Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops Quotes

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Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops by E.M. Forster
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Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“Actual life is full of false clues and sign-posts that lead nowhere. With infinite effort we nerve ourselves for a crisis that never comes. The most successful career must show a waste of strength that might have removed mountains, and the most unsuccessful is not that of the man who is taken unprepared, but of him who has prepared and is never taken. On a tragedy of that kind our national morality is duly silent. It assumes that preparation against danger is in itself a good, and that men, like nations, are the better for staggering through life fully armed.”
E.M. Forster, Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops
“Paul and his mother, ripple and great wave, had flowed into her life and ebbed out of it for ever. The ripple had left no traces behind; the wave had strewn at her feet fragments torn from the unknown. A curious seeker, she stood for a while at the verge of the sea that tells so little, but tells a little, and watched the outgoing of this last tremendous tide. Her friend had vanished in agony, but not, she believed, in degradation. Her withdrawal had hinted at other things besides disease and pain. Some leave our life with tears, others with an insane frigidity; Mrs. Wilcox had taken the middle course, which only rarer natures can pursue. She had kept proportion. She had told a little of her grim secret to her friends, but not too much; she had shut up her heart--almost, but not entirely. It is thus, if there is any rule, that we ought to die--neither as victim nor as fanatic, but as the seafarer who can greet with an equal eye the deep that he is entering, and the shore that he must leave.”
E.M. Forster, Howards End, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View, Where Angels Fear to Tread and The Machine Stops