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“Every one needs to talk to some one . . . Before we had religion and other nonsense. Now for every one there should be some one to whom one can speak frankly, for all the valor that one could have one becomes very alone.”
―
Ernest Hemingway
,
For Whom the Bell Tolls
topic:
loneliness
talking
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“I have faults enough, but they are not, I hope, of understanding. My temper I dare not vouch for. It is, I believe, too little yielding—certainly too little for the convenience of the world. I cannot forget the follies and vices of other so...”
―
Jane Austen
,
Pride and Prejudice
“Woman, don't you know, is such a subject that however much you study it, it's always perfectly new.”
―
Leo Tolstoy
,
Anna Karenina
“When you are inquisitive, Jane, you always make me smile. You open your eyes like an eager bird, and make every now and then a restless movement, as if answers in speech did not flow fast enough for you, and you wanted to read the tablet of one's...”
―
Charlotte Brontë
,
Jane Eyre
“No longer did he feel shame for his hairless body or his human features, for now his reason told him that he was of a different race from his wild and hairy companions.”
―
Edgar Rice Burroughs
,
Tarzan of the Apes
“They have a word for people our age. They call us children and they treat us like mice.”
―
Orson Scott Card
,
Ender's Game
“If we have only one life to live, we might as well not have lived at all.”
―
Milan Kundera
,
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
“Truth is so obscure in these times, and falsehood so established, that unless we love the truth, we cannot know it.”
―
Blaise Pascal
,
Pensées
“before I can live with other folks I've got to live with myself. The one thing that doesn't abide by majority rule is a person's conscience.”
―
Harper Lee
,
To Kill a Mockingbird
“Beauty to her, as to all who have felt, lay not in the thing, but in what the thing symbolized.”
―
Thomas Hardy
,
Tess of the d'Urbervilles
“O, why should nature build so foul a den, unless the gods delight in tragedies?”
―
William Shakespeare
,
Titus Andronicus
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