Quotes about master
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“Should I eat first or accuse the Master of the City of murder? Choices, choices. -Anita”
Source: Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series, Danse Macabre (2006), Chapter 1, pp. 4-5
Context: [Talking to friend Veronica, Anita Blake worries she may be pregnant. ]
Ronnie: I could ask, who's the father, but that's just creepy. If you are, then it's this little tiny, microscopic lump of cells. It's not a baby. It's not a person, not yet.
Anita: We'll have to disagree on that one.
Ronnie: You're pro-choice.
Anita: Yep, I am, but I also believe that abortion is taking a life. I agree women have the right to choose, but I also think that it's still taking a life.
Ronnie: That's like saying you're pro-choice and pro-life. You can't be both.
Anita: I'm pro-choice because I've never been a fourteen-year-old incest victim pregnant by her father, or a woman who's going to die if the pregnancy continues, or a rape victim, or even a teenager who made a mistake. I want women to have choices, but I also believe that it's a life, especially once it's big enough to live outside the womb.
Source: Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Mind's Eye: Writings on Photography and Photographers

“The Artist always has the masters in his eyes.”
Source: Pleasure of a Dark Prince
“Your master plan has holes big enough to drive a truck through.”
Source: Magic Slays

“Once you have mastered a technique, you barely have to look at a recipe again”
Source: Julia's Kitchen Wisdom: Essential Techniques and Recipes from a Lifetime of Cooking

“Difficulties mastered are opportunities won.”

Illusions : The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah (1977)

“Truth is a hard master, and costly to serve, but it simplifies all problems.”

Greatness
1870s, Society and Solitude (1870), Books, Letters and Social Aims http://www.rwe.org/comm/index.php?option=com_content&task=category§ionid=5&id=74&Itemid=149 (1876)
“The first step towards mastering time is always to make time meaningless”

“We are masters of the unsaid words, but slaves of those we let slip out.”
Quoted in Words of Wisdom: Winston Churchill, Students’ Academy, Lulu Press (2014), Section Three : ISBN 1312396598
Post-war years (1945–1955)
“Waiting. Like it or not, it's a skill all spies have to master eventually.”
Source: Out of Sight, Out of Time

“He that is taught only by himself has a fool for a master.”

“I'd never seen a man who could outshop me, but Jenks was a master.”
Source: A Fistful of Charms

“The mind is a wonderful servant, but a terrible master.”

“Money. It's a good servant but a bad master.”
Source: The Happiness Project: Or Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun

“A nation which can prefer disgrace to danger is prepared for a master, and deserves one.”
Letter to the Daily Advertiser http://books.google.com/books?ei=dUcWTpuaHsT0gAfPpeEL&ct=result&dq=&jtp=245&id=x5q-cszpoPYC&ots=j0QS9L0jfK#v=onepage&q&f=false (21 February 1797)
Source: Secrets of a Summer Night

Source: Death by Black Hole - And Other Cosmic Quandaries
Source: The Walk

Skinny Legs and All (1990)
Context: ... she recreated the mountains not as she had originally seen them but as she eventually chose to perceive them, not only a capacity to observe the world but a capacity to alter his or her observation of it — which, in the end, is the capacity to alter the world, itself. Those people who recognise that imagination is reality's master, we call "sages," and those who act upon it, we call "artists."

“The master's tools will never dismantle the master's house.”
essay "The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House", in Sister Outsider

Quote c. 1902, in Racontars d'un Rapin, Paul Gauguin; as quoted in 'Introduction' of Camille Pissarro - Letters to His Son Lucien, ed. John Rewald, with assistance of Lucien Pissarro – (translated from the unpublished French letters by Lionel Abel); Pantheon Books Inc. New York, second edition, 1943, p. 15
After Paul Cezanne it was Gauguin who came to ask advice and painted landscape at the side of the much elder Pissarro. The traces of this apprenticeship as an impressionist were soon to disappear from Gauguin's works, but shortly before he died, he wrote these sentences about his former teacher
1890s - 1910s
“But the Harp called out quite loud: Master! Master!”
English Fairy Tales (1890), Preface to English Fairy Tales, Jack and the Beanstalk

Zen: Dawn in the West (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1980), p. 83.

Song lyrics, Biograph (1985), Up to Me (recorded 1974)

“Esteem money neither more nor less than it deserves, it is a good servant and a bad master.”
N'estime l'argent ni plus ni moins qu'il ne vaut: c'est un bon serviteur et un mauvais maître.
Preface to Théatre complet de Al. Dumas fils (Paris: Michel Lévy Frères, 1863) vol. 1, p. 4; translation from Ernest Smith Fields of Adventure (Boston: Small, Maynard, 1924) p. 99.

Talcott Parsons (1968) "Systems Analysis: Social Systems" in: David L. Sills ed. International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. p. 472

As quoted in Planet Savers : 301 Extraordinary Environmentalists (2008) by Kevin Desmond, p. 248
1990s

Source: 1961 - 1980, transcript of a public forum at Boston university', conducted by Joseph Ablow 1966, pp. 68/69

“That master of arts, that dispenser of genius, the Belly.”
Magister artis ingenique largitor<br/>venter.
Prologue, line 10.
The Satires
Quantum Profiles (1991), John Stewart Bell: Quantum Engineer

The Secret of Efficient Expression (1911)

Abhinaya and Netrābhinaya
Source: p. 21 http://www.google.co.in/books?id=O_U7AAAAMAAJ&dq=mani+madhava&q=mani+madhava&pgis=1#search Natya, Bharatiya Natya Sangh, 1962.

letter to the Abbés Chalut and Arnaud (17 April 1787).
Epistles

On Juche in Our Revolution vol. 2 (1977)
Source: Journal, p. 29

Quote about the future challenges that industrial society faced due to the societal catastrophe, which was considered to be 20 to 50 years away. Cited in: Ian Murray (1972) " Workers told of peril of technology http://www.kwilliam-kapp.de/pdf/Kapp%20in%20NYT%2072.pdf". In: The Times, April 16, 1972

1960s, State of the Union Address (1966)
Source: Sirius (1944), Chapter XII Farmer Sirius (an answer to Plaxy's rant about democracy).
"Now That's What I Call Toxic!," http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/obsidian_wings/2009/02/now-thats-what-i-call-toxic.html Obsidian Wings (2009-02-27)

1960s, State of the Union Address (1966)