Words matter. These are the best Curses Quotes from famous people such as Lyndon LaRouche, Ray Romano, Amy Tan, Justin Halpern, Lady Gregory, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Maybe every once in a while someone associated with me gets a little freaked out and curses somebody out.
I married a saint – well, a saint who curses.
My mother believed in curses, karma, good luck, bad luck, feng shui. Her amorphous set of beliefs showed me you can pick and choose the qualities of your philosophy, based on what works for you.
I’m not a guy who curses very much in my personal life. When I curse it sounds like a kid trying to be cool. But I think there are quite a few people, my father being one of them, who use curse words rather eloquently.
Our curses on them that boil the eggs too hard! What use is an egg that is hard to any person on earth?
People seem to think of me as a goody-goody who never curses, but I can be very nasty if I’m pushed. Cross me too many times, and I’ll never talk to you again.
The time has mainly gone on getting Inform into a decent shape for public use. I suppose the plot of ‘Curses’ makes a sequel conceivable when compared with, say, the plot of ‘Hamlet’ but none is planned.
Riches get their value from the mind of the possessor; they are blessings to those who know how to use them, and curses to those who do not.
I think one of the biggest curses in the U.S. is that we have only two political parties.
Black magic operates most effectively in preconscious, marginal areas. Casual curses are the most effective.
Curses on the law! Most of my fellow citizens are the sorry consequences of uncommitted abortions.
One of the biggest curses from which India is suffering – I do not say that other countries are free from it, but I think our condition is much worse – is bribery and corruption. That really is a poison.
It’s really sad how many people believe in curses.
I had a very ‘colorful’ language, and every time I went to say something, Michael would cut me off with words like ‘shoot’ and ‘fudge.’ He didn’t like curses. He didn’t think it was necessary when other words would do.
With pride, there are many curses. With humility, there come many blessings.
People tend to fear the ghosts in their own family. You feel these family curses and think, ‘If it happened to my father, it could happen to me.’
I hold that the beginning of modern Irish drama was in the winter of 1898, at a school feast at Coole, when Douglas Hyde and Miss Norma Borthwick acted in Irish in a Punch and Judy show; and the delighted children went back to tell their parents what grand curses ‘An Craoibhin’ had put on the baby and the policeman.
Actually, I don’t even believe in curses.
Reading literature remains a civilising activity, no matter that it’s literature in which people do and say abominable things and the author curses like the very devil. What’s at issue is how we describe the way the civilising works.