Galloway Quotes

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Galloway (The Sacketts, #14) Galloway by Louis L'Amour
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Galloway Quotes Showing 1-5 of 5
“A man who starts imagining that others think good because he does is simply out of his mind. I've helped bury a few who did think that way... nice, peaceful men who wanted no trouble and made none.

When feeding time comes around there's nothing a hawk likes better than a nice, fat, peaceful dove.”
Louis L'Amour, Galloway
“I like my fellow man, but I also realize he carried a good measure of the Old Nick in him and he can find a good excuse for almost any kind of wrongdoing or mischief.”
Louis L'Amour, Galloway
“How much can a man endure? How long could a man continue? These things I asked myself, for I am a questioning man, yet even as I asked the answers were there before me. If he be a man indeed, he must always go on, he must always endure. Death is an end to torture, to struggle, to suffering, but it is also an end to warmth, light, the beauty of a running horse, the smell of damp leaves, of gunpowder, the walk of a woman when she knows someone watches. . . these things, too, are gone.”
Louis L'Amour, Galloway
“Bats and birds taken from those mountains”
Louis L'Amour, Galloway: The Sacketts
“If he be a man indeed, he must always go on, he must always endure. Death is an end to torture, to struggle, to suffering, but it is also an end to warmth, light, the beauty of a running horse, the smell of damp leaves, of gunpowder, the walk of a woman when she knows someone watches … these things, too, are gone.”
Louis L'Amour, Galloway: The Sacketts