Ordeal by Innocence Quotes
Ordeal by Innocence
by
Agatha Christie31,912 ratings, 3.83 average rating, 2,820 reviews
Ordeal by Innocence Quotes
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“How can I go on living here and suspecting everybody ?”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Justice is, after all, in the hands of men and men are fallible.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Men, they never think.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“The old gentleman refuses to have the telephone which he regards as a device of the devil, and on a par with radio, television, cinema organs and jet planes, so I had to take a chance of finding him at home.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“A man is responsible for his deeds, and not just the deeds, but for the consequences of those deeds, as well.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Of course people do kill themselves a good deal, between fourteen and nineteen. It's an age in life when things are very much out of proportion. Schoolboys kill themselves because they don't think they can pass examinations and girls kill themselves because their mothers won't let them go to the pictures with unsuitable boy friends. It's a kind of period where everything appears to be in glorious Technicolor. Joy or despair. Gloom or unparalleled happiness. One snaps out of it. The trouble with you is, Hester, it's taken you longer to snap out of it than most people.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“This river... it's a crossing over Rubicon.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“O maid most dear, I am not here. I have no place, no part, No dwelling more by sea nor shore, But only in thy heart.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“That’s what you might call the normal pattern of female life. I’ve seen many girls and women, with strong maternal instincts, keen on getting married but mainly, though they mayn’t quite know it themselves—because of their urge to motherhood. And the babies come; they’re happy and satisfied. Life goes back into proportion for them. They can take an interest in their husbands and in the local affairs and in the gossip that’s going round, and of course in their children. But it’s all in proportion. The maternal instinct, in a purely physical sense, is satisfied, you see.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“The family would come under suspicion,” he said, “and it might remain under suspicion for a long time—perhaps for ever. If one of the family was guilty it is possible that they themselves would not know which one. They would look at each other and—wonder … Yes, that’s what would be the worst of all. They themselves would not know which…”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Devotion was all very well when you could get away from it for nine or ten hours of the day. It was a nice thing to come home to. But now he was lapped round with it; watched over, cared for, cherished. It made one yearn for a little wholesome neglect”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Not selfish things, not things for herself; who could give to unwanted children love, care, a home. All these things she could buy for them, but not their love for her.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“You’re quite right,” said MacMaster. “You’re putting your finger on the thing that matters. If you think it over, you know, that’s always the interesting part of any murder. What the person was like who was murdered. Everybody’s always so busy inquiring into the mind of the murderer. You’ve been thinking, probably, that Mrs. Argyle was the sort of woman who shouldn’t have been murdered.” “I should imagine that everyone felt that.” “Ethically,” said MacMaster, “you’re quite right. But you know”—he rubbed his nose—“isn’t it the Chinese who held that beneficence is to be accounted a sin rather than a virtue? They’ve got something there, you know. Beneficence does things to people. Ties ’em up in knots. We all know what human nature’s like. Do a chap a good turn and you feel kindly towards him. You like him. But the chap who’s had the good turn done to him, does he feel so kindly to”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Calgary sighed. Things were never, he thought, the way you imagined them to be. Every day he found himself less attracted to the man whose name he had taken such trouble to vindicate. He was almost coming to understand and share the point of view which had so astounded him at Sunny Point.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“and fair hair combed off her face and arranged in a large bun at the back of her neck; a style which at the moment happened to be fashionable although that was not her reason for wearing it so. She was a woman who always kept to her own style.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Your son was accused of a crime he did not commit, was tried for it, condemned—and died in prison. Justice has come too late for him. But such justice as can be done, almost certainly will be done, and will be seen to be done. The Home Secretary will probably advise the Queen that a free pardon should be granted.” Hester laughed. “A free pardon—for something he didn’t do?” “I know. The terminology always seems unrealistic. But I understand that the custom is for a question to be asked in the House, the reply to which will make it clear that Jack Argyle did not commit the crime for which he was sentenced, and the newspapers will report that fact freely.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Ma non aveva mai tenuto conto della natura umana. Aveva sempre considerato le persone come casi da trattare e problemi da risolvere. Non aveva mai capito che ciascun essere umano era diverso, aveva le proprie idiosincrasie, avrebbe reagito diversamente. Già allora l'aveva ammonita a non aspettarsi troppo. Ma lei si era sempre aspettata troppo, anche se non voleva ammetterlo, e così era sempre rimasta delusa.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“The truth often does sound unconvincing. – Philip Durrant”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“It’s so awful when people are always right. It’ makes you feel more and more inadequate. - Hester Argyle”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“One must take responsibility for one’s actions and not only one’s actions but for the result of one’s actions. - Dr. Arthur Calgary”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Appearances are sometimes deceptive. – Dr. Arthur Calgary”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“I’ve seen a good many Jackos in my lifetime. Later in life, when the boy has gone hopelessly wrong, the parents say, ‘If only I’d been stricter with him when he was young,’ or else they say, ‘I was too harsh, if only I’d been kinder.’ I don’t think myself it amounts to a penn’orth of difference. There are those who go wrong because they’ve had an unhappy home and essentially feel unloved. And again there are those who go wrong because at the least stress they’re going to go wrong anyway. I put Jacko down as one of the latter.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“I perceive your devilish intention,' said Major Finney.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
“Povera Rachel, pensò Leo. Povera Rachel, che poteva comperare tante cose...e le comperava per gli altri; che poteva donare amore, cure, una casa a quei piccoli derelitti, comperare tutto per loro...ma non il loro amore per lei.”
― Ordeal by Innocence
― Ordeal by Innocence
