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Quotes About Window

I was admiring the view from my second story window when the screaming started.
~ Betty Webb
Every leaf that taps against the attic window, every thorn that nestles against the bricks, is part of a barrier that keeps the twentieth century at bay. I have always taken a dim view of the twentieth century, so that I consider this to be a laudable amibition.
~ Beverley Nichols
I held the letter—a window to another world. Did I dare open it?
~ Beverly Lewis
If you think scrawling your Twitter handle on a bus window with a Sharpie is a worthwhile way to gain followers, your social media strategy is headed in a pretty pathetic direction.
~ Sean Evans
La finestra, a províncies, substitueix els teatres i el passeig.
~ Gustave Flaubert
Emma était accoudée à sa fenêtre (elle s'y mettait souvent : la fenêtre, en province, remplace les théâtres et la promenade)
~ Gustave Flaubert
His notes to the outside world offered a window on an active, sympathetic, eclectic mind.
~ H.W. Brands
You could see Coach Bobby working the name, as if his forehead had a window and the squirrel running on the little track was picking up speed. When the synapses stopped firing, Coach Bobby's grin practically ripped the boy-band goatee at the corners.
~ Harlan Coben
He passed a hair salon called Snip Away, which sounded more like a vasectomy clinic than a beauty parlor. The Snip Away beauticians were either reformed mall girls or guys named Mario whose fathers were named Sal. Two patrons sat in a window - one getting a perm, the other a bleach job. Who wanted that? Who wanted to sit in a window and have the whole world watch you get your hair done?
~ Harlan Coben
During the car ride Myron asked for details. Kitty sat up front next to him. In the back, Mickey ignored them. He stared out the window, white iPod earbuds in place—playing the part of a petulant teenager, which, Myron surmised, he was. By
~ Harlan Coben
Home is watching the moon rise over the open, sleeping land and having someone you can call to the window, so you can look together. Home is where you dance with others, and dancing is life.
~ Stephen King
Number one way life would be different if dogs ran the world: All motorists must drive with head out window.
~ David Letterman
There's a pigeon's nest on the branch of the tree outside the window. A chick is growing up in it. I'm happy about that
~ Aya Kito
The trees come up to my window like the yearning voice of the dumb earth
~ Rabindranath Tagore
In October, a maple tree before your window lights up your room like a great lamp. Even on cloudy days, its presence helps to dispel the gloom.
~ John Burroughs
The Tibetans have an exclamatory cry reserved just for when that window opens. The cry is Emaho! which might be loosely rendered "Oh my God! Who would have thought it's this simple!
~ Shinzen Young
the book typographer's job was building a window between the reader inside a room and that landscape which is the author's words. He may put up a stained glass window of marvelous beauty, but a failure as a window; that is he may use some rich superb type like text gothic that is something to be look at, not through.
~ Simon Garfield
Moonlight shone through the window, cutting through the room at an angle.
~ Simon Wood
Una mujer sentada junto a la ventana. Piensa / y mientras piensa, desespera / desespera por ser quien es / y no otra persona.
~ Siri Hustvedt
I opened the window and my heart. The sun flooded my house and Love flooded my soul.
~ Paulo Coelho
Out on the moors, The lonely moors, I roll around in sheep poo. Heathcliff, it's youuuuu, I hate you, I love you tooooo. Let me in, I'm here, it's meeeee, Catheeeeeeee. Look out of your windooooow.
~ Louise Rennison
My 'thing' is that I just lie in my immense bed and look out the window at the skyline over Virginia and the sky and the airplanes coming into Reagan. I really love doing that.
~ Ben Stein
Despite having seen a fair amount of the world, I still love travelling - I just have an insatiable curiosity and like looking out of a window.
~ Michael Palin
You would have entire suburban neighborhoods of upper-middle-class professionals, none of whom had possessed even the basic know-how to replace a cracked window.
~ Max Brooks