The Dance Tree Quotes
The Dance Tree
by
Kiran Millwood Hargrave9,040 ratings, 3.88 average rating, 1,258 reviews
The Dance Tree Quotes
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“It is as though she has stepped through her own shadow and exists, suddenly, on the other side of her life.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“The bees are at work int he boiling air, legs fat with pollen the priesets say they stole. But her bees are no thieves.
The bees. They are their own. It was one of the first lessons they taught her, even as she coaxed them to the skeps. They are not dumb beasts: they have their own mind even if it is the mind of the king bee. This is why they are spoken of so often in church, their obedience, their duty.
...
but Lisbet knows what only those who tend to them know. That wildness is the key to their success, that freedom sweetens their honey. That you cannot truly keep bees. You can only make them want to stay.”
― The Dance Tree
The bees. They are their own. It was one of the first lessons they taught her, even as she coaxed them to the skeps. They are not dumb beasts: they have their own mind even if it is the mind of the king bee. This is why they are spoken of so often in church, their obedience, their duty.
...
but Lisbet knows what only those who tend to them know. That wildness is the key to their success, that freedom sweetens their honey. That you cannot truly keep bees. You can only make them want to stay.”
― The Dance Tree
“It takes courage, to love beyond what others deem the right boundaries.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“When Lisbet started her bloods, Mutti lost her mind. Only Mutti and Lisbet drew the line between these two events. And so now she alone must shoulder the knowledge that her mother's unmaking was tied to her becoming.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“Agnethe falls to her knees on the stone, the dome of her head tilted back, her arms draped out at her sides in supplication. Lisbet has never seen someone pray in such a pose. When she benders her neck to speak to God, she feels the aim is to make herself as small as possible, turning inwards to find some tiny voice that perhaps sometimes she believes is from heaven, but is more often her mother's. She fails even at carrying God inside her like others seem to. But Agnethe prays like in the holy stories, as though God is everywhere, and she is showing herself as broadly and as boldly as she can.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“The world is ending, she thinks, and she can do nothing but watch its crumbling.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“She thinks, watching him, that maybe the priests are wrong: the opposite of order is not chaos. Maybe it is freedom.”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
“the bad years, as most of Alsace did. We have paid it back but”
― The Dance Tree
― The Dance Tree
