
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl asks us to list our ten favourite quotations from books, but I have taken a slightly different approach to the topic. There are so many passages I love from so many books that I would never be able to narrow them down to ten favourites – or even remember them all (which is why, for the last few years, I have been putting together my monthly Commonplace Book posts so that I will have some sort of record to look back on in the future).
Back to today’s post, though, and I have turned to Goodreads for help. Those of you who use Goodreads may know that there is a ‘Quotes’ function where you can find, ‘like’ and save notable quotations – and I have quite a few stored there, from which I have picked out ten that I found beautiful, funny, interesting or memorable in some way. Not necessarily all-time favourites, then, but I hope you’ll enjoy reading them anyway.
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1. One that all book lovers will understand:
“What she was finding also was how one book led to another, doors kept opening wherever she turned and the days weren’t long enough for the reading she wanted to do.”
Alan Bennett – The Uncommon Reader
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2. One from a favourite children’s book:
“Animals don’t behave like men,’ he said. ‘If they have to fight, they fight; and if they have to kill they kill. But they don’t sit down and set their wits to work to devise ways of spoiling other creatures’ lives and hurting them. They have dignity and animality.”
Richard Adams – Watership Down
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3. One I find beautiful and inspiring:
“A hard truth: that courage can be without meaning or impact, need not be rewarded, or even known. The world has not been made in that way. Perhaps, however, within the self there might come a resonance, the awareness of having done something difficult, of having done…something.”
Guy Gavriel Kay – The Last Light of the Sun
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4. One of my favourite opening lines:
“He was born with a gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad.”
Rafael Sabatini – Scaramouche
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5. One that I can identify with at the moment:
“Are there any leading men in your life?”
“Several, but they’re all fictional.”
Catherine Lowell – The Madwoman Upstairs
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6. One with which anyone who has read Dorothy Dunnett’s Lymond Chronicles will sympathise:
“I wish to God,” said Gideon with mild exasperation, “that you’d talk – just once – in prose like other people.”
Dorothy Dunnett – The Game of Kings
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7. One from a favourite classic:
“Some of us rush through life and some of us saunter through life. Mrs. Vesey sat through life.”
Wilkie Collins – The Woman in White
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8. One of Dickens’ best:
“That was a memorable day to me, for it made great changes in me. But it is the same with any life. Imagine one selected day struck out of it, and think how different its course would have been. Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day.”
Charles Dickens – Great Expectations
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9. One which gives us some good advice:
“The past can teach us, nurture us, but it cannot sustain us. The essence of life is change, and we must move ever forward or the soul will wither and die.”
Susanna Kearsley – Mariana
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10. One I find comforting when I’m having a bad day:
“Come what come may, time and the hour run through the roughest day.”
William Shakespeare – Macbeth
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Do you have any favourite quotations? How do you remember them? Do you keep a notebook or do you record them online somewhere?