Commentaires récents 
    
    
      Neil Gaiman 
    
    
      Barack Obama  
    
    
      SOME PERSON 
    
    
      Erudite 
    
    
      SOME PERSON 
    
    
      Plus 
    
    
        
        
    
   
  
     
  English 
  Français (French) 
  Español (Spanish) 
  Português (Portuguese) 
  Italian (Italiano) 
  Svenska (Swedish) 
  Deutsch (German) 
  Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) 
  हिंदी (Hindi) 
  Pусский (Russian) 
  Dansk (Danish) 
  বাংলা (Bengali) 
  Nederlands (Dutch) 
  Eestlane (Estonian) 
  ελληνικά (Greek) 
  čeština (Czech) 
  Polish (Polski) 
  Hrvatski (Croatian) 
  Română (Romanian) 
  Magyar (Hungarian) 
  한국어, 조선어 (Korean) 
  Türkçe (Turkish) 
  中文 (Chinese) 
  Suomi (Finnish) 
  српски језик (Serbian) 
  Українська мова (Ukrainian) 
  norsk språk (Norwegian) 
  српски језик (Hebrew) 
  schweizerdeutsche sprache (Swiss-German) 
  नेपाली (Nepali) 
  ภาษาไทย (Siamese) 
  Lingua Latina (Latin) 
  ᱥᱟᱱᱛᱟᱞᱤ (Santali) 
  日本語 (Japanese) 
  
    
    dlandrith's citations 
    
    
    
    
      
      
      
        Sir Percy Blakeney, as written by Baroness Emma Orczy
         - The Scarlet Pimpernel
       
      
      "All done in the tying of a cravat," Sir Percy had declared to his clique of admirers. "We seek him here, we seek him there, those Frenchies seek him everywhere. Is he in heaven? Is he in hell? That damned, elusive Pimpernel!"
      
    
    
    
      
      
      
        Joni Mitchell
         - Both Sides, Now
       
      
      Rows and floes of angel hair. And ice cream castles in the air. And feather canyons everywhere. I've looked at clouds that way. But now they only block the sun. They rain and snow on everyone. So many things I would have done, but clouds got in my way.
      
    
    
    
      
      
      
        Jerome Kern
         - I've Told Ev'ry Little Star
       
      
      I've told every little star just how sweet I think you are. Why haven't I told you? I've told ripples in a brook, made my heart an open book. Why haven't I told you?
      
    
    
    
      
      
      
        Bertrand Russell
         - Boredom, from Chapter 4 of The Conquest of Happiness (1930)
       
      
      Boredom as a factor in human behavior has received, in my opinion, far less attention than it deserves. It has been, I believe, one of the great motive powers throughout the historical epoch, and is so at the present day more than ever.