Mountolive Quotes

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Mountolive (The Alexandria Quartet, #3) Mountolive by Lawrence Durrell
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Mountolive Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“Balthazar sighed and said "Truth naked and unashamed. That's a splendid phrase. But we always see her as she seems, never as she is. Each man has his own interpretation.”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive
“The old love was slowly metamorphosed into admiration, just as his physical longing for her (so bitter at first) turned into a consuming and depersonalized tenderness which fed upon her absence instead of dying from it.”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive
“Is it any wonder that I absent-mindedly take the entrance marked Aliens Only whenever I enter?”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive
“When you are in love you know that love is a beggar, shameless as a beggar; and the responses of merely human pity can console one where love is absent by a false travesty of an imagined happiness.”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive
“How do you spell love in Alexandria?' he said at last, softly. 'That is the question. Sleeplessness, loneliness, bonheur, chagrin -- I do not want to harm or annoy her, but I feel that somehow, somewhere, she must need me as I need her.”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive
“How disgusting that people should love without consent. Clea”
Lawrence Durrell, Mountolive