Wednesday, November 13, 2002
�Facts were never pleasing to him. He acquired them with reluctance and got rid of them with relief. He was never on terms with them until he had stood them on their heads.�
- Sir J.M Barrie (1860 � 1937), Scottish dramatist and writer: �The Greenwood Hat�, 1937.
�I have learned to live each day as it comes, and not to borrow trouble by dreading tomorrow. It is the dark menace of the future that makes cowards of us.�
- Dorothy Dix (1870 � 1951), American writer: �Dorothy Dix, Her Book�, 1926.
�Who can give a law to lovers? Love is a greater law unto itself.�
- Boethius (c. 475 � 524), Roman statesman, scholar and philosopher: �De Consolatione Philosophiae�, c. 522-524.
�From the days of Eve women have always faced sexual facts with more courage than men.�
- Sir Compton MacKenzie (1883 � 1972), Scottish writer and broadcaster: �Literature in My Time�, 1933.
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