Daybreak Quotes

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Daybreak Daybreak by Belva Plain
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Daybreak Quotes Showing 1-12 of 12
“A person who studies the universe will enlarge his mind and hatred will become picayune, stupid, impossible. Did you enjoy the book we sent to you?” “I tore it up,” Tom said, and not trying to hide his shame, looked straight at Arthur.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“Still, if your leg was broken, you felt the pain, and it didn’t ease the pain to be told that somebody else had two broken legs.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“He was well enough acquainted with popular psychology to diagnosis his ailment; depression was anger turned inward. After”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“Over and over, she had tended that dress as it wore out, knotting the first loose threads, catching the next tiny rent, mending and hiding the splits one after the other, wearing the dress as long as the fabric could be decently held together, until eventually there came a tear too wide to be bound up, and the dress had to go. Perhaps her life with Bud had been like that and had been destined to end even without his death.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“I want you here a few days more so we can watch you. The guys will be just as glad to see you next Monday as they would be today.” “Well, I’m still worried about Earl.” “Who’s he?” “My dog.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“I’d rather have a bleeding heart than a frozen one, or perhaps no heart at all.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“There’s more to people than what you can see, isn’t there, Aunt Lillian?” Immediately, Lillian pursued the subject. “What do you mean? He respects you, I hope.” “Respect” in the aunts’ vocabulary meant “no sex.” “Yes, he respects me.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“You have a talent, and that’s more than enough to bring you happiness.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“Enough,” Arthur said. “We’ve come to the end. Now accept.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“What can be wrong?” they asked the doctor and their friends and themselves. “Oh, nothing but colic, it usually is just colic.” So the formula was changed, and that did work for a time. But only for a time. It had to be changed again and yet again. Then the doctor himself began to seem uncertain.…”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“Oh!” cried the mother in her bitterness, “I’ll never understand! A hereditary disease, and never before in either of our families. And our other child with no sign of it. Thank God,” she added quickly.”
Belva Plain, Daybreak
“Revolution, and this is—”
Belva Plain, Daybreak