Quotes About Daybreak
away and rose to start her day.
~ Nora Roberts
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Dawn was close. The weaker stars had already disappeared, and even the brightest were uncertain of themselves.
~ Clive Barker
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Et iam prima novo spargebat lumine terras
~ Virgil
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Only that day dawns to which we are awake. There is more day to dawn. The sun is but a morning star.
~ Henry David Thoreau, Walden
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The campsite was like a pinprick of awareness, poised between fading memories and the unknown future—and if daybreak and the journey home would reclaim some of what the darkness now shrouded, that reprieve itself was only temporary.
~ Greg Egan
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It's an awful thing to hear a strong, desperate, fat man scream incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
~ O. Henry
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A rare experience of a moment at daybreak, when something in nature seems to reveal all consciousness, cannot be explained at noon. Yet it is part of the day's unity.
~ Charles Ives
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In a rather inexplicable phenomenon, music makes up a small part of the frequency of waves we see with our eyes. That's right, music and light are part of the same spectrum. It's just that we hear part of that spectrum, suggesting that the angels both hear and see light, which adds a whole new dimension to the idea of daybreak, high noon, or sundown.
~ Charles Martin
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E quando amanhece, não é o dia que nasce no horizonte, é a noite que se recolhe no fundo do vale
~ Chico Buarque
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Does not the morn break thus, Swift, bright, victorious.
~ lazarus emma ii
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I'm up at the crack of dawn.
~ Dennis Skinner
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When day begins to break I count my blessings, good and bad, Being wakeful for your sake, Remembering the covenant we've always had, What eagle look your face still shows, While up from my heart's root So great a sweetness flows I shake from head to foot.
~ P.C. Cast
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La heradera del dia destruida. (The heiress of the destroyed day.)
~ Pablo Neruda
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In alto, lo sfavillio delle stelle cominciò a impallidire, appannandosi, e nel firmamento dilagò la promessa perlacea del nuovo giorno.
~ Wilbur Smith
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She slept but little. In the morning she found habit by her bedside; she clothed herself therein and faced the day.
~ William John Locke
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Afore me! It is so very late, That we may call it early by and by.
~ William Shakespeare
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Le monde m'est nouveau à mon réveil, chaque matin.
~ Colette
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Messengers wait outside the door, to carry urgent orders for release. It is difficult, when the pen skips over a name, to associate it with the corpse it might belong to, tomorrow or the day after that. There is no sense of evil in the room, just tiredness and the aftertaste of petty squabbling. Camille drinks quite a lot of Fabre's brandy. Towards daybreak, a kind of dismal camaraderie sets in.
~ Hilary Mantel
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Gazing at her for a long moment with something like horror, as though he was seeing her for the first time, he spoke. "You are more dangerous than daybreak.
~ Holly Black
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Rosy-fingered dawn appeared, the early-born.
~ Homer
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Los perros ladran en la distancia y los gallos anunciaban la llegada del nuevo día.
~ Lian Hearn
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It's so early do you want some coffee or something?
~ Val Kilmer
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Deux heures de l'après-midi est prosaïque, presque vulgaire; mais deux heures du matin est un aventurier qui s'enfonce dans l'inconnu. Et cet inconnu, c'est trois heures du matin, le pôle nocturne, le continent mystérieux du temps. On en fait le tour; et si on croit l'avoir traversé jamais, on se trompe, car bientôt quatre heures du matin arrive sans que vous ayez surpris le secret de la nuit. Et le petit jour strie déjà les volets de ses baguettes bleues parallèles.
~ Unknown
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They sat on the boarding house porch and saw the sun plunge into the same crack in the earth from which the night emerged.
~ Zora Neale Hurston
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