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| A person buying ordinary products in a supermarket is in touch with his deepest emotions. | | John Kenneth Galbraith | |
| Colors, like features, follow the changes of the emotions. | | Pablo Picasso | |
| Emotion resulting from a work of art is only of value when it is not obtained by sentimental blackmail | | Jean Cocteau | |
| He liked to observe emotions; they were like red lanterns strung along the dark unknown of another's personality, marking vulnerable points. | | Ayn Rand | |
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| I love writing. I love the swirl and swing of words as they tangle with human emotions. | | James A. Michener | |
| No form of art goes beyond ordinary consciousness as film does, straight to our emotions, deep into the twilight of the soul | | Ingrid Bergman | |
| One of the things which danger does to you after a time is -, well, to kill emotion. I don't think I shall ever feel anything again except fear. None of us can hate anymore - or love. | | Graham Greene | |
| One sheds one's sicknesses in books--repeats and presents again one's emotions, to be master of them. | | D.H. Lawrence | |
| Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words? He thinks I don't know the ten-dollar words. I know them all right. But there are older and simpler and better words, and those are the ones I use. | | Ernest Hemingway | |
| She (Katherine Hepburn) runs the gamut of emotions from A to B | | Dorothy Parker | |
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| The arousing of prejudice, pity, anger, and similar emotions has nothing to do with the essential facts, but is merely a personal appeal to the man who is judging the case. | | Aristotle | |
| The artist is a receptacle for the emotions that come from all over the place: from the sky, from the earth, from a scrap of paper, from a passing shape, from a spider's web. | | Pablo Picasso | |
| The degree of one's emotions varies inversely with one's knowledge of the facts. | | Bertrand Russell | |
| The emotions aren't always immediately subject to reason, but they are always immediately subject to action | | William James | |
| The first and simplest emotion which we discover in the human mind, is curiosity | | Edmund Burke | |
| There are moments in life, when the heart is so full of emotion That if by chance it be shaken, or into its depths like a pebble Drops some careless word, it overflows, and its secret, Spilt on the ground like water, can never be gathered together | | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow | |
| There are so many tender and holy emotions, flying about in out inward world, which, like angels, can never assume the body of an outward act; so many rich and lovely flowers spring up which bear no seed, that it is a happiness poetry was invented, w | | Jean Paul Richter | |
| There is always something ridiculous about the emotions of people whom one has ceased to love. | | Oscar Wilde | |