Makayla MacGregor > Makayla's Quotes

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  • #1
    Claudia Gray
    “People are more than their worst act.”
    Claudia Gray, Master and Apprentice

  • #2
    Arthur Golden
    “But now I know that our world is no more permanent than a wave rising on the ocean. Whatever our struggles and triumphs, however we may suffer them, all too soon they bleed into a wash, just like watery ink on paper.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #3
    “Don't you think he may be pursuing an ideal that is hidden in a cloud of unknowing — like an astronomer looking for a star that only a mathematical calculation tells him exists?”
    William Somerset Maugham, The Razor's Edge

  • #4
    Emily Henry
    “Maybe it's possible to belong in a hundred different ways to a hundred different people and places.”
    Emily Henry, Book Lovers

  • #5
    George Eliot
    “But, my dear Mrs. Casaubon,' said Mr. Farebrother, smiling gently at her ardour, 'character is not cut in marble — it is not something solid and unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become diseased as our bodies do.'
    'Then it may be rescued and healed,' said Dorothea.”
    George Eliot, Middlemarch

  • #6
    Maggie O'Farrell
    “She walks back, more slowly, the way she came. How odd it feels, to move along the same streets, the route in reverse, like inking over old words, her feet the quill, going back over work, rewriting, erasing. Partings are strange. It seems so simple: one minute ago, four, five, he was here, at her side; now, he is gone. She was with him; she is alone. She feels exposed, chill, peeled like an onion.”
    Maggie O'Farrell, Hamnet

  • #7
    Paul Bogard
    “I don't want fear so strong that I am incapacitated. But there is fear that comes from being attentive enough that you realize there is life greater than you, life that was here before you and will be after.”
    Paul Bogard, The End of Night: Searching for Natural Darkness in an Age of Artificial Light by Paul Bogard

  • #8
    George Eliot
    “Within ourselves our evil will is momentous, and sooner or later it works its way outside us—it may be in the vitiation that breeds evil acts, but also it may be in the self-abhorrence that stings us into better striving.”
    George Eliot, Daniel Deronda



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