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Sarah Dessen The Truth About Forever

Quote from Sarah Dessen, The Truth About Forever

I don’t get it,’ Caroline said, bemused. ‘She’s the only one with wings. Why is that?’There were so many questions in life. You couldn’t ever have all the answers. But I knew this one.It’s so she can fly,’ I said. Then I started to run.

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The Gospel of Ruth: Loving God Enough to Break the Rules

Quote from Carolyn Custis James, The Gospel of Ruth: Loving God Enough to Break the Rules

It doesn’t cause me to doubt God’s existence, but it does force me to admit there’s a lot about God I don’t understand.

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Richard Dawkins

Quote from Richard Dawkins

After sleeping through a hundred million centuries we have finally opened our eyes on a sumptuous planet, sparkling with color, bountiful with life. Within decades we must close our eyes again. Isn’t it a noble, an enlightened way of spending our brief time in the sun, to work at understanding the universe and how we have come to wake up in it? This is how I answer when I am asked—as I am surprisingly often—why I bother to get up in the mornings.

Quote from Kaitlin Hollon

Always ask the questions you want to, life is too short to know if you’ll get a second chance to ask , and afterlife is probably too long to wonder what the answer may be.

Quote from E.A. Bucchianeri, Faust: My Soul Be Damned for the World: Volume I

To be, or not to be: what a question!

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Oliver Goldsmith She Stoops to Conquer

Quote from Oliver Goldsmith, She Stoops to Conquer

Ask me no questions, and I’ll tell you no fibs.

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Thomas H. Cook

Quote from Thomas H. Cook, Master of the Delta

He looked at me intently, from what seemed behind the veil of a grave experience. Then slowly and prophetically, he said the scariest thing I’d ever heard: “Because the answer to a heartfelt question, Jack, will always break your heart.

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The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays Wendell Berry

Quote from Wendell Berry, The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays

Until modern times, we focused a great deal of the best of our thought upon rituals of return to the human condition. Seeking enlightenment or the Promised Land or the way home, a man would go or be forced to go into the wilderness, measure himself against the Creation, recognize finally his true place within it, and thus be saved both from pride and from despair. Seeing himself as a tiny member of a world he cannot comprehend or master or in any final sense possess, he cannot possibly think of himself as a god. And by the same token, since he shares in, depends upon, and is graced by all of which he is a part, neither can he become a fiend; he cannot descend into the final despair of destructiveness. Returning from the wilderness, he becomes a restorer of order, a preserver. He sees the truth, recognizes his true heir, honors his forebears and his heritage, and gives his blessing to his successors. He embodies the passing of human time, living and dying within the human limits of grief and joy.(pg.95, “The Body and the Earth”)

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Letters to a Young Poet Rainer Maria Rilke

Quote from Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet

Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart. Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not now look for the answers. They cannot now be given to you because you could not live them. It is a question of experiencing everything. At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day.

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