Shrines of Gaiety Quotes
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Shrines of Gaiety Quotes
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“Gossip,” Mr. Pollock called it dismissively, but Gwendolen thought that was the word men gave to women’s conversation. Men talked in order to convey information or to ruminate on cricket scores and campaign statistics. Women, on the other hand, talked in an effort to understand the foibles of human behaviour. If men were to “gossip,” the world might be a better place. There would certainly be fewer wars.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Some people were complete in themselves, as if born from the earth or the ocean, like some of the gods. Which was not a compliment. The gods were ruthlessly indifferent to humanity.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“The library had not been a career choice. After all, who would choose to be a librarian?”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“He brought her a cup of tea, the first and last resource of an English husband.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Gwendolen’s mother had been a foolish woman, inclined to believe any passing nonsense. Of such people were patriots made, in Gwendolen’s opinion. More’s the pity.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Women, he sneered, what are they good for? Laundry and fucking. Ramsay wondered if Gerrit had actually met Nellie. His mother seemed good for neither of those activities, but then Nellie wasn’t really a woman, she was an element, like iron.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“There was nothing wrong with having a good time as long as she didn't have to have one herself.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Gwendolyn's mother had been a foolish woman, inclined to believe any passing nonsense. Of such people were patriots made, in Gwendolyn's opinion. More's the pity.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“The rest of the Cokers gravitated rapidly towards the casualty. They were naturally drawn to trouble.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Gwendolen was so touched that she wept, but quietly, for her mother would have been monstrously jealous of such emotion. She had claimed grief for her own long ago.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Freda had overheard Cissy telling Gladys that Freda was “a show-off brat.” She had been wounded by her sister’s judgement on her character. I am not a brat, merely unusually confident, she thought,”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Freda knew that she could tell Cissy about Mr. Birdwhistle’s lewd approaches, but she was used to being blamed for the bad behaviour of others and suspected it would be no different in the case of the octopus’s wandering tentacles.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“The river this morning was brown and sluggish with a never-ending flotilla of barges and boats, the commerce of the city. No lilacs here. No scent of a hay meadow or of a stand of lime trees, only the stink of a noxious city. Frobisher felt his soul shrivel.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“See you later, pet. Don’t do anything I wouldn’t!,” which gave Freda a pretty broad canvas to work on.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“A woman in her sixth decade, dressed in everyday drab, is more invisible than a librarian.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Preferans.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Life was for absorbing, not recording. And in the end, it was all just paper that someone would have to dispose of after you were gone. Perhaps, after all, one’s purpose in this world was to be forgotten, not remembered”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“It was undignified to be on show like this. That was the thing about hospitals, anyone could wander into your room and gawp at you when you were at your very lowest, your most unflattering.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“It never ceased to surprise the Cokers how willing nightclub patrons were to pitch in behind the scenes. For the novelty of it, rather than altruism. They loved a disaster.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“The three eldest girls were the crack troops of the family. Betty and Shirley had both gone to Cambridge. "Wear their learning lightly," Nellie said proudly to prospective suitors. ("Hardly wear it at all," Niven said.)”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Vanda had "lost her man" early in the war. Freda thought he must have been killed in battle, but Duncan said he'd run off to Barnsley with a barmaid. "Alliterative adultery," he said.
"Big word," Vanda said.
"Which one?" Duncan said.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
"Big word," Vanda said.
"Which one?" Duncan said.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Freda was not going to work in Rowntrees! She was going to be a star! She was going to be famous! She was going to go to London! She would rather die of a surfeit of exclamation marks before she worked in an office or factory!”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“He is inviting your mother to meet him tomorrow. For afternoon tea."
Niven barked with laughter. "Afternoon tea? He certainly does sound bad, Emin."
"She should watch her back, effendim."
"My mother is nothing but back, Emin.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
Niven barked with laughter. "Afternoon tea? He certainly does sound bad, Emin."
"She should watch her back, effendim."
"My mother is nothing but back, Emin.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Though She Be but Little She Is Fierce”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Life was for absorbing, not recording. And in the end, it was all just paper that someone would have to dispose of after you were gone. Perhaps, after all, one’s purpose in this world was to be forgotten, not remembered.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“A sin of omission, not commission.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“Frobisher should perhaps have realized that Lottie was a woman who was resistant to salvage. She had risen and fallen like the tide, but she seemed to favour the ebb rather than the flow.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“His head was always in the clouds. 'I'm writing a novel,' he told her. As if that was something to crow about. As if there weren't enough novels in the world already.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“one grief after another—her brothers, Father, the money, not to mention the war itself—had taken its toll on her and she had allowed herself to be worn down on the grindstone of Mother.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety
“He had his standards. He had trained at the Ritz before losing his post there due to an unfortunate incident involving two chambermaids and a linen cupboard. "You can imagine the rest," he said to Nellie when he applied for the job at the Amethyst. "I'd rather not," she said.”
― Shrines of Gaiety
― Shrines of Gaiety