Marilyn Monroe
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What good am I? I can't have kids. I can't cook. I've been divorced three times. Who would want me?
Quote by Marilyn Monroe
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Marilyn Monroe Quotes
If there is only one thing in my life that I am proud of, it's that I've never been a kept woman.
What's the good of drawing in the next breath if all you do is let it out and draw in another?
I guess I have always been deeply terrified to really be someone's wife since I know from life one cannot love another, ever, really.
When it comes to gossip, I have to readily admit men are as guilty as women.
If your man is a sports enthusiast, you may have to resign yourself to his spouting off in a monotone on a prize fight, football game or pennant race.
I don't know if high society is different in other cities, but in Hollywood, important people can't stand to be invited someplace that isn't full of other important people. They don't mind a few unfamous people being present because they make good listeners.
If you spend your life competing with business men, what do you have? A bank account and ulcers!
I used to think as I looked out on the Hollywood night, 'There must be thousands of girls sitting alone like me dreaming of being a movie star.' But I'm not going to worry about them. I'm dreaming the hardest.
Someday I want to have children and give them all the love I never had.
Having a child, that's always been my biggest fear. I want a child and I fear a child.
Best Quotes
Politics are a very unsatisfactory game.
American youth attributes much more importance to arriving at driver's license age than at voting age.
I'm not particularly a feminist, but if you get women off the animal cycle of reproduction and give them some say in how many children they'll have, immediately the floor will rise.
I played by the rules of politics as I found them.
Habit is a second nature that destroys the first. But what is nature? Why is habit not natural? I am very much afraid that nature itself is only a first habit, just as habit is a second nature.
The confidence in another man's virtue is no light evidence of a man's own, and God willingly favors such a confidence.
God can help man solve all man's problems except man.
God made man to go by motives, and he will not go without them, any more than a boat without steam or a balloon without gas.
It is more agreeable to have the power to give than to receive.
The harder you work, the harder it is to surrender.
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