neve 🍒 > neve 🍒's Quotes

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  • #1
    Angela Carter
    “They had imagined too often and too much and so they had exhausted all their possibilities. When they embraced each other’s phantoms, each in his separate privacy has savoured the most refined of pleasures but, connoisseurs of unreality as they were, they could not bear the crude weight, the rank smell and the ripe taste of real flesh. It is always a dangerous experiment to act out a fantasy; they had undertaken the experiment rashly and had failed…”
    Angela Carter, Love
    tags: love, sex

  • #2
    Graham Greene
    “The sense of unhappiness is so much easier to convey than that of happiness. In misery we seem aware of our own existence, even though it may be in the form of a monstrous egotism: this pain of mine is individual, this nerve that winces belongs to me and to no other. But happiness annihilates us: we lose our identity.”
    Graham Greene, The End of the Affair

  • #3
    Graham Greene
    “I measured love by the extent of my jealousy.”
    Graham Greene, The End of the Affair

  • #4
    Graham Greene
    “There are times when a lover longs to be also a father and a brother: he is jealous of the years he hasn't shared.”
    Graham Greene, The End of the Affair
    tags: lover

  • #5
    Daphne du Maurier
    “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.”
    Daphne Du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #6
    Graham Greene
    “Insecurity is the worst sense that lovers feel; sometimes the most humdrum desireless marriage seems better. Insecurity twists meanings and poisons trust.”
    Graham Greene, The End of the Affair

  • #7
    Graham Greene
    “Pain is easy to write. In pain we're all happily individual. But what can one write about happiness?”
    Graham Greene, The End of the Affair

  • #8
    David Sheff
    “Resentment is like taking poison and waiting for the other person to die.”
    David Sheff, Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction

  • #9
    Daphne du Maurier
    “Women want love to be a novel. Men, a short story.”
    Daphne du Maurier

  • #10
    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    “You know, you’re a feminist.” It was not a compliment. I could tell from his tone—the same tone with which a person would say, “You’re a supporter of terrorism.”
    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, We Should All Be Feminists

  • #11
    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    “Some people ask: “Why the word feminist? Why not just say you are a believer in human rights, or something like that?” Because that would be dishonest. Feminism is, of course, part of human rights in general—but to choose to use the vague expression human rights is to deny the specific and particular problem of gender. It would be a way of pretending that it was not women who have, for centuries, been excluded. It would be a way of denying that the problem of gender targets women.”
    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, We Should All Be Feminists

  • #12
    Daphne du Maurier
    “And all this, she thought, is only momentary, is only a fragment in time that will never come again, for yesterday already belongs to the past and is ours no longer, and tomorrow is an unknown thing that may be hostile. This is our day, our moment, the sun belongs to us, and the wind, and the sea, and the men for'ard there singing on the deck. This day is forever a day to be held and cherished, because in it we shall have lived, and loved, and nothing else matters but that in this world of our own making to which we have escaped.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek

  • #13
    Daphne du Maurier
    “For love, as she knew it now, was something without shame and without reserve, the possession of two people who had no barrier between them, and no pride; whatever happened to him would happen to her too, all feeling, all movement, all sensation of body and of mind.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek

  • #14
    Daphne du Maurier
    “Contentment is a state of mind and body when the two work in harmony, and there is no friction. The mind is at peace, and the body also. The two are sufficient to themselves. Happiness is elusive -- coming perhaps once in a life-time -- and approaching ectasy.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek

  • #15
    Daphne du Maurier
    “...she thought with pity of all the men and women who were not light-hearted when they loved, who were cold, who were reluctant, who were shy, who imagined that passion and tenderness were two things separate from one another, and not the one, gloriously intermingled, so that to be fierce was also to be gentle, so that silence was a speaking without words.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek

  • #16
    Daphne du Maurier
    “There was silence between them for moment, and she wondered if all women, when in love, were torn between two impulses, a longing to throw modesty and reserve to the winds and confess everything, and an equal determination to conceal the love forever, to be cool, aloof, utterly detached, to die rather than admit a thing so personal, so intimate.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek
    tags: love

  • #17
    Daphne du Maurier
    “...somewhere there is a Dona of tomorrow, a Dona of the future, of ten years away, to whom all of this will be a thing to cherish, a thing to remember. Much will be forgotten then, perhaps, the sound of the tide on the mud flats, the dark sky, the dark water, the shiver of the trees behinds us and the shadows they cast before them, and the smell of the young bracken and the moss. Even the things we said will be forgotten, the touch of hands, the warmth, the loveliness, but never the peace that we have given to each other, never the stillness and the silence.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek

  • #18
    C.S. Lewis
    “I wrote this story for you, but when I began it I had not realized that girls grow quicker than books. As a result you are already too old for fairy tales, and by the time it is printed and bound you will be older still. But some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again. You can then take it down from some upper shelf, dust it, and tell me what you think of it. I shall probably be too deaf to hear, and too old to understand a word you say, but I shall still be your affectionate Godfather, C. S. Lewis.”
    C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

  • #19
    C.S. Lewis
    “I hope no one who reads this book has been quite as miserable as Susan and Lucy were that night; but if you have been - if you've been up all night and cried till you have no more tears left in you - you will know that there comes in the end a sort of quietness. You feel as if nothing is ever going to happen again.”
    C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

  • #20
    Kiley Reid
    “I don't need you to be mad that it happened. I need you to be mad that it just like... happens.”
    Kiley Reid, Such a Fun Age

  • #21
    Graham Greene
    “One's life is more formed, I sometimes think, by books than by human beings: it is out of books one learns about love and pain at second hand. Even if we have the happy chance to fall in love, it is because we have been conditioned by what we have read, and if I had never known love at all, perhaps it was because my father's library had not contained the right books.”
    Graham Greene, Travels with My Aunt
    tags: life

  • #22
    Graham Greene
    “One is apt to be unfair to somebody one has loved a great deal.”
    Graham Greene, Travels with My Aunt



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