Madam, Will You Talk? Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Madam, Will You Talk? Madam, Will You Talk? by Mary Stewart
8,405 ratings, 4.10 average rating, 814 reviews
Open Preview
Madam, Will You Talk? Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“At breakfast!' said Louise in an awed voice. 'A man who can read poetry at breakfast would be capable of anything.”
Mary Stewart, Madam, Will You Talk?
“I saw the first light, fore-running the sun, gather in a cup of the eastern cloud, gather and grow and brim, till at last it spilled like milk over the golden lip, to smear the dark face of heaven from end to end. From east to north, and back to south again, the clouds slackened, the stars, trembling on the verge of extinction, guttered in the dawn wind, and the gates of day were ready to open at the trumpet. . .”
Mary Stewart, Madam, Will You Talk?
“Oh, hell." He landed beside me, soft-footed on the pine needles. "This is beginning to have all the elements of a farce, isn't it? Too many villains, and nothing to tie them up with.”
Mary Stewart, Madam, Will You Talk?
“When you let excitement in, Johnny would add, in a lecture-room sort of voice, fear will follow.”
Mary Stewart, Madam, Will You Talk?
“Thank God for cosmetics, I thought, as I put them into my bag; one not only looks better, one feels better, with one’s flag at the top of the mast again.”
Mary Stewart, Madam, Will You Talk?
“Suddenly I was cold. The pleasant melancholy had faded, and in its place began to grow, unbidden, the little germ of loneliness which could, I knew, mature in these dark and wild surroundings all too soon into the flower of desolation.”
Mary Stewart, Madam Will You Talk?
“And silence. Such silence. Silence with a positive quality, that is more than just an absence of sound. Silence like music.”
Mary Stewart, Madam Will You Talk?