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| Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
| e9c5cf9 | As I say--it's not the plague. It's this new illness. They call it the sweating sickness, a new plague that King | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 2161b37 | pure beauty, shining among the other girls | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 48c496b | When you raise a child and he becomes a man, you start to think that he is safe, | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 7355e88 | how it is that men, even thoughtful men, can sound as if they never consider anything but always simply know. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 9c5beb8 | We are two women who have recognised that we cannot control the world. We are players in this game but we do not choose our own moves. The men will play us for their own desires. All we can do is try to survive whatever happens next. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 1f50e68 | I am going to be Queen of England,' I protest. 'You make it sound like a battle to the death.' 'It is a battle to the death,' she says simply. 'That is what it means to be Queen of England. You are not Melusina, rising from a fountain to easy happiness. You will not be a beautiful woman at court with nothing to do but make magic. The road you have chosen will mean that you have to spend your life scheming and fighting. Our task, as your fam.. | historical romance war | Philippa Gregory | |
| 2b0a534 | man will always promise more than he can do to a woman he cannot understand. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 48ae9f6 | In America the quirk was that people were things. Best to cut your losses on an old man who won't survive a trip across the ocean. A young buck from strong tribal stock got customers into a froth. A slave girl squeezing out pups was like a mint, money that bred money. If you were a thing--a cart or a horse or a slave--your value determined your possibilities. She minded her place. | Colson Whitehead | ||
| f0f4e97 | What was his coward's way out? when the doors of the church open, and I have to walk forwards and take the hand of my new husband, and stand before a priest and swear to be a wife. I feel his big hand take mine and I hear his deep voice answer the questions, where I just whisper. He pushes a heavy ring of Welsh gold on my finger, and I have to hold my fingers together like a little paw to keep it on. It is far too big for me. I look up at h.. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| dc52a85 | Gwyneth looks at me. "What does it say?" she asks. "Nothing," I say. The lie comes to my mouth so swiftly that it must have been put there by God to help me, and therefore it does not count as a lie at all." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 4b3b8ba | For a moment out eyes meet, but we exchange nothing except a grim determination to get this parting over, to get this exile under way, to keep this precious boy safe. I suppose that Jasper is the only man whom I have loved, perhaps he is the only man whom I will ever love. But there has never been time for words of love between us: we have spent most of our time saying good-bye. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| ed986f0 | she taught me that there is nothing in the world more powerful than a woman who knows what she wants and walks a straight road towards it. "It doesn't matter if you call it magic or determination. It doesn't matter if you make a spell or a plot. You have to make up your mind what you want, and have the courage to set your heart on it." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| bad418e | Walk through your sorrow, my daughter, it hardly matters as long as you walk to where you want to be. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| b50658f | I am a woman with water in her veins and power in her breeding. I am a woman who makes things happen, and I am not defeated yet. I am not defeated by a boy with a newly won crown, and no man will ever walk away from me certain that he won't walk back. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| b617e35 | she was a water goddess who came out of the river to marry the first duke, but she couldn't be a mortal woman. She comes back to cry for the loss of her children." "And when have you heard her?" "The night that my baby sister died. I heard something. And I knew at once that it was Melusina." "But how did you know it was her?" the other maid whispers, afraid of being excluded from the conversation. I shrug, and Joan smiles in recognition of .. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| cb20479 | She would have come to me if she could, she would have blessed this baby as she blessed all the others. I had a hard confinement without her here and I expect to miss her for the rest of my life. This baby came into the world just as my mother left it, and so I am naming her for my mother. And I can tell you this-I am absolutely sure that a Tudor Elizabeth is going to be one of the greatest monarchs that England has ever seen. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 039f277 | Now I understand Isabel's slavish loyalty to George. Now I understand the passionate bond between the king and the queen. Now I even understand the queen's mother Jacquetta dying of heartbreak at the loss of the man she married for love. I learn that to love a man whose interests are mine, whose passion is given freely and openly to me, and whose battle-hardened young lithe body lies beside me every night as his only joy, is to utterly chan.. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| be5cf00 | counsels. "And never tell anyone that you spoke to me. And be sure that I will never confess it." "Dear" | Philippa Gregory | ||
| a66429b | D'you think I can't write this and get someone-a drunk married to a fool -to swear to it? Do you think I can't sey up as historian? As storyteller? D'you think I can't write a history which years from now everyone will believe as the truth? I am the king. Who shall write the record of my reign if not me? 'You can say anything you like' I say levelly. 'Of course you can. You're King of England. But it doesn't make it true. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| cf29923 | There will be a child, but no child. There will be a king but no king. There will be a virgin queen all-forgotten. There will be a queen but no virgin. ["And Lord Robert Dudley?" he whispered.] "He will have the making of a prince who will change the history of the world," I whispered in reply. And he will die, beloved by a queen, safe in his bed." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 908d17b | Twelfth night, of all the nights of the year, is one where shapes shift and identities flicker. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| e2560e2 | All this is always for nothing," he says. "Don't you understand that yet? Every death is a pointless death; every battle should have been avoided." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 48978d7 | all that I learn just teaches me that I know nothing. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 2c1723a | She doesn't realize yet though men go to war it is the women who suffer--perhaps more than anyone. | war women | Philippa Gregory | |
| 2678558 | She tried to live like an ordinary woman; but some women cannot live an ordinary life. She tried to walk in the common ways; but some women cannot put their feet to that path. This is a man's world, Jacquetta, and some women cannot march to the beat of a man's drum. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 2f63366 | For a moment our eyes meet, but we exchange nothing except a grim determination to get this parting over, to get this exile underway, to keep this precious boy safe. I suppose that Jasper is the only man that I have loved, perhaps he is the only man that I will ever love. But there has never been time for words of love between us, we have spent most of our time saying goodbye. | love royal tudor | Philippa Gregory | |
| 3eeaa61 | There is nothing but the gleam of mysterious light--not dawn and yet not starlight--where the unlit earth meets the night-black sky, and the only sound is the haunting call of the owls. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| c41b498 | Once more, I am watching the most powerful men in the kingdom bring their power to bear on a woman who has done nothing worse than live to the beat of her own heart, see with her own eyes; but this is not their tempo nor their vision, and they cannot tolerate any other. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 2ddbe1a | This is a woman who has not been tamed to be as others want; she has not been cut down to fit her circumstances. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 4061e83 | These were simple people: when someone told them that they had nothing to fear they knew that they were in trouble. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 585c579 | We would never meet. I would never have to see them. They were a life I had left behind. I could cut myself in two and say: "That was the old life, the old life with her; it is gone now, all gone." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 98c0683 | She tried to live like an ordinary woman, but some women cannot live an ordinary life. She tried to walk in the common ways, but some women cannot put their feet to that path. This is a man's world, Jacquetta, and some women cannot march to the beat of a man's drum. Do you understand? | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 738a4ab | I assure him swiftly. 'There is | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 7a4adf7 | Ne postoji nista sto covek moze uciniti nego da podnosi. Mozete besneti ili mozete plakati, ali na kraju cete nauciti kako to podnosti. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 00b4d96 | A man and a woman can love each other so deeply that their hearts beat as if they were one heart, and yet, at the same time, know that they are utterly hopelessly different. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| 1e3edf1 | No," I said. "I don't think I'll ever have a fancy for a man." "Hard luck on the man who loves you," Will offered neutrally. "Very," I said. I shot a sideways look at him. "A disaster for the man who loves me," I repeated. "If he married me he would find me always cold. If he did not, he could waste his life in loving me and I would never return it." | Philippa Gregory | ||
| c9be014 | basket | Philippa Gregory | ||
| cba6ebb | your sisters are the keepers of your memories and hopes for the future. | Philippa Gregory | ||
| e4ba085 | Mark Twain: "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do." This" | Elizabeth Dunn | ||
| ac96125 | We should also point out the significance of the fact that Jesus' ministry differed so markedly in character from that expected of the Coming One by the Baptist. Why should Jesus so fully ignore the prophetic expectation of one so obviously inspired (cf. Mark 11.30) ? Why did Jesus not see his ministry in terms of judgment? How came he to be so selective in his use of OT prophecy? The most obvious answer is that he had found God in his own .. | James D.G. Dunn | ||
| 7e7d69e | The objection by Dibelius is a weighty one. But since Strauss it has not been uncommon to argue that certain sayings of Jesus have been elaborated into narratives - as for example, the stilling of the storm (Mark 4.35-41, pars.), the miraculous catch of fishes (Luke 5.1-11), and perhaps the cursing of the fig tree (Mark II.12-14 par.).114 If this is a real possibility, how much more likely is it that the (Markan) account of Jesus' experienc.. | James D.G. Dunn | ||
| e5b97b2 | Slipped beneath the minnow Pea front door] Nollopton Monty No-way 6 Insane woman named Ella: Retreat is what we want. Go away. Let we alone. Anonymess | resistance-is-futile | Mark Dunn | |
| fdb1f69 | All present life is but an interjection, An "Oh!" or "Ah!" of joy or misery Or a "Ha, ha!" or "Bah!"--a yawn, or "Pooh!" Of which perhaps the latter is most true. --LORD BYRON" | Mark Dunn | ||
| b2c3c68 | For the present, it is easier for us to turn away. Our repulsion, you see, will not spur us to revolt until this plague moves much closer to home. | revolt | Mark Dunn |