, there're eighty-six thousand, four hundred seconds in a day, right? There're one thousand, four hundred and forty minutes in a day...There're one hundred and sixty-eight hours in a week. Around eighty-seven hundred and then some hours in a year, and you know what?...I want to spend every second, every minute, every hour with you...I want a year's worth of seconds and minutes with you. I want a decade's worth of hours, so many that I can't add them up.
|
|
lux-series
origin
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
4def286
|
Me and Katy look adorkable in extraterrestrial highway shirts. You would just look stupid. You can thank me later.
|
|
humor
origin
luc
katy-swartz
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
d327adc
|
Daemon: Ever hear the saying you catch more lions with honey than vinegar? Katy: I think it's 'catch more bees' and not lions. Daemon: Whatever.
|
|
jennifer-l-armentrout
origin
katy-swartz
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
c56565f
|
"He hasn't even eaten at Olive Garden, so I doubt he's a connoisseur of hotels." - Kat "No Olive Garden? Man, we've got to get that boy some endless breadsticks and salad. Travesty." - Daemon"
|
|
daemon-black
lux
lux-series
origin
katy-swartz
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
46c74b0
|
but then again, they were like baby Einsteins on crack.
|
|
humor
origin
katy-swartz
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
5f60366
|
Remember death. Even for those who wield great power, life is brief. There is only one way to triumph over death, and that is by making our lives masterpieces. We must seize every opportunity to show kindness and to love fully.
|
|
life-quotes
death
inspirational
robert-langdon
origin
|
Dan Brown |
07a8c69
|
"The kid curled his fingers inward, like he was motioning them to come play with him, and in a total Magneto way, the guns flew from the officers' hands, zinging toward the kid. They, too, stopped in midair and lit up in vibrant shades of blue. A second later the guns were dust. Kat's hands dug into my back. "Holy..." "Shit," I finished."
|
|
katy
origin
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
07b7dc5
|
"What?" She burrowed closer, tucking her fingers against the collar of my shirt. Throwing my arm around her waist, I took what felt like the first real breath in weeks. "If I had a Mogwai, I'd totally feed it after midnight. That Mohawk gremlin was a badass."
|
|
jennifer-l-armentrout
lux-series
origin
|
Jennifer l. Armentrout |
e4ac0f9
|
My friends, I am not saying I know for a fact that there is no God. All I am saying is that if there is a divine force behind the universe, it is laughing hysterically at the religions we've created in an attempt to define it.
|
|
robert-langdon
origin
|
Dan Brown |
49f605a
|
We are now perched on a strange cusp of history, a time when the world feels like it's been turned upside down, and nothing is quite as we imagined. But uncertainty is always a precursor to sweeping change; transformation is always preceded by upheaval and fear. I urge you to place your faith in the human capacity for creativity and love, because these two forces, when combined, possess the power to illuminate any darkness.
|
|
origin
|
Dan Brown |
315343c
|
I really don't think that was a good idea,'' Archer said, appearing in the open archway. ''To go sightseeing when you have half the government gunning for your ass.
|
|
humor
lux-series
origin
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
d585064
|
All you have to do is ask, Peaches.
|
|
origin
luc
peaches
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
db5cdfe
|
You tried to kidnap me, Luc. Hmm, he murmured. That means I like you. I arched a brow. Okay. That's messed up on about a thousand different levels. Probably, I don't people well.
|
|
kidnap
origin
luc
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
af7e68a
|
"I kinda like the arm-grabbing thing," he replied, shoving his hands into the pockets of his jeans. "Very dominant of you. Maybe I'm the submissive type in, you know, the-"
|
|
origin
luc
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
79bf14e
|
I watched her until I could no longer keep my eyes open. I then counted each breath she took until I could no longer remember what the last number was. And when that happened, I repeated her name, over and over again, until it was the last thing I thought before I slipped into oblivion.
|
|
jennifer-l-armentrout
jla
lux
lux-series
katy
origin
|
Jennifer L. Armentrout |
d00f8e6
|
There is no real origin for anything. Everything just exists. Everything just exists in order to exist.
|
|
origin
exist
|
Peter Ackroyd |
63846f2
|
Celui qui n'appartient a aucun lieu specifique ne peut, en realite, retourner nulle part.
|
|
origin
immigrants
immigration
roots
|
Jhumpa Lahiri |
41b9934
|
The origin myth of the Tukano speaks of the time, eons ago, when humans first settled the great rivers of the Amazon basin. It seems that 'supernatural beings' accompanied them on this journey and gifted them the fundamentals upon which to build a civilized life. From the 'Daughter of the Sun' they received the gift of fire and the knowledge of horticulture, pottery-making, and many other crafts. 'The serpent-shaped canoe of the first settlers' was steered by a superhuman 'Helmsman.' Meanwhile other supernaturals 'travelled by canoe over all the rivers and ... explored the remote hill ranges; they pointed out propitious sites for houses or fields, or for hunting and fishing, and they left their lasting imprint on many spots so that future generations would have ineffaceable proof of their earthly days and would forever remember them and their teachings.
|
|
myth
lost-ancient-civilizations
origin
deep-human-history
serpent-people
settle
proof
|
Graham Hancock |
4ff4e37
|
Elsewhere Lankford reiterates that this belief system was by no means confined to the Plains, the Eastern Woodlands, and the Mississippi Valley. It is better understood, he argues, as part of 'a widespread religious pattern' found right across North America and 'more powerful than the tendency towards cultural diversity.' Indeed, what the evidence suggests is the former existence of 'an ancient North American international religion ... a common ethnoastronomy ... and a common mythology. Such a multicultural reality hints provocatively at more common knowledge which lay behind the facade of cultural diversity united by international trade networks. One likely possibility of a conceptual realm in which that common knowledge became focused is mortuary belief [and] ... the symbolism surrounding death.
|
|
ethnoastronomy
origin
pattern
legacy
mythology
symbolism
|
Graham Hancock |