Flores Flowers Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Flores Flowers. Here they are! All 26 of them:

Creer en Dios es cosa buena, es lo que se debe hacer, pero cuando se refuerza esta creencia con palabras tomadas del Antiguo Testamento que uno mismo escoge e interpreta de manera que más le convenga, eso es hipocresía, y eso es exactamente lo que hacen mis padres.
V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
Dicen que hay flores que sólo despuntan una vez cada cien años. ¿Y por qué no hay otras que florezcan cada mil o cada diez mil años? Tal vez hasta ahora no lo hayamos sabido por la sencilla razón de que esa vez-cada-mil-años toca precisamente hoy.
Yevgeny Zamyatin (We)
I can’t help from drowning in your eyes. You make me wanna come and clean up all these lies. Let me up before I die. Mine. ~From Jaxon James' song, Mine
Carlene Love (Sin's Flower (Sin Pointe, #2))
Joy is a flower that pain grows best.
Kristian Ventura (Can I Tell You Something?)
You can’t ever take your love for granted. It’s like a flower than needs sun, water, and food to survive. Without them, it cannot bloom. And besides, it’s never too late to fall in love all over again, even for us old folks.
Jacob Z. Flores (Please Remember Me)
Estáis aquí, pero en realidad no existís
V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
El macho de la especie nace sabiendo todo lo que es malo
V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
Existem homens que se chamam Flores e batem nas mulheres. Um nome bonito não impede ninguém de ser um canalha.
Valérie Perrin (Fresh Water for Flowers)
Podrán cortar todas las flores, pero no podrán detener la primavera. (You can cut all the flowers, but you cannot delay springtime.)
Pablo Neruda (Pablo Neruda: Antologia Poetica, 2)
Habíamos perdido a nuestro padre, nuestro hogar, nuestros amigos y nuestras cosas, y aquella noche dejé de creer que Dios era el juez perfecto, de modo que también perdí a Dios, en cierto modo.
V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
El pelo crece donde tiene que crecer, de modo que lo mejor será que lo dejes en paz y no pienses más en tener el cuerpo liso como el de una niña pequeña y te des cuenta de que ese pelo es atractivo.
V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger, #1))
Siempre las flores vigilaron la muerte, porque siempre los hombres incomprensiblemente supimos que su existir dormido y gracioso es el que mejor puede acompañar a los que murieron sin ofenderlos con soberbia de vida, sin ser más vida que ellos.
Jorge Luis Borges (Cuaderno San Martín)
Entonces entraron al cuarto de José Arcadio Buendía, lo sacudieron con todas sus fuerzas, le gritaron al oído, le pusieron un espejo frente a las fosas nasales, pero no pudieron despertarlo. Poco después, cuando el carpintero le tomaba las medidas para el ataúd, vieron a través de la ventana que estaba cayendo una llovizna de flores amarillas. Cayeron toda la noche sobre el pueblo en una tormenta silenciosa, y cubrieron los techos y atascaron las puertas, y sofocaron a los animales que durmieron a la intemperie. Tantas flores cayeron del cielo, que las calles amanecieron tapizadas de una colcha compacta, y tuvieron que despejarlas con palas y rastrillos para que pudiera pasar el entierro.
Gabriel García Márquez
Why is it called tierra and not tierro? Why is it round, like two breasts sewn together, like the two halves of an orange—a naranja—or the belly of a pregnant woman, and has never had any phallic tendencies, even while it was first forming? Why do we say naturaleza, in the feminine, and not naturalezo? Why did the old poets prefer to write la mar and not el mar, the way most people do today? Why is it la noche, night, la madrugada, dawn, la soledad, solitude, la ternura, tenderness, la felicidad, happiness, la luz, light, la luna, the moon, las constelaciones, the constellations, la voz, a person’s voice, las caricias, caresses, las flores, flowers, la melancolía, melancholy? Why would it seem that the really poetic words are in the feminine? But that’s nonsense. Mentira, lie, is feminine, and that’s not so poetic. And there are lots of poetic words that are masculine: el cielo, the sky, el alba, another word for dawn, el misterio, mystery, el desea, desire, el parto, childbirth, el bien, good as opposed to evil. And speaking of evil, that’s masculine in gender, el mal, and so is power, el poder. Although we shouldn’t forget el querer, loving, a word that belongs to the strategy of desire. And also has a little bit of goodness in it. Bondad, goodness, is a very pretty word, and very feminine—it’s conjugated in the feminine. On the other hand, muerte, death, which is feminine, no matter how she gets herself up to look attractive and profound, could she ever seduce anyone?
Zoé Valdés (Dear First Love)
Observe," said the Director triumphantly, "observe." Books and loud noises, fiowers and electric shocks-already in the infant mind these couples were compromisingly linked; and after two hundred repetitions of the same or a similar lesson would be wedded indissolubly. What man has joined, nature is powerless to put asunder. "They'll grow up with what the psychologists used to call an 'instinctive' hatred of books and flowers. Reflexes unalterably conditioned. They'll be safe from books and botany all their lives." The Director turned to his nurses. "Take them away again." / —Observen —dijo el director, en tono triunfal—. Observen. Los libros y ruidos fuertes, flores y descargas eléctricas; en la mente de aquellos niños ambas cosas se hallaban ya fuertemente relacionadas entre sí; y al cabo de doscientas repeticiones de la misma o parecida lección formarían ya una unión indisoluble. Lo que el hombre ha unido, la Naturaleza no puede separarlo. —Crecerán con lo que los psicólogos solían llamar un odio instintivo hacia los libros y las flores. Reflejos condicionados definitivamente. Estarán a salvo de los libros y de la botánica para toda su vida. —El director se volvió hacia las enfermeras—. Llévenselos.
Aldous Huxley (Brave New World)
Las flores son sólo órganos sexuales, vaginas abigarradas que adornan la superficie del mundo, entregadas a la lubricidad de los insectos.
Michel Houellebecq (La carte et le territoire)
If life gives you seeds, grow flowers ... / Si la vida te da semillas, cultiva flores...
John F. Bisner Urena (Ian & Yo)
Esta mañana les he contado a las flores lo que haría por ti y han florecido
Rupi Kaur (The Sun and Her Flowers)
Alice imaginou que uma biblioteca deveria ser um jardim tranquilo de livros, onde as histórias cresciam como flores.
Holly Ringland (The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart)
Amado, tu me trouxeste muitas flores... ... levá-as, como eu costumava fazer Tuas flores, e as mantenha onde elas não enfraqueçam. Instrua os teus olhos a manterem suas cores verdadeiras, E diga à sua alma, que suas raízes são deixadas na minha. Elizabeth Barret Browning
Holly Ringland (The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart)
Cada flor é uma linguagem secreta. Quando uso uma combinação de flores juntas, é como se estivesse escrevendo meu próprio código secreto que ninguém mais consegue entender a menos que conheça minha língua.
Holly Ringland (The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart)
Dios creó en primer lugar un jardín”. Esta afirmación expresa una profunda verdad psicológica. La horticultura tiene su fuente -o, en todo caso, una de sus fuentes- en el Otro Mundo de los antípodas de la mente. Cuando lo fieles ofrecen flores en el altar, están devolviendo a los dioses cosas que saben o que oscuramente -si no son visionarios- comprenden que pertenecen al cielo.
HUXLEY, Aldous (Godalming, 1894 - Los Angeles, 1964),
Los jóvenes no hacen más que mirar el teléfono móvil y no muestran el menor interés por las flores.
Camilla Läckberg, Henrik Fexeus (El mentalista (Mina Dabiri & Vincent Walder, #1))
Cogí las ultimas flores que me regalaste, ahora se marchitan en el jarrón. Una a una les arranque los petalos y me los comí.
Rupi Kaur (The Sun and Her Flowers)
Saber que existia um tipo de magia que fazia flores e bebés nascerem depois de tempestades assustava-a; mais coisas preciosas no seu mundo que o pai poderia maltratar.
Holly Ringland (The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart)
I love the church. I like the waxed candles that remind me people think of people. I love the bouquet of flowers on the altar that a group of grandmas grow in their gardens and pridefully donate every week. I admire the wooden statues of craftsmanship, of a mother staring at you with the kind of pure, loving look I forgot to ask from mine. I like the skinny man nailed to the cross reminding me that people are capable of sacrificial love. I like to stare at the art on the stained-glass windows, of angels, of lambs, and of fruit. I love running my hands over mosaics and tracing the lips of saints. I love the hymns and joy of the choir, who sing regardless if you’re too scared. I love watching the collective sway of bodies subconsciously comforted by their environment after finally saying “Peace be with you.” And most of all, I love being surrounded by people trying. They wear Christ around their neck and squeeze a rosary for dear life, admitting their weaknesses and sins. Tell me, where do you find that? There is an honesty in the church, spilling from kneeling persons, that gives me the hope humans can take care of each other and our planet can be a good one. Where else can I be exposed to the practice of morality on such an emotional level? I love everything about the church—the shiny pews, the smoky incense, the Bible and its purpose – because when all is considered, it makes sense. It is a template of discipline and thoughtfulness. Why call religious people idiots when they’re the few paying attention to their own lives? And there are other ways to be moral of course, but not many ways to practice. I’ve learned that to believe in God doesn’t subtract any life from you. It is additional. It is the world and God. If someone wears a jacket over their shirt, they aren’t naked. They’re double-layered.
Kristian Ventura (The Goodbye Song)