Prince Otto Quotes
Prince Otto: a Romance
by
Robert Louis Stevenson351 ratings, 3.33 average rating, 57 reviews
Prince Otto Quotes
Showing 1-9 of 9
“What am I to call it? Diffidence? The fear of ridicule? Inverted vanity? What matters names, if it has brought me to this? I could never bear to be bustling about nothing; I was ashamed of this toy kingdom from the first; I could not tolerate that people should fancy I believed in a thing so patently absurd! I would do nothing that cannot be done smiling. I have a sense of humour, forsooth! I must know better than my Maker. And it was the same thing in my marriage," he added more hoarsely. "I did not believe this girl could care for me; I must not intrude; I must preserve the foppery of my indifference. What an impotent picture!"
"Ay, we have the same blood," moralised Gotthold. "You are drawing, with fine strokes, the character of the born sceptic."
"Sceptic?—coward!" cried Otto. "Coward is the word. A springless, putty-hearted, cowering coward!”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
"Ay, we have the same blood," moralised Gotthold. "You are drawing, with fine strokes, the character of the born sceptic."
"Sceptic?—coward!" cried Otto. "Coward is the word. A springless, putty-hearted, cowering coward!”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
“Vanity dies hard, in some obstinate cases it outlives the man.”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
― Prince Otto: a Romance
“Rightly looked upon,' mused Gotthold, 'it is ourselves that we cannot forgive, when we refuse forgiveness to our friend. Some strand of our own misdoing is involved in every quarrel.”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
― Prince Otto: a Romance
“The woman who can manage, like the man who can fight, must never shrink from an encounter. The knight must not disgrace his weapons.”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
― Prince Otto: a Romance
“The stars alone, cheerful whisperers, confer quietly with each of us like friends; they give ear to our sorrows smilingly, like wise old men, rich in tolerance; and by their double scale, so small to the eye, so vast to the imagination, they keep before the mind the double character of man’s nature and fate.”
― Prince Otto: a Romance
― Prince Otto: a Romance
“And yet it has not changed my love,’ returned Otto softly. ‘Our misdeeds do not change us. Gotthold, fill your glass. Let us drink to what is good in this bad business; let us drink to our old affection; and, when we have done so, forgive your too just grounds of offence, and drink with me to my wife, whom I have so misused, who has so misused me, and whom I have left, I fear, I greatly fear, in danger. What matters it how bad we are, if others can still love us, and we can still love others?”
― Prince Otto, a Romance
― Prince Otto, a Romance
“The devil you would!’ exclaimed the Prince. The licentiate Roederer laughed most heartily. ‘I thought I should astonish you,’ he said. ‘These are not the ideas of the masses.”
― Prince Otto, a Romance
― Prince Otto, a Romance
“When you look about you,’ interrupted the licentiate, ‘you behold the ignorant. But in the laboratory of opinion, beside the studious lamp, we begin already to discard these figments. We begin to return to nature’s order,”
― Prince Otto
― Prince Otto
“O, sir!’ she cried, ‘I wish to beg of you to spare my father; for I assure your Highness, if he had known who you was, he would have bitten his tongue out sooner. And Fritz, too—how he went on! But I had a notion; and this morning I went straight down into the stable, and there was your Highness’s crown upon the stirrup-irons! But, O, sir, I made certain you would spare them; for they were as innocent as lambs.”
― PRINCE OTTO—A ROMANCE
― PRINCE OTTO—A ROMANCE
