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Orbitor. Aripa dr...
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Nov 27, 2025 11:26AM

 
La Végétarienne
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Nostalgia
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Tavi Tavi said: " [Some random notes for now]
Reading in Romanian, the 2021 Humanitas edition.

Five stories.
First: Ruletistul. Starts with two verses, loosely translated from the poem A Song for Simeon by T.S. Eliot. The translation is meaningfully different from the or
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Anthony Trollope
“He had a pride in being a poor man of a high family; he had a pride in repudiating the very family of which he was proud; and he had a special pride in keeping his pride silently to himself.”
Anthony Trollope, Doctor Thorne

Frances Cha
“I know, because I was in love with a poor man once. He could not pay to spend time with me and I could not afford to spend time with him.”
Frances Cha, If I Had Your Face

Anthony Trollope
“And what had Mary said when these fervent protestations of an undying love had been thrown at her feet? Mary, it must be remembered, was very nearly of the same age as Frank; but, as I and others have so often said before, "Women grow on the sunny side of the wall." Though Frank was only a boy, it behoved Mary to be something more than a girl. Frank might be allowed, without laying himself open to much just reproach, to throw all of what he believed to be his heart into a protestation of what he believed to be love; but Mary was in duty bound to be more thoughtful, more reticent, more aware of the facts of their position, more careful of her own feelings, and more careful also of his.”
Anthony Trollope, Doctor Thorne

Anthony Trollope
“Another misfortune was, that he was a bachelor. Ladies think, and I, for one, think that ladies are quite right in so thinking, that doctors should be married men. All the world feels that a man when married acquires some of the attributes of an old woman—he becomes, to a certain extent, a motherly sort of being; he acquires a conversance with women's ways and women's wants, and loses the wilder and offensive sparks of his virility. It must be easier to talk to such a one about Matilda's stomach, and the growing pains in Fanny's legs, than to a young bachelor.”
Anthony Trollope, Doctor Thorne
tags: humor

Anthony Trollope
“Frank and Mary had been so much together in his holidays, had so constantly consorted together as boys and girls, that, as regarded her, he had not that innate fear of a woman which represses a young man's tongue; and she was so used to his good-humour, his fun, and high jovial spirits, and was, withal, so fond of them and him, that it was very difficult for her to mark with accurate feeling, and stop with reserved brow, the shade of change from a boy's liking to a man's love.”
Anthony Trollope, Doctor Thorne
tags: humor, love

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