Howards End
Rate it:
Read between November 24 - November 25, 2020
3%
Flag icon
Like many others who have lived long in a great capital, she had strong feelings about the various railway termini.  They are our gates to the glorious and the unknown.  Through them we pass out into adventure and sunshine, to them alas!  we return.  In Paddington all Cornwall is latent and the remoter west; down the inclines of Liverpool Street lie fenlands and the illimitable Broads; Scotland is through the pylons of Euston; Wessex behind the poised chaos of Waterloo.
3%
Flag icon
To Margaret--I hope that it will not set the reader against her--the station of King's Cross had always suggested Infinity.  Its very situation--withdrawn a little behind the facile splendours of St. Pancras--implied a comment on the materialism of life.  Those two great arches, colourless, indifferent, shouldering between them an unlovely clock, were fit portals for some eternal adventure, whose issue might be prosperous, but would certainly not be expressed in the ordinary language of prosperity.
10%
Flag icon
To trust people is a luxury in which only the wealthy can indulge; the poor cannot afford it.
37%
Flag icon
"It is sad to suppose that places may ever be more important than people," continued Margaret.     "Why, Meg?  They're so much nicer generally.  I'd rather think of that forester's house in Pomerania than of the fat Herr Förstmeister who lived in it."     "I believe we shall come to care about people less and less, Helen.  The more people one knows the easier it becomes to replace them.  It's one of the curses of London.  I quite expect to end my life caring most for a place."
41%
Flag icon
What is the good of your stars and trees, your sunrise and the wind, if they do not enter into our daily lives?  They have never entered into mine, but into yours, we thought--Haven't we all to struggle against life's daily greyness, against pettiness, against mechanical cheerfulness, against suspicion?  I struggle by remembering my friends; others I have known by remembering some place--some beloved place or tree--we thought you one of these."
53%
Flag icon
If a man cannot lead up to passion he can at all events lead down from it, and she had hoped, after her complaisance, for some interchange of gentle words.
69%
Flag icon
Are the sexes really races, each with its own code of morality, and their mutual love a mere device of Nature to keep things going?  Strip human intercourse of the proprieties, and is it reduced to this?  Her judgment told her no.  She knew that out of Nature's device we have built a magic that will win us immortality.  Far more mysterious than the call of sex to sex is the tenderness that we throw into that call; far wider is the gulf between us and the farmyard than between the farm-yard and the garbage that nourishes it.