
Perhaps there is a beast…maybe it’s only us.
– William Golding
Related Quotes:
- I think are foolish to pretend they are equal to men,they are far superior and always have been. -William Golding – William Golding
- Life [-¦] is scientific, that’s what it is. – William Golding
- The thing is–fear can’t hurt you any more than a dream. – William Golding
- I think women are foolish to pretend they are equal to men, they are far superior and always have been. – William Golding
- Art is partly communication, but only partly. The rest is discovery. – William Golding
- I am by nature an optimist and by intellectual conviction a pessimist. – William Golding
- I tell you, money can’t build your spire for you. Build it of gold and it would simply sink deeper. – William Golding
- … People were never quite what you thought they were. – William Golding
- The three boys stood in the darkness, striving unsuccessfully to convey the majesty of adult life – William Golding
- Jack looked around for understanding, but found only respect. – William Golding
- What else is there to do? – William Golding
- What else is there to do? – William Golding
- History is the nothing people write about a nothing. – William Golding
- My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder. – William Golding
- As for the fear, you’ll have to put up with that like the rest of us. – William Golding
- You don’t even care enough about us to hate us, do you? – William Golding
- Fancy thinking the Beast was something you could hunt and kill! – William Golding
- We have a disharmony in our natures. We cannot live together without injuring each other. – William Golding
- I do think that art that doesn’t communicate is useless. – William Golding
- We’ve got to have rules and obey them. After all, we’re not savages. We’re English, and the English are best at everything. – William Golding
- At the moment of vision, the eyes see nothing. – William Golding
- I got this to say. You’re acting like a crowd of kids. – William Golding
- Worse than madness. Sanity. – William Golding
- Worse than madness. Sanity. – William Golding
- There’s a kinship among men who have sat by a dying fire and measured the worth of their life by it. – William Golding
- I was its skin, its movement, its shape, its god, its creator, its destroyer. And you thought Dexter was bad. The Bridgeman arrives soon. – Catherine Astolfo
- I am happy to be alone. Perhaps this is true. Or perhaps I am the biggest coward of all. – Heather Day Gilbert
- Perhaps it is how we are made; perhaps words of truth reach us best through the heart, and stories and songs are the language of the heart – Stephen R Lawhead
- Perhaps the magic would last, perhaps it wouldn’t. But then again, what does? – Terry Pratchett
- Perhaps he was merely being friendly. Perhaps he saw the look on my face and mistook it for something else. Really what I wanted was the cigarette. – Margaret Atwood
- Perhaps it is possible to discover more in silence than in speech. Or perhaps it is only that those who are silent among us learn to listen. – Alice Hoffman
- Perhaps we were friends first and lovers second.But then perhaps this is what lovers are. – Andr Aciman
- Perhaps Choices spring up when history makes way for them. Perhaps they will grow, like legends upon dead conquerors. – Roshani Chokshi
- Perhaps pondering words is also a form of seeking justice. If a monologue can invite a chorus, then perhaps it can speak for others as well. – Duo Duo
- Perhaps we are not really sinners in the hands of an angry God, after all. Perhaps we are all more like seedlings in the hands of a wise gardener. – Seth Adam Smith
- The Fourth Crown Princess of the blue Cresent Islands had sixteen rituals to observe from the moment of waking to when she broke her fast. – Julia Golding
- The aim of the taper is to minimise accumulated fatigue and fill up the fuel stores to arrive at the start line fresh. – Dan Golding
- Not how it is meant. Law is defined by its effect rather than its intention, and its chief affect his accusation, the intimation of less-than. – William McDavid
- by confusing life with play-acting and play-acting with life, one may perhaps construct a tolerable moral world from shattered fragments of the past – William Hardy McNeill
- Perhaps all pleasure in only relief – William S Burroughs
