Historical Novel Quotes

Quotes tagged as "historical-novel" Showing 1-30 of 84
Diana   Forbes
“I felt hot under my Mutton sleeves." I just wish he'd have the decency to say whatever he came to say in front of his wife. "
"Perhaps his wife is busy today."
"She shouldn't be." His wife should track him like a bloodhound.”
Diana Forbes, Mistress Suffragette

Ellen Brazer
“Some people like the Jews, and some do not. But no thoughtful man can deny the fact that they are, beyond any question, the most formidable and most remarkable race which has appeared in the world.
— Winston S. Churchill”
Ellen Brazer, Clouds Across the Sun

Anton Sammut
“Let him who knows who he is be no other but himself.”
Anton Sammut, Memories of Recurrent Echoes

Leslie K. Simmons
“They stood in the pool of lantern light, the house still around them. She placed a hand to calm his still heaving chest, the heat of his body fresh from travel. The coolness of her hand made him start, then he pulled her close. It was more than her body he needed.”
Leslie K. Simmons, Red Clay, Running Waters

Erik Larson
“The intermittent depression that had shadowed him throughout his adult life was about to envelop him once again.”
Erik Larson, The Devil in the White City

“As libertines we seek to find and provide pleasures for others before pleasing ourselves. Libertines are never boorish, profane or blasphemous. We seek to lessen any cause for offence while maximizing pleasure. After our liaisons, our return is eagerly anticipated, and our departure is mourned. For most men the reverse is the case. In a world where most men are barely on before they are off again, we take the time and the care to be gentle lovers and build the sighs and the panting of true delight.”
Harry F. MacDonald, Casanova and the Devil's Doorbell

“Pomposity plans your eviction just as your derriere is settling on to the finest of cushions.”
Harry F. MacDonald, Casanova and the Devil's Doorbell

“Plans are for those without the good sense to savor the present. Others make plans and neglect their opportunities as they trickle through their fingers like dust. We find beauty in what is.”
Harry F. MacDonald, Casanova and the Devil's Doorbell

“Disgusting foods, as Madame de Pompadour discovered, do not arouse the senses. They only dull them. Seduction, as you know by now, for women starts with the ears and for men starts with the eyes and for both, travels directly to the stomach. Some say you need sweet murmurings in the ears, but I say laughter, intrigue and delicacies are more powerful.”
Harry F. MacDonald, Casanova and the Devil's Doorbell

David Wellington
“Shit rolls downhill. Bureaucracy rolls faster.”
David Wellington

“…they looked about as careful and as discreet as a troupe of Visigoths at an afternoon tea party.”
Harry F. MacDonald, Casanova and the Devil's Doorbell

“She is my friend, and there is nothing you can say or do that can stop me from helping her.”
Peter G. Nogel

“Güvendin değil mi? Bilmeliydin, emrindeki Germiyanlıların yanımdaki beylerine geleceğini. Bilmeliydin, kara tatarların yanımdaki soydaşlarına geleceğini. Bilmeliydin, Saruhanlıların yanımdaki şehzadeyi seçeceğini. Ve bilmeliydin, ben bu diyarın ve ötesinin en büyük hükümdarıyım. Ben Cengizsoylu oğullara ve torunlara sahip, sahipkıranım. Ben Cengiz'in damadıyım.”
Deniz Canan, Larende'nin Yükselişi

“A good measure of a society’s primitiveness is the way in which it treats its poor.”
Juliane Weber

Alexandre Dumas
“But there is no need to know danger in order to fear it; indeed, it may be observed, that it is usually unknown perils that inspire the greatest terror.”
Alexandre Dumas, The Count of Monte Cristo

“Kapalı odasında, yalnız hayatında; düşünceler içinde okudukları ile sarmalandığında hayat ne güvenliydi.”
Deniz Canan, Larende'nin Düşüşü

Alexandre Dumas
“It would be wrong, however, to judge the actions of one era from the perspective of another. What would be regarded today as shameful for a man of honour was in those days an entirely simple and natural thing.”
Alexandre Dumas, The Three Musketeers

Mariia Manko
“I continued, regardless:" Success is the ability to go from one failure to another, with no loss of enthusiasm. "
"What does that mean?"
"It takes real strength and ability to experience repeated failure and keep moving toward your goal, even when nothing appears to be coming of it, without losing enthusiasm. It signifies a desire for self-improvement; a need to constantly learn from your mistakes...”
Mariia Manko, Finding Martin Eden: Travels to Find Myself

Anne Perreault
“Judith.” Her mother glanced at her with a curious look on her face. “You seem a might bit distracted this evening. Is something the matter?”
“Nothing’s the matter, Mama,” she mumbled.
“Then I suggest, dear, that you put the sampler down before you stain it with your blood.” Her mother smiled tenderly at her.”
Anne Perreault, An Unusual Adventure

Pamela   Hamilton
“She had seen the faces of shattered dreams, the zippy Ziegfeld girls, the doll-faced divorcées, the wellborn wives in opulent ivory towers, knocked down and knocked right out.”
Pamela Hamilton, Lady Be Good: The Life and Times of Dorothy Hale

J. Stanion
“History belongs to those who write it.”
J Stanion, My Place Among Them

“Vahşi hayvanlar ölüleri çekiştiriyor, karga sürüleri ziyafet çekiyordu. Timur’un ünlü kuleleri de bu ölüm tarlasının üzerinde yükseliyordu. Kellelerden kulelerdi bunlar. Osmanoğlu’nun en büyük şehzadesi Süleyman’ın tebaası işte orada yatıyordu.”
Deniz Canan, Larende'nin Düşüşü

“Beni mahvetti. Gülüşüyle aklımı çeldi. Bakışıyla kalbimi mühürledi. Bahtıma yalnızca birkaç cilve düştü. Sonrasında ateşin çevresinde dönen bir pervane böceği oldum. Evet umutsuz ama belki bir umut bulurum diye darma duman.”
Deniz Canan, Larende'nin Düşüşü

Iota Angel
“I wished that old Diogenes, groping so patiently with his lantern, searching so zealously for one solitary honest man in all the world, might meander along and stumble on our party. I ought not to say it, may be, but still I suppose he would have put out his light." Mark Twain”
Iota Angel, The Island Beyond the Coast - Book II: A real-life journey set in Greece during the 19th century with Bayard Taylor & Mark Twain

Iota Angel
“Much that we learned, much that we saw, much that we heard, we will forget, but still a store of softly-tinted images will remain in our memories. We will remember something." Mark Twain”
Iota Angel, The Island Beyond the Coast - Book II: A real-life journey set in Greece during the 19th century with Bayard Taylor & Mark Twain

Iota Angel
“One author is too favorable, another too severe, and I foresee that, inasmuch as my path lies between the two extremes, I shall be, to some extent, discredited by both sides." Bayard Taylor”
Iota Angel, The Island Beyond the Coast - Book II: A real-life journey set in Greece during the 19th century with Bayard Taylor & Mark Twain

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