Women S Saga Quotes

Quotes tagged as "women-s-saga" Showing 1-12 of 12
Michael Tobert
“Séamus’s eyebrows, like the antennae of the potato beetle but with a greater sense of grievance, poke forward as he delivers his first utterance of the morning.”
Michael Tobert, Karna's Wheel

Michael Tobert
“Karṇa walks, his back is straight, he is lit up by his divine earings; yet his feet drag. He turns into an alley. His head droops and falls to his chest. He stops. Mist swirls around him, becomes motionless, parts. From between his ribs steps a young woman. Her eyes and face and tongue are brown like old blood and she is decked in old things and she wears upon her wrists two burnt black bracelets. She places the point of a knife under Karṇa’s chest plate and cuts, a gentle sawing motion, the blade moving beneath the skin, a slicing of the quick: nerves, blood vessels, sinews. I feel his pain; not a stab; it is insistent, enduring, but sharp nonetheless, as with any loss.”
Michael Tobert, Karna's Wheel

Gina Buonaguro
“A midwife knows too much... But if she is truly a wise woman, she knows when to keep her mouth shut.”
Gina Buonaguro, The Virgins of Venice

Gina Buonaguro
“Knowing I should get into the habit of praying on my knees before bed, I shrugged and instead huddled under the bedcovers, the rose clasped in my hands close to my heart. The stem was very long, with all thorns removed, and an old Venetian saying came to mind: The longer the stem, the greater the love.”
Gina Buonaguro, The Virgins of Venice

Jeanette Watts
“heir eyes met. They both smiled, aware that they were in public, where anyone could see them on the street and in the window. But the rest of the world did not matter. For that moment, everything else vanished. He was there, she was there, no trouble could touch them.”
Jeanette Watts, My Dearest Miss Fairfax

Gina Buonaguro
“The day was perfect. Hot, yes, but with a refreshing zephyr sidling in from the west. The lagoon was flecked with small islands, and beyond lay the more ominous mainland, the papal army camped somewhere on it. But here, on this beautiful islet far from our usual universe, a warrior pope seemed a figment.”
Gina Buonaguro, The Virgins of Venice

Gina Buonaguro
“Venetians prefer being merchants to philosophers.”
Gina Buonaguro, The Virgins of Venice

Gina Buonaguro
“We stood for a moment, the brackish canal water teething at the stone,the last of the stars fading as the sky transformed from black to indigo. A pair of swans like large white clouds floated on the water, their heads tucked under their wings, as a gondola pulled up, a lantern on the prow, the gondolier on the stern, rubbing his sleepy eyes.”
Gina Buonaguro

Gina Buonaguro
“Despite the convent walls, when I was writing, my mind was free.”
Gina Buonaguro, The Virgins of Venice

Kate  Rose
“It was not too farfetched to see this moment as the beginning of an intense communion with Nature; mind and body willingly rendered into a vessel through which She could enact her cures.”
Kate Rose, The Angel and the Apothecary

Kate  Rose
“Jeremiah has come to see life as a serious of motions he must enact towards its conclusion.”
Kate Rose, The Angel and the Apothecary

Kate  Rose
“Love is but a reflection of oneself in the looking glass.”
Kate Rose, The Angel and the Apothecary