Read – and be curious. And if somebody says to you: 'Things are this way. You can't change it' - don't believe a word.
It is curious how sometimes the memory of death lives on for so much longer than the memory of the life that is purloined.
The world is always curious, and people become valuable merely for their inaccessibility
I'm insatiably curious about human nature.
I want to see and taste and experience it all, I am curious by nature. I would actually really love to go to New Zealand.
It is a curious thing that people only ask if you are enjoying yourself when you aren't.
Beauties are always curious about beauties, and wits about wits.
There was an American girl, Priscilla Johnson. She worked for U. P. in Moscow. She knew [John] Kennedy, and she met [Lee Harvey] Oswald around the same time I did. But I can tell you something else almost as curious.
There's a great power of imagination about these little creatures, and a creative fancy and belief that is very curious to watch. . . I am sure that horrid matter-of-fact child-rearers. . . do away with the child's most beautiful privilege. I am determined that Anny shall have a very extensive and instructive store of learning in Tom Thumbs, Jack-the-Giant-Killers, etc.
Creative people are curious, flexible, and independent with a tremendous spirit and a love of play.
I find it hard to believe that anyone could be so curious about me that they would want to read that I wear underwear shorts with green polka dots on them.
My memory is coming back. It is curious how it comes. Each day, a rush of pieces, loosely connected, unimportant bits, snake through me. They click, click, click into my brain, like links being snapped together. And then they are done. A small chain of memories that fill in one tiny part of my life. They come out of nowhere, and most are not important.
The public cannot be too curious concerning the characters of public men.
I was thinking what a curious thing love is; only a sentiment, and yet it has power to make fools of men and slaves of women.
In spite of the fact that religion looks backward to revealed truth while science looks forward to new vistas and discoveries, both activities produce a sense of awe and a curious mixture of humility and arrogance in their practitioners. All great scientists are inspired by the subtlety and beauty of the natural world that they are seeking to understand. Each new subatomic particle, every unexpected object, produces delight and wonderment. In constructing their theories, physicists are frequently guided by arcane concepts of elegance in the belief that the universe is intrinsically beautiful.
It is a curious sensation: the sort of pain that goes mercifully beyond our powers of feeling. When your heart is broken, your boats are burned: nothing matters any more. It is the end of happiness and the beginning of peace.
It is curious how an age of public self-revelation, and of the use of psychological jargon, should also be an age when self-examination is rarely practised.
I am not lesbian, I am not bisexual, I am not straight. I am just curious
It is a curious property of research activity that after the problem has been solved the solution seems obvious. This is true not only for those who have not previously been acquainted with the problem, but also for those who have worked over it for years.
Animals! the object of insatiable interest, examples of the riddle of life, created, as it were, to reveal the human being to man himself, displaying his richness and complexity in a thousand kaleidoscopic possibilities, each of them brought to some curious end, to some characteristic exuberance.