What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

This topic is about
Fragile Things
SOLVED: Adult Fiction
>
SOLVED. Quotation-Hunting, Pity and Color. [s]
date
newest »



It does, in fact, but I can’t find it, unfortunately. The quotation might have been well-known and simply quoted in the book I’m remembering. I seem to remember a hero, like a swashbuckler, saying it.

I have tried it, but I can try again… What are some examples? (Thank you, by the way.)



I was able to track down the “pity” one. It comes from John Dickson Carr’s The Crooked Hinge (1935):
“I do not dwell on this part of it, for I would not have you think I am asking for pity or sympathy: the notion angers me furiously. I feel like the man in the play: Your liking I will have if I can. Your respect I will have or kill you. But your pity? Damn your impudence!”
Now if only I knew what play the character and his author were referencing!

http://andthenweallhadtea.blogspot.co...
"Funny how having a really pleasant dream just before waking up can colour your whole day, much like having an unpleasant dream can do."
The author of the blog has one published book but it's a recipe book (and a bunch of others that she calls " Cookbooklets")

http://andthenweallhadtea.blogspot.co...
“Funny how having a really pleasant dream just before waking up c…”
Thanks, but not that–definitely not from a blog post or a cookbook. Thank you, though–and the quote’s close.

Page 65:
"Recounting the strange is like telling one's dreams: one can communicate the events of a dream, but not the emotional content, the way that a dream can colour one's entire day"
Books mentioned in this topic
Fragile Things: Short Fictions and Wonders (other topics)Cyrano de Bergerac (other topics)
Cyrano de Bergerac (other topics)
The first is a quotation I’ve been using for years, without ever really remembering where it comes from. The author is talking about dreams, specifically “…the way a dream can color your whole day.”
I like it because it uses color in an unusual but extremely appropriate way: it gets to the heart of what I mean when I talk about how the mood of a dream affects a person.
The second I thought was from a Sherlock Holmes story, but I don’t think so anymore. The speaker is listing qualities he doesn’t mind being attributed to him, but then he says, “But your pity–never!”
It’s an “I can take anything but your pity” quotation, but I can’t for the life of me remember where it’s from.
Anyone know these? Thanks in advance.