The Grace of Wild Things Quotes
The Grace of Wild Things
by
Heather Fawcett5,740 ratings, 4.11 average rating, 1,097 reviews
Open Preview
The Grace of Wild Things Quotes
Showing 1-13 of 13
“Being wise, apparently, was not knowing a lot of things, but knowing all the things you didn’t know. It was dreadful. She felt very sorry for all the wise people of the world.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“Plenty of talented people in this world are useless,” the witch said. “It’s what you do with your talent that matters.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“Grace didn’t actually know what scullion meant. She’d come across it in a book of William Shakespeare’s poetry, and she couldn’t understand even half of William Shakespeare. But scullion was such a delicious word, harsh and slippery at the same time, the sort of word meant to be spat at an enemy in a moment of dramatic rage. For months, it had floated at the back of her head, waiting for an opportunity to burst free.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“What she loved were the flashes of beauty in poems, the way the poet chose just the right word for a meadow or a river, one that made her realize there was more to meadows and rivers than she’d thought, that they had whole worlds hidden inside them. It was a different kind of magic, poetry. And she loved the strange words poets tossed about like enchantments. Evensong. Darkling. Vernal.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“And though she'd always liked reading about faraway places, wasn't it also nice, she asked, to have somebody make you see all the beautiful things right under your nose?”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“Eavesdropping is not a virtue in a young lady," Mrs Crumley said.
"Is it a virtue in an old lady?" Grace demanded, her temper flaring. "You seem to learn half your gossip that way.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
"Is it a virtue in an old lady?" Grace demanded, her temper flaring. "You seem to learn half your gossip that way.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
“It's only right that you're confused, Windweaver said. Birds aren't for humans to understand.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“The witch’s room was full of souvenirs from her travels, mostly in the form of oddly shaped vases and colorful rugs. On the mantelpiece was a skull with a crown perched on it in a mocking sort of way, and there was also a sword mounted on the wall that was clearly cursed, for every few seconds it would drip blood onto the floor and whisper, “So this is how it ends.” Grace decided that she would not be visiting the witch’s room again.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“Sing to us, cedars; the twilight is creeping With shadowy garments, the wilderness through; All day we have carolled, and now would be sleeping, So echo the anthems we warbled to you . . . —E. Pauline Johnson (Tekahionwake), “The Birds’ Lullaby”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“Not just one friend, which would have given her enough happiness to last a lifetime, but friends. Such a lovely variety of letters that word had, with a silent little i in the middle like a secret.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“You know the funny thing about fear? It’s usually mixed up with hate. Two sides of a coin. And the thing you hate most, the thing you fear, is often inside yourself. It’s what you don’t want anyone else to see.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“The world was a different place once. People didn’t own forests when I was a girl. Forests simply were. We witches could drift from place to place, from wood to wood, weaving cottages from magic and whatever bits of the forest were handy…”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
“New clothes?” Grace gaped at her. “New clothes? Oh, but I’ve never had new clothes in all my life! This is simply the most wonderful thing that’s ever happened to me. Not that I’ve experienced many wonderful things, given that mine has been a life of tragedy.” The witch rubbed between her eyes. “You are the most melodramatic little thing I’ve ever encountered.” Grace frowned. “I don’t know about that. I think there are some people who have more reason to be dramatic than others. I don’t think such people should be called melodramatic. Very few people have spent their lives in a lonely orphanage after their parents were tragically lost at sea, then had a wicked witch try to cook them alive.” “Keep harping on that and I may try again.”
― The Grace of Wild Things
― The Grace of Wild Things
