Thursday, April 25, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Rachel Maddow

« All quotes from this author
 

I felt tense. He did not.
--
The Rachel Maddow Show, MSNBC (April 3, 2009)
--
Reporting on whether her interview with Colin Powell became tense.

 
Rachel Maddow

» Rachel Maddow - all quotes »



Tags: Rachel Maddow Quotes, Authors starting by M


Similar quotes

 

His face was tense with pain. But then, who notices when they meet a theatre critic whose face is tense with pain? It is one of the marks of the profession.

 
Robertson Davies
 

Before enlightenment, I used to be depressed; after enlightenment, I continue to be depressed. You don't make a goal out of relaxation and sensitivity. Have you ever heard of people who get tense trying to relax? If one is tense, one simply observes one's tension. You will never understand yourself if you seek to change yourself. The harder you try to change yourself the worse it gets. You are called upon to be aware.

 
Anthony de Mello
 

For the painter, for whom painting is a vital activity and a way of life — not merely a profession — such attitudes as we find in the histories are deadly. For him the only benefit, at least the deepest and most important benefit, which he can get from the study of the Masters comes from his capacity to see the painting in a thoroughly contemporary way. I mean in the present tense — the tense after all in which it was painted. Not for instance as an early this or a late that, nor as a good example of chiaroscuro or some other aesthetic or technical quality but as an immediately important human statement completely relevant to his life at the moment and convincing for that reason. If a work does not strike the painter in this way all further analysis of it will be futile.

 
Patrick Swift
 

But to go deeper, beneath what people said (and these judgements, how superficial, how fragmentary they are!) in her own mind now, what did it mean to her, this thing she called life? Oh, it was very queer. Here was So-and-so in South Kensington; some one up in Bayswater; and somebody else, say, in Mayfair. And she felt quiet continuously a sense of their existence and she felt what a waste; and she felt what a pity; and she felt if only they could be brought together; so she did it. And it was an offering; to combine, to create; but to whom?

 
Virginia Woolf
 

Politics is history in the present tense.

 
John Avlon
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact