Silent Melody Quotes

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Silent Melody (Georgian, #2) Silent Melody by Mary Balogh
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Silent Melody Quotes Showing 1-18 of 18
“Idleness was so often despised. And yet it was on idleness, she knew, that one touched meaning and peace.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Tis what marriage is all about, madam," he said. "Have you not realized it? 'Tis about discovering unknown facets of the character and experience and taste of one's spouse and learning to adjust one's life accordingly. 'Tis learning to hope that one's spouse is doing the same thing.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Even at its darkest moment, life was a precious gift.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Perhaps we should do the learning - and learn not to communicate, or to do it in a different way. Now there is a thought. Perhaps we could learn your peace if we could share your silence.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Ah, those eyes," he said. "They can speak volumes, but sometimes even I cannot translate the language. And we never did invent enough signs for deeper thoughts and feelings.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“It takes chracter to refuse a man you love more dearly than life merely because marrying him would be the wrong thing to do.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“That was the heart of the difference, she thought. In her world she had learned to be . Other people seemed to gain their sense of identity and worth from doing.
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“But Ashley had always understood. He had always known there was a person behind the silence - not just a person who listened with her eyes and would have responded in similar words if she could have, but one who inhabited a world of her own and lived in it quiet as richly as anyone in his world. With Ashley there had always been a language. There had always been a way of giving him glimpses of herself.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“She wondered if she would have tumbled into love with him during the past week if her heart had been whole, if her soul had no been shattered long ago. She rather thought she might have. But a heart and soul could not be mended by the power of the will, she had discovered over seven years. And so she had accepted reality and moved on.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Gifts were dangerous things, she thought. Sometimes one succeeded only in taking far more than one gave.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“She was not sure that her deafness had strengthened her character. She was not even sure she had met a challenge. A silent world was as natural to her as a noisy one must be to them, she reflected. But people tended to assume that deaf persons could function as people only if they learned to conform to a world of sound. What about the challenge of silence? Very few people of hearing ever accepted it or even knew that there was a challenge there. People of hearing feared silence...”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“He would never know know her. Such intimacy but no communication, because words - even if she could speak or write them - could never explain her world to him.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“It was hard to leave. But it was impossible to stay. He was leaving from choice because he was young and energetic and adventurous and had long wanted to carve a life of his own.
He was going to new possibility, new dreams. But he was leaving behind places and people. And though, being young, he was sure he would see them all again some day, he knew too that many years might pass before he did so.
It was not easy to leave.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“There was at least as much to learn as there was to be taught.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Leave love to take its course.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“Why would forgiveness be of any value if it were reserved only for forgivable offenses?”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“It was in idleness that one came face-to-face with the I AM. With simple, elemental Being.”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody
“usual look”
Mary Balogh, Silent Melody