A Quote by Nicholas Sparks

Little girls. They could melt the toughest hearts. — © Nicholas Sparks
Little girls. They could melt the toughest hearts.
Melt their weapons, melt their hearts, melt their anger with love.
There are girls, not specially beautiful, whom you could not lose in a crowd. There are other girls, apparently perfect in beauty, who seem to melt into insignificance.
The girl she said, I didn’t tell you this because it was a small thing, but little girls, they leave their hearts at home when they walk outside. Hearts are so precious. They don’t want to lose them.
Why did the little girls grow crippled While the little boys grow strong The boys allowed to come of age The girls just came along The girls were told sing harmonies The boys could all sing songs That's why little girls grew crippled While little boys grew strong.
The toughest guys have the biggest hearts. The biggest hearts - because they have to be tough to protect it.
Being a good artist is the toughest job you could pick, and you have to be a little nuts to take it on.
Hearts may break, but hearts are the toughest of muscles, able to pump for a lifetime, seventy times a minute, and scarcely falter along the way. Even dreams, the most delicate and intangible of things, can prove remarkably difficult to kill.
If we could learn even a little to like ourselves, maybe our cruelties and angers might melt away.
I think my mom put it best. She said, 'Little girls soften their daddy's hearts.'
I can't say no to my girls. They melt my heart. I'm very grateful for my family.
Good-looking girls break hearts, and goodhearted girls mend them.
It is agreed that little girls should have a different physical education than little boys, but it is not admitted how much of the difference is counseled by the conviction that little girls should not look like little boys.
Girls! Girls! Those of you who have hearts, and therefore a wish for happiness, homes and husbands by and by, never develop a reputation for being clever.
I thought you were her knight, but you have become only her woodsman--taking little girls into the forest to cut out their hearts.
Expecting to be able to get rid of the competitive drive, first of all, flies in the face of human nature - and little girls certainly have this drive, as much as little boys do, or at least the little girls I have observed in my immediate family have it.
Part of why I wrote my book was so that we could focus on the structural and systemic reasons behind social misery. Changed hearts and minds are important. But they do little against the backdrop of a system that needs to exploit people and labor to survive. I'm more interested in changed systems than changed hearts.
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