A Quote by Anchee Min

When Chinese get together - what's buried stays buried. We don't even discuss our embarrassing early days struggling in Chicago. — © Anchee Min
When Chinese get together - what's buried stays buried. We don't even discuss our embarrassing early days struggling in Chicago.
Buried was the bloody hatchet; Buried was the dreadful war-club; Buried were all warlike weapons, And the war-cry was forgotten. Then was peace among the nations.
You know, I'll always be your slave 'til I'm buried, buried in my grave.
In the dust where we have buried the silent races and their abominations we have buried so much of the delicate magic of life.
The dog of your boyhood teaches you a great deal about friendship, and love, and death: Old Skip was my brother. They had buried him under our elm tree, they said-yet this wasn't totally true. For he really lay buried in my heart.
The past is dead and buried. But I know now that buried things have a way of rising to the surface when one least expects them to.
I buried Little Ann by the side of Old Dan. I knew that was where she wanted to be. I also buried a part of my life along with my dog.
There is a lot of history buried in Chicago that I still have yet to discover.
Where I feel the most productive and engaged is when I'm buried in code, buried in some project, tweaking some designs. I'm certainly introverted.
The only thing that walks back from the tomb with the mourners and refuses to be buried is the character of a man. This is true. What a man is, survives him. It can never be buried.
I buried my dad the day I started Craig David's tour. Buried him, got on this tour bus in Stratford, and hit the road. Mixed emotions.
What makes a date so dreadful is the weight of expectation attached to it. There is every chance that you may meet your soulmate, get married, have children and be buried side by side. There is an equal chance that the person you meet will look as if they've already been buried for some time.
I've arranged with my executor to be buried in Chicago. Because when I die, I want to still remain active politically.
It's very inconvenient because every time I finish, let's say, a chapter of a book, I think I'm going to ring Richard and then realize: Oh, Christ, I've buried him. I buried him last year.
If something is buried in the past, leave it buried. . . . Such dwelling on past lives, including past mistakes, is just not right! It is not the gospel of Jesus Christ. . . . In cases of marriage and family, . . . we can end up destroying so many others.
The one thing that could never die or be buried was my loyalty to Cameron for everything he’d done for me and what we’d been through together, even if that loyalty was a ghost.
As time passes, the actual complexity of our history - even of our own personal experience - gets buried under the weight of the ideal image.
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