Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Pictures must not be too picturesque.
The dirt is picturesque, so I don't mind.
Milan is marvellous, picturesque, and full of elegance.
It is not enough to photograph the obviously picturesque.
This is the beauty of Rajasthan; everything is so picturesque.
Pioneers may be picturesque figures, but they are often rather lonely ones.
Fanatics are picturesque, mankind would rather see gestures than listen to reasons.
Detroit's industrial ruins are picturesque, like crumbling Rome in an 18th-century etching.
Bali is the sort of place where you can walk down the street and find something picturesque.
Poverty, to be picturesque, should be rural. Suburban misery is as hideous as it is pitiable.
Lapped in poetry, wrapped in the picturesque, armed with logical sentences and inalienable words.
The language of excitement is at best picturesque merely. You must be calm before you can utter oracles.
To the real artist in humanity, what are called bad manners are often the most picturesque and significant of all.
There is no picturesque version of what self-care looks like; it's different for every person who wants to practice it.
Perhaps no country in Latin America is more picturesque than Bolivia, and the most memorable Bolivian city may be Potosi.
I have been to the South several times. The picturesque locations were a real treat for the eyes and I also love the culture.
You have here In New York one of the greatest and most picturesque and artistic structures in the world. I mean the Brooklyn Bridge.
I live in my house as I live inside my skin: I know more beautiful, more ample, more sturdy and more picturesque skins: but it would seem to me unnatural to exchange them for mine.
The old world of England was picturesque and safe in a way that L.A. wasn't, but it was so amazingly socially cruel. I had never experienced that in America - never in school, nowhere.
The landlord of colonial days may not have been the greatest man in town, but he was certainly the best-known, often the most popular, and ever the most picturesque and cheerful figure.
Scotland is a picturesque country where the people are friendly yet completely incomprehensible. Also, the national delicacy is a sheep's stomach filled with its liver, lungs, and heart.
Los Angeles is a weird mixture of every influence that Europe has dropped in its melting pot. It is hot, arid, picturesque, seething, banal, sometimes plain pleasant, and sometimes awesome.
Arles is certainly one of the most interesting towns I have ever seen, whether viewed as a place remarkable for the objects of antiquity it contains, or for the primitive manners of its inhabitants and its picturesque appearance.
The Southern whites are in many respects a great people. Looked at from a certain point of view, they are picturesque. If one will put oneself in a romantic frame of mind, one can admire their notions of chivalry and bravery and justice.
The American people want something terse, forcible, picturesque, striking - something that will arrest their attention, enlist their sympathy, arouse their indignation, stimulate their imagination, convince their reason, awaken their conscience.
In these days of our new materialistic Irish state, poetry will have a harder, less picturesque task. But the loss of Yeats and all that boundless activity, in a country where the mind is feared and avoided, leaves a silence which it is painful to contemplate.
Some say that sudden knowledge of mystical matters is accomplished only in complete quietude, or that Creator, in one of God's many forms, appears only in orderly ways that are beauteous and picturesque, or that the mystical appears only in completely silent ways. All are true. Except for the 'only' part.
The classic French blanch-and-cool technique I learned at Chez Panisse yields the kind of brilliant, picturesque vegetables we all want to see on restaurant plates. Long-cooked foods, on the other hand, fall firmly into the 'ugly but good' camp of the Tuscan cucina povera, where flavor far outshines looks.