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I am the Roman Emperor, and am above grammar.
I am the Roman Emperor, and am above grammar.
No poet will ever take the written word as a substitute for the spoken word; he knows that it is read more
No poet will ever take the written word as a substitute for the spoken word; he knows that it is on the spoken word, and the spoken word only, that his art is founded.
Sometimes a piece of music in the score isn't effective. When a score is too well finished with too many read more
Sometimes a piece of music in the score isn't effective. When a score is too well finished with too many elements, sometimes it's too much.
If your company is taken over for stock, I would sell unless I had a great reason. I'd ignore what read more
If your company is taken over for stock, I would sell unless I had a great reason. I'd ignore what the chief executive officer had to say.
We've been wrestling tough all year, and this was one of our goals on our list. It was just exciting read more
We've been wrestling tough all year, and this was one of our goals on our list. It was just exciting to see them get to the semifinals and step it up. We really represented. The whole town of Greeley just did awesome. There were a lot of tough teams here.
Playing against that type of speed, we learned that we can move the ball if we execute. We've just got read more
Playing against that type of speed, we learned that we can move the ball if we execute. We've just got to be more fundamentally sound on the defensive side of the ball.
Digging was very successful [during Nov. 12-15], and there was over 20,000 people who participated. The weather always plays a read more
Digging was very successful [during Nov. 12-15], and there was over 20,000 people who participated. The weather always plays a big factor, but I expect it to be equally as good.
There's nothing gratuitous about my films.
There's nothing gratuitous about my films.
The superstition was that disability of any sort was the mark of the devil. The phrases are in languages throughout read more
The superstition was that disability of any sort was the mark of the devil. The phrases are in languages throughout Europe: the devil's hoof, the devil's horn mark. It reaches back to early Christianity and the middle ages. Where a child was born out of wedlock, the church cooked up the impression that you'd done something sinful, and something dreadful would result. You will still find, particularly in Greece, people doing a little sign when they see a very badly disabled child – it needs warding off.