Quotes about Expression
The fun of talk is to explore, but much of it and all that is irresponsible should not be written. Once written you have to stand by it. You may have said it to see whether you believed it or not.
— Ernest Hemingway
The very heart of worship, as the Bible makes clear, is the business of expressing, from the depths of our spirits, the highest possible honor we can offer before God.
— RC Sproul
I hope my books make statements about our general condition.
— William Golding
Infant baptism when practiced can be no more than an expression of the faith and hope of the parents that their child will ultimately be saved.
— Lewis Sperry Chafer
He who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things ought himself to be a true poem.
— John Milton
The arts and humanities teach us who we are and what we can be. They lie at the very core of the culture of which we're a part.
— Ronald Reagan
Literary experience heals the wound, without undermining the privilege, of individuality.
— CS Lewis
Humanity looks to works of art to shed light upon its path and its destiny.
— Pope John Paul II
Creativity has got to start with humanity.
— Marilyn Monroe
American rock has a sort of self-pitying whine to it.
— Bill Bailey
A true sonnet goes eight lines and then takes a turn for better or worse and goes six or eight lines more.
— Robert Frost
A writer needs three things, experience, observation, and imagination, any two of which, at times any one of which, can supply the lack of the others.
— William Faulkner