You lost your son, but reality he is alive, my father I lost him I know on 99% he is dead if this is faken okay, I will know that he is alive, but who knows?? I haven't met him after I lost him, you met your son didn't you?? And then you lost him, it sounds fair does it?? (Storm Of The Century by Stephen King).
— Deyth BangerDoes it matter how long they were together that night? To lovers, an hour can last a century. But even for lovers, every hour ends.
— Scott Snyder16th century advertisements cannot market 21st century products. Look for what is necessary at the present moment.
— Israelmore AyivorAfter Homer and Dante, is a whole century of creating worth one Shakespeare?
— Dejan StojanovicEverything has happen, will happen and it's going to happen in one moment. There isn't even and time, time is an illusion - get it?? It even doesn't exist, I'm here now, but even the word 'now' doesn't exist. Everything has happen in one day, but people prefer to have some kind a time like day, date, year, century and time (under time, hours, minutes, seconds and so on and so on). Because you should know when you did that if you said in under one day it's kind a...
— Deyth BangerCentury was an occasional thing in cricket, Sachin made it frequent.
— Amit KalantriTo jump over centuries In one step is impossible. Jump too high or far, You’ll be way too late.
— Dejan StojanovicThe century of airplanes has a right to its own music.
— Claude DebussySumone Yiden Smiff was a businessman of note. Was, past tense. Through years of sweat and swearing and amazingly smart (or lucky) deals he’d built up a mining empire that spanned the sum of known space. At 74 years, he had reached the apex of a career stretching half a century. His companies mined precious commodities like Impervium, Obstinatium and Bitanium. He wasn’t really famous, or ostentatious. In fact he only ever made the cover of Fortune One Billion once, twenty-five years ago. He’d never married, had lots of children – light-years apart, apparently.
— Christina EngelaThe nineteenth century believed in science but the twentieth century does not.
— Gertrude Stein