The Mirrored World Quotes
The Mirrored World
by
Debra Dean1,393 ratings, 3.21 average rating, 274 reviews
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The Mirrored World Quotes
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“You should not give your whole heart to anything mortal, daughter.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“Whatever we know as children, this is the world, eaten whole and without question.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“How may one describe enchantment? As he sang, his countenance softened, and without benefit of costume or any other artifice of the stage, the Gaspari I knew faded and was transfored into something eerily beautiful. A delicate hand, rising and turning like a vine, seemed to unfurl this otherworldy sound into the air. Though I could not translate the words, there was no need, for the sound went straight to my soul, transcending the poor and broken language we mortals must use. I slipped gratefully out of my body and floated on the current of music, feeling that all of us round the table were a single spirit, a single being. I was filled with such love. The voice soared, wave upon wave, until the last note, quivering with tenderness, put us ashore again too soon.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“To love deeply is to risk being undone.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“I am often tongue-tied with strangers and have what the philosopher Monsieur Diderot calls l’esprit de l’escalier, staircase wit: only long after a remark is made to me will my imagination supply the thing I should have said in reply.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“it is on the ninth day after death that the soul is said to leave the body. On the fortieth day, it departs this world. Between these two points lies a blank space that the Church does not account for, but peasants will tell you that the soul returns home and takes up residence behind the stove.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
“For her part, my mother was probably more alike him than he suspected, the chief difference being that showing her husband affection was among her duties. Though she might harshly reprimand a servant or child, in his presence she was always soft-spoken and demure. She deferred to his opinions, flattered his vanities, and endured his rebukes with meekness. Love was a choice she made, and then made again daily for the remainder of her life. From her I learnt that a woman should not expect her happiness to come from the man himself, but from those acts of devotion she showed to him.”
― The Mirrored World
― The Mirrored World
