The Marriage of Opposites Quotes

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The Marriage of Opposites The Marriage of Opposites by Alice Hoffman
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“Whoever knows you when you are young can look inside you and see the person you once were, and maybe still are at certain times.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“My father had told me that no matter how comfortable we might feel, we must live like fish, unattached to any land. Wherever there was water, we would survive. Some fish could stay in the mud for months, even years, and when at last there was a high flooding tide, they would swim away, a dark flash, remembered only by their own kind. So perhaps the stories they told of our people were true: no net could hold us.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“As I turned the pages, I felt as if there were bees on my fingertips, for I had never felt so alive as when reading.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“Then I understood that when someone begins to tell you her story, you are entwined together. Perhaps even more so if the ending hasn’t been divulged.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I knew what happened in fairy tales. The strong survived while the weak were eaten alive.”
Alice Hoffman , The Marriage of Opposites
“You couldn’t see love, or touch it, or taste it, yet it could destroy you and leave you in the dark, chasing after your own destiny.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“Then let us be among those who hope that the future will be less cruel than the past.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I only had access to him when we were together in the library, and I loved them both -the library and my father- equally and without question.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“A woman who knows what she wants, Adelle always told me, is likely to receive it.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“With every step I wished myself away to another life, one lived far from here.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
tags: life
“But I was not a mouse. In the fields where I walked, I was much more interested in the actions of the hawks.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I knew I must do all as I was told, yet something burned inside me, a seed of defiance that must have derived from a long-ago ancestor. Perhaps my mind was inflamed from the books I had read and the worlds I had imagined.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“There is the outside of a story, and there is the inside of a story, he told me as we sat in his library one afternoon. One is the fruit and may be delicious, but the other is the seed.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I didn’t understand that when I closed myself to her, I took a part of her bitterness inside me. It was green and unforgiving, and as it grew it made me more like her. It gave me my strength, but it gave me my weakness as well.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“He is gone and all we have is this world, here and now.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“Witches are made, not born.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“Then I understood that when someone begins to tell you her story, you are entwined together. Perhaps even more so if the ending hasn't been divulged. It was exactly like dreaming the same dream, then waking too soon and never finding out what had happened.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I had been blind to the pain of others until I had my own burden to carry.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I wondered if all creatures were drawn to what was dangerous or if we merely wanted light at any cost and were willing to burn for our desires.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I hope you're happy," she said to Mrs. James.

"Happiness is for fools." Helena James shrugged. "So I wish that for you.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“My father told us that our people had been slaves in the desert and because God had seen fit to set us free, none among us should ever own another man. It had been written that every man belonged to God and no one else. But did women belong to God or to the men of their family? They could not own property or businesses; only their husbands could have that honor.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“There are those who say that heaven and hell are not so far apart. They are not at opposite ends of the world beyond ours, only a step away from one another.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“werewolves were members of the old Danish families who owned slaves. Their transformation was God’s punishment for their wrongdoings. You could spy their teeth and claws at night, even when they were in their human guise, so they often wore gloves and scarves, even in the hottest times of the year.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“Perhaps that was what my mother disliked most. I resembled her. I could not help but wonder if for some women, that was the worst sin of all.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I had never felt so alive as when reading.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“You lose people sometimes, you know. You don’t expect to, but then it happens and you can’t get them back.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“... he discovered that the stars in the southern world were far brighter than any he had known, and that beneath the water there lived creatures so immense they created waves, as if they were masters of the ocean, and of the universe, and of fate.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“I’d thrown my fate away once, and I would never again allow other people’s opinions rule my life. As a girl I’d done what was necessary, but I was a girl no longer.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“There is the outside of a story, and the inside of a story... One is the fruit and may be delicious, but the other is the seed.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites
“he thought of Jesus as a great teacher, a rebel who refused to see the poor and disenfranchised mistreated.”
Alice Hoffman, The Marriage of Opposites

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