Kay > Kay's Quotes

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  • #1
    Kay Thorpe
    “Her cheeks burned afresh at the memory of that final night before
    her departure from Sibu. She had gone to his berth out in the
    saloon and pleaded with him to let her stay—sinking every last
    vestige of pride in her desperation to be with him. Only he hadn't
    cared. He'd told her roughly to get back to her cabin and stop
    making a fool of herself. Next time he needed a woman, he had
    said, he would make sure it was one and not some silly little girl
    with romantic notions.”
    Kay Thorpe, Jungle Island

  • #2
    “Last night there was intermittent rain, a gusty wind.
    Deep sleep did not relieve me of
    The last effects of wine.
    I ask the maid rolling up the blinds,
    But she replies: "The crab-apple is lovely as before."
    "Don't you know?"
    "Oh, don't you know?"
    "The green should be plump and the red lean?”
    Li Qing Zhao

  • #3
    “Spring returns to my lonely chamber,
    Once more spring grass is lush and green.
    Some red plum blossoms are open,
    Others have yet to bloom.
    I grind tea bricks into fine jade powder
    In a pot carved with azure clouds,
    Still under the spell of the morning's dream,
    Till all of a sudden I am woken
    By a jug of spring.
    Flower shadows press at the double gate,
    Pale moonlight silvers the translucent curtains.
    A beautiful evening!
    Three times in two years
    We've missed the spring.
    Come back without further ado
    And let's enjoy our fill of this spring!”
    Li Qing Zhao

  • #4
    “Stepping down from the swing,
    Languidly she smooths her soft slender hands,
    Her flimsy dress wet with light perspiration
    A slim flower trembling with heavy dew.
    Spying a stranger, she walks hastily away in shyness:
    Her feet in bare socks,
    Her gold hairpin fallen.
    Then she stops to lean against a gate,
    And looking back,
    Makes as if sniffing a green plum”
    Li Qing Zhao

  • #5
    Rania al-Abdullah
    “We can spend out lives letting others dictate our narrative, and cast ourselves as the victims. Or we can realize the truth: that we are the creators of our own story.”
    Queen Rania of Jordan Al Abdullah

  • #6
    Elizabeth Peters
    “No woman really wants a man to carry her off; she only wants him to want to do it.”
    Elizabeth Peters

  • #7
    Jean S. MacLeod
    “I never use the word 'sex' in my novels - that is not what romance is about. It's about love and emotion. All my stories were different but they all had a happy ending - the perfect finish to any romance.”
    Jean S. MacLeod

  • #8
    Helen Brooks
    “And a man who is stupid enough to let you slip through his fingers does not deserve you anyway.”
    Helen Brooks , In the Italian's Sights



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