Some Mouthwatering Quotes
"Cultivate in them, while there is yet time,
the utmost graces of the fancies and affections, to adorn their lives so much in
need of ornament; or, in the day of your triumph, when romance is utterly driven
out of their souls, and they and a bare existence stand face to face, Reality
will take a wolfish turn, and make an end of you." Book 2, Chap. 6
"As he now leaned back in his chair, and bent his deep-set eyes upon her in his
turn, perhaps he might have seen one wavering moment in her, when she was
impelled to throw herself upon his breast, and give him the pent-up confidences
of her heart. But, to see it, he must have overleaped at a bound the artificial
barriers he had for many years been erecting, between himself and all those
subtle essences of humanity which will elude the utmost cunning of algebra until
the last trumpet ever to be sounded shall blow even algebra to wreck. The
barriers were too many and too high for such a leap." Book 1, Chap. 15
"Strange as it always is to consider any assembly in the act of submissively
resigning itself to the dreariness of some complacent person, lord or commoner,
whom three-fourths of it could, by no human means, raise out of the slough of
inanity to their own intellectual level, it was particularly strange, and it was
even particularly affecting, to see this crowd of earnest faces, whose honesty
in the main no competent observer free from bias could doubt, so agitated by
such a leader." Book 2, Chap. 4
"Mr. Gradgrind greatly tormented his mind about what the people read in this
library: a point whereon little rivers of tabular statements periodically flowed
into the howling ocean of tabular statements, which no diver ever got to any
depth in and came up sane." Book 1, Chap. 8
"She went up to the house, keeping within the shrubbery, and went round it,
peeping between the leaves at the lower windows. Most of them were open, as they
usually were in such warm weather, but there were no lights yet, and all was
silent. She tried the garden with no better effect." Book 2, Chap 11
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