Laws are silent in time of war.
I don't know why my shoes are so popular - I am always surprised and mystified by it.
I do enjoy my own company. I cannot imagine anybody entertaining me more than I do. If it sounds selfish, I don't care. I made it a religion almost.
When somebody wants to work and believes in something, it doesn't matter if you're well known or rich or whatever it is.
I'm an old bag - I like old thing.
I'm loyal to my friends, but I have so few now. I force myself to see people when they're here. Or when I'm here. I don't live in England that much now in the sense that I spend time in factories. I'm such a factory man now. This is really what I enjoy doing.
That kind of woman who used to be there at the time is not here any longer. In 10 years, people disappear. But I fantasize still about those kinds of women, and that kind of life that doesn't really exist any longer.
Some ministers say, 'If you don't repent you'll die and go to a place the name of which I can't pronounce. ' I can! You'll go to hell!
There never is but one opportunity of a kind.
The music that really moves me is music that's written by people where there isn't a lot of money and they're really singing with just their voice and a guitar about their feelings and about their life. Their poetry is relatively simple, in the sense that it's about their soul in jeopardy.
Instead of making others right or wrong, or bottling up right and wrong in ourselves, there's a middle way, a very powerful middle way. . . . . . Could we have no agenda when we walk into a room with another person, not know what to say, not make that person wrong or right? Could we see, hear, feel other people as they really are? It is powerful to practice this way. . . . . true communication can happen only in that open space.