Enjoy Quotes

When we have passed beyond enjoyings, then we shall have Bliss. Desire was the helper; Desire is the bar.
Sri Aurobindo



Transform enjoying into an even and objectless ecstasy; let all thyself be bliss. This is thy goal.
Sri Aurobindo



People seem to enjoy things more when they know a lot of other people have been left out of the pleasure.
Russell Baker



A mystic is a man who separates heaven and earth even if he enjoys them both.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton



People often grudge others when they cannot enjoy themselves.
Aesop



"Learn while you're young," he often said, "There is much to enjoy, down here below; Life for the living, and rest for the dead!" Said the jolly old pedagogue, long ago.
George Arnold



Playing Doctor Who came as a great surprise to me. I had no idea that I would enjoy it so much. All that was required of me was to be able to speak complete gobbledygook with conviction.
Tom Baker



The Chinese enjoyed the spectacle of death, Jim had decided, as a way of reminding themselves of how precariously they were alive. They liked to be cruel for the same reason, to remind themselves of the vanity of thinking the world was anything else.
James Graham Ballard



People who enjoy waving flags don't deserve to have one.
Banksy



I enjoy doing layoutproblems of design. I could very cheerfully be a typographer.
Donald Barthelme



Like a lot of painters in this century, you seem to enjoy lifting things out of the world, in this case words or phrases, and then... And then, sung to and Simonized, theyre thrown into the mesh.
Donald Barthelme



How have you left the ancient love That bards of old enjoyed in you! The languid strings do scarcely move! The sound is forced, the notes are few!
William Blake



Though I bequeath you no estate, I leave you in the enjoyment of liberty.
William Bradford



Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden are much like Nancy Dell'Olio and Ulrika Jonsson: they can't stand each other, but they both enjoy fucking the same bloke.
Rory Bremner



God will call evil men to a strict account for all the outward good that they have enjoyed.
Thomas Brooks





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