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Zelda Popkin Quotes

1.
No war can end war except a total war which leaves no human creature on earth. Each war creates the causes of war: hate, desire for revenge and have-nots, desperate with need.
Zelda Popkin

2.
Every door opens to something and it is better to go toward that something than to sit staring at the blank wall of time.
Zelda Popkin

3.
Grief is illness. You cannot breathe; you cannot walk or eat or sleep. The sickness is entire, the body and the spirit.
Zelda Popkin

4.
pity runs its course. An hour comes when no hand but your own can build your future.
Zelda Popkin

5.
Inspiration is just one requirement for being a writer. Another is keeping regular working hours.
Zelda Popkin

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
Destiny is thrifty. To weave her tapestry, she uses even the tiniest snips of thread.
Zelda Popkin

7.
Each husband gets the infidelity he deserves.
Zelda Popkin

8.
New York's the place where you can have a private life. You can do anything, be anything you please. New Yorkers mind their own business. Police cars, ambulances, fire engines - nobody even turns around for them. We go to the movies for excitement.
Zelda Popkin

Quote Topics by Zelda Popkin: Children Hours Wall Book Fire Revenge Inns Infidelity Hate Country Deserve Loneliness Fate Appreciation Pity Running Death Body Inspiration Doors Car Opportunity Writing New York War News Husband Heart Destiny Dark
9.
There's no privacy for the violently dead.
Zelda Popkin

10.
The newer education put stress on culture ... Saturday mornings, the young were brushed and washed, forced into blue cheviot suits, and dragged to children's concerts to learn appreciation. They wriggled, squirmed, counted the light bulbs in the ceiling, dived under seats to gather ticket stubs, stampeded out at intermissions. The weakness of their bladders was astounding.
Zelda Popkin

11.
of all the deprivations which afflict humankind, none is more dreadful than loneliness. A corrosive, it eats the heart out. People were meant to live by twos, with someone close with whom to share good and bad, to hear breathing in the dark room at night. Being alone is the one unnatural act.
Zelda Popkin

12.
A country inn is a percolator. News seeps, simmers, and bubbles.
Zelda Popkin

13.
You do not conceive a novel as easily as you conceive a child, nor even half as easily as you create nonfiction work. A journalist amasses facts, anecdotes and interviews with top brass. Enough of these add up to a book. A novelist demands quite different things. He has to find himself in his materials, to know for sure how he would feel and act and the events he writes about. In addition, he requires a catalyst — a person, idea, or emotion which coalesces his ingredients and makes them jell into a solid purpose.
Zelda Popkin