What did Margaret Atwood mean by: Wars happen because the ones who start them think they can win. - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada Copy
+ All I can hope for is a reconstruction: the way love feels is always only approximate. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ Time rises and rises, and when it reaches the level of your eyes you drown. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Eye, Levels, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ We thought we were running away from the grownups, and now we are the grownups. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Romance, Running, Running Away, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ Disease has always been a much bigger killer of human beings than wars. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Disease, Killers, War, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ The heart of Jesus glowed, because it was holy. Holy things glowed in general. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Heart, Holy, Jesus, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ Because I am a mother, I am capable of being shocked: as I never was when I was not one. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Mother, Shocked, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ A home filled with nothing but yourself. It’s heavy, that lightness. It’s crushing, that emptiness. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Crush, Emptiness, Home, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
+ Every aspect of human technology has a dark side, including the bow and arrow. Feraz Zeid, January 2, 2024January 10, 2024, Margaret Atwood, Arrows, Dark, Technology, 0 - Margaret Atwood Author · Canada
I won’t undertake war until I have tried all the arts and means of peace. - François Rabelais Author · France
To win a race, the swiftness of a dart Availeth not without a timely start - Jean de La Fontaine Poet · France
Everyone, when there’s war in the air, learns to live in a new element: falsehood. - Jean Giraudoux Playwright · France
Like the greatest virtue and the worst dogs, the fiercest hatred is silent. - Jean Paul Writer · Germany
It is the people who have no say in making wars who suffer from the consequences of them. - Jean Plaidy Author · England
When war becomes a trade, it benefits, like all other trades, from the division of labour. - Jean-Baptiste Say Economist · France