Louise McMillan > Louise's Quotes

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  • #1
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Facts are the soil from which the story grows. Imagination is a last resort.”
    Dorothy Dunnett

  • #2
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “I would give you my soul in a blackberry pie; and a knife to cut it with.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #3
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “I wish to God,” said Gideon with mild exasperation, “that you’d talk—just once—in prose like other people.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #4
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “[Robin Stewart] was your man. True for you, you had withdrawn the crutch from his sight, but still it should have been there in your hand, ready for him. For you are a leader-don't you know it? I don't, surely, need to tell you?-And that is what leadership means. It means fortifying the fainthearted and giving them the two sides of your tongue while you are at it. It means suffering weak love and schooling it till it matures. It means giving up you privicies, your follies and your leasure. It means you can love nothing and no one too much, or you are no longer a leader, you are led.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Queens' Play

  • #5
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Jerott, for God’s sake! Are you doing this for a wager?’ said Lymond, his patience gone at last. ‘What does anyone want out of life? What kind of freak do you suppose I am? I miss books and good verse and decent talk. I miss women, to speak to, not to rape; and children, and men creating things instead of destroying them. And from the time I wake until the time I find I can’t go to sleep there is the void—the bloody void where there was no music today and none yesterday and no prospect of any tomorrow, or tomorrow, or next God-damned year.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #6
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “For an hour, blended with all she could offer, something noble had been created which had nothing to do with the physical world. And from the turn of his throat, the warmth of his hair, the strong, slender sinews of his hands, something further; which had. Though she combed the earth and searched through the smoke of the galaxies there was no being she wanted but this, who was not and should not be for Philippa Somerville.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Checkmate

  • #7
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “It was one of the occasions when Lymond asleep wrecked the peace of mind of more people than Lymond awake.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Queens' Play

  • #8
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “And the English army, wheeling, started south at a gallop over the hill pass into Ettrick, followed by twenty men and eight hundred sheep in steel helmets.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #9
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Versatility is one of the few human traits which are universally intolerable. You may be good at Greek and good at painting and be popular. You may be good at Greek and good at sport, and be wildly popular. But try all three and you’re a mountebank. Nothing arouses suspicion quicker than genuine, all-round proficiency.”

    Kate thought. “It needs an extra gift for human relationships, of course; but that can be developed. It’s got to be, because stultified talent is surely the ultimate crime against mankind. Tell your paragons to develop it: with all those gifts it’s only right they should have one hurdle to cross.”

    “But that kind of thing needs co-operation from the other side,” said Lymond pleasantly. “No. Like Paris, they have three choices.” And he struck a gently derisive chord between each. “To be accomplished but ingratiating. To be accomplished but resented. Or to hide behind the more outré of their pursuits and be considered erratic but harmless.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #10
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Kate viewed him suspiciously. “I don’t see why I should abandon my entertainment because of your conscience.”

    “It isn’t quite conscience so much as horrified admiration,” said Lymond.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #11
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “I am telling you now that you did right with Robin Stewart and I am telling you that the error you made came later, when you took no heed of his call. It was too late then, I know it. But he should have been in your mind. He was your man. True for you, you had withdrawn the crutch from his sight, but still it should have been there in your hand, ready for him. For you are a leader—don’t you know it? I don’t, surely, need to tell you?—And that is what leadership means. It means fortifying the fainthearted and giving them the two sides of your tongue while you are at it. It means suffering weak love and schooling it till it matures. It means giving up your privacies, your follies and your leisure. It means you can love nothing and no one too much, or you are no longer a leader, you are the led.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Queens' Play

  • #12
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “I prize freedom of the mind above freedom of the body.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #13
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “ ‘I’m fairly bursting tae ken how ye guessed I spoke Scots?’ Lymond looked up. Superficial pain, withstood or ignored for quite a long time, had made his eyes heavy, but they were brimming with laughter. ‘Well, God,’ he said. ‘In the water, you were roaring your head off at a bloody bull elephant called Hughie.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Queens' Play

  • #14
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “And if there’s no trouble, you’ll make it,’ offered Will Scott, his eyes bright, his cheeks red. ‘No. At the moment,’ affirmed Lymond grimly, ‘I am having truck with nothing less than total calamity.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #15
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Lymond said quietly, ‘You had good reason to hate me. I always understood that. I don’t know why you should think differently now, but take care. Don’t build up another false image. I may be the picturesque sufferer now, but when I have the whip-hold, I shall behave quite as crudely, or worse. I have no pretty faults. Only, sometimes, a purpose.’ He paused, and said, ‘Est conformis precedenti. I owe the Somervilles rather a lot already.’ Philippa’s unwinking brown gaze flickered shiftily at the Latin and then steadied.

    'I should have told you before. You don’t mind?’

    ‘If you had told me before, you might not have decided to have me for a friend. I don’t mind,’ said Francis Crawford and told, for once, the bare truth.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #16
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “When you ran that roof race with me you started with one stocking marked, a loose row of bullion on your hoqueton, and your hair needing a cut. Your manners, social and personal, derive directly from the bakehouse; your living quarters, any time I have seen them, have been untidy and ill-cleaned. In the swordplay just now you cut consistently to the left, a habit so remarkable that you must have been warned time and again; and you cannot parry a coup de Jarnac. I tried you with the same feint for it three times tonight.... These are professional matters, Robin. To succeed as you want, you have to be precise; you have to have polish; you have to carry polish and precision in everything you do. You have no time to sigh over seigneuries and begrudge other people their gifts. Lack of genius never held anyone back,' said Lymond. 'Only time wasted on resentment and daydreaming can do that. You never did work with your whole brain and your whole body at being an Archer; and you ended neither soldier nor seigneur, but a dried-out huddle of grudges strung cheek to cheek on a withy.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Queens' Play

  • #17
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Not to every young girl is it given to enter the harem of the Sultan of Turkey and return to her homeland a virgin.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Ringed Castle

  • #18
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Nobody ever,” said the Dowager sorrowfully, “credits me with normal thought processes. When a mysterious man creates a royal scandal on the banks of the Lake of Menteith with the keenest ears in Scotland strolling utterly oblivious—by her own account—in the locality, I begin to wonder. I also wonder when a delicately reared child sends a court into fits with a riddle which I invented myself.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #19
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “A Scott, having got his bride pregnant, was apt to file her as completed business for eight months at a time.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #20
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “Once, long ago, Francis Crawford had reduced her to terror and, the episode over, she had suffered to find that for Kate, apparently, no reason suggested itself against making that same Francis Crawford her friend. He was not Philippa’s friend. She had made that clear, and, to be fair, he had respected it. He had even, when you thought of it, curtailed his visits to Kate, although Kate’s studied lack of comment on this served only to make Philippa angrier. He had been nasty at Boghall. He had hit her at Liddel Keep. He had stopped her going anywhere for weeks. He had saved her life. That was indisputable. He had been effective over poor Trotty Luckup, while she had been pretty rude, and he hadn’t forced himself on her; and he had made her warm with his cloak. He had gone to Liddel Keep expressly to warn her, and when she had been pig-headed about leaving (Kate was right) he had done the only thing possible to make her. And then he had come to Flaw Valleys for nothing but to make sure of her safety, and he had been so tired that Kate had cried after he had gone. And then it had suddenly struck her, firmly and deeply in her shamefully flat chest, so that her heart thumped and her eyes filled with tears, that maybe she was wrong. Put together everything you knew of Francis Crawford. Put together what you had heard at Boghall and at Midculter, what you had seen at Flaw Valleys, and it all added up to one enormous, soul-crushing entity. She had been wrong. She did not understand him; she had never met anyone like him; she was only beginning to glimpse what Kate, poor maligned Kate, must have seen all these years under the talk. But the fact remained that he had gone out of his way to protect her, and she had put his life in jeopardy in return.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Disorderly Knights

  • #21
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “And habits are hell's own substitute for good intentions. Habits are the ruin of ambition, of initiative, of imagination. They're the curse of marriage and the after-bane of death.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #22
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “I don't like this war. I don't like the cold-blooded scheming at the beginning and the carnage at the end and the grumbling and the jealousies and the pettishness in the middle. I hate the lack of gallantry and grace; the self-seeking; the destruction of valuable people and things. I believe in danger and endeavor as a form of tempering but I reject it if this is the only shape it can take.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings

  • #23
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “You might, without my crediting it, fall deeply in love and forever, with some warped hunchback whelped in the gutter. I should equally stop you from taking him.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, Checkmate

  • #24
    Dorothy Dunnett
    “And deep within him, missing its accustomed tread, his heart paused, and gave one single stroke, as if on an anvil.”
    Dorothy Dunnett, The Ringed Castle



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