Something special is ending, and you're sad, but you can't be that said because, hey, it was good while it lasted, and there'll be other vacations, other good times.
I'm sorry? No more smooches is worse than the world ending?
I've come with a happy heart from the beginning, and hope there is a happy ending.
The words ending in Ique do mocke the Physician (as Hectique, Paralitique, Apoplectique, Lethargique).
The most important part of a story is the ending. No one reads a book to get to the middle.
Did you know destruction of the soul is not the ending to life: Fear not of the Antichrist.
Let me tell you a few things about regret. There is no end to it. Do you regret the beginning which ended so badly, or just the ending itself?
I feel that there is an alternate ending that leaps off too far into fantasy and there is an alternate ending that leaps off too far into pessimism, but that, in fact, the novel as it has developed should, if it's functioning correctly, have equipped you as the reader to make your own decision about where you want to go with that, about where you're going to fall on that continuum. So, the novel is taking you directly up to the point that you have to choose, and it's letting you do that.
Both of us were quiet with the recognition that something was ending, and something was beginning.
The great gift of the human imagination is that it has no limits or ending.
Stories are as unique as the people who tell them, and the best stories are in which the ending is a surprise.
I like to joke that I started writing long poems out the anxiety over ending and starting poems. It just seemed easier to keep going.
Somewhere somebody must have some sense. Men must see that force begets force, hate begets hate, toughness begets toughness. And it is all a descending spiral, ultimately ending in destruction for all and everybody. Somebody must have sense enough and morality enough to cut off the chain of hate and the chain of evil in the universe. And you do that by love.
I didn't make 'The Sixth Sense' because I thought the ending wouldn't work!
You don't manage a social wrong. You should be ending it.
People generally like happy endings, which is something I learned from my years in advertising. I like happy endings myself, but only if they're honest. I'm just as happy with a terrible, hopeless ending.
In life, every ending is just the start of another story.
The more irrational of us are worried about the millennium ending - as if a date would really matter.
The public doesn't get to see everything. I worked with X a couple times since then. Me and X have a close relationship. We actually did a record they were going to put on the Training Day soundtrack but he ending up buying the record from me and putting it on Great Depression as a bonus track.
I never know the endings when I write. It's a turnoff when you know the ending. You lose much of your incentive to write when you already know. It's like seeing a movie a second time.