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Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes & Sayings

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Top Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Li Ka-shing

You can believe in Fung Shui if you want, but ultimately people control their own fate. The most important thing is to improve yourself and give it your best. Then many things previously thought to be impossible will become possible. — Li Ka-shing

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Maximus The Confessor

God, Who is by nature good and dispassionate, loves all men equally as His handiwork. But He glorifies the virtuous man because in his will he is united to God. At the same time, in His goodness he is merciful to the sinner and by chastising him in this life brings him back to the path of virtue. Similarly, a man of good and dispassionate judgment also loves all men equally. He loves the virtuous man because of his nature and the probity of his intention; and he loves the sinner, too, because of his nature and because in his compassion he pities him for foolishly stumbling in darkness. — Maximus The Confessor

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Ian Gregor

What The Mysteries of Udolpho suggests is how a novel, by presenting phenomena before it present resolutions, can create an on-going, perhaps spurious, but nevertheless compelling dynamic between details which can undermine the ability of form to impose its particular tyranny on the reader's experience: there is a life in the novel which comes from within. — Ian Gregor

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Alan W. Watts

But if we were to realize that we are, as it were, all action, all deed - the doer vanishes, and with it vanishes this sense of man as something separate, something cut off, walled away from the rest of the world by his skin. When that realization comes about; when, in other words, our own separateness disappears, we have what the Buddha called nirvana — Alan W. Watts

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Jane Austen

Oh! No, I only mean what I have read about. It always puts me in mind of the country that Emily and her father travelled through, in The Mysteries of Udolpho. But you never read novels, I dare say?" "Why not?" "Because they are not clever enough for you - gentlemen read better books. — Jane Austen

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Amy Bloom

I think the impulse to get to the heart of the story and to tell it well is in my genes. — Amy Bloom

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Franklin D. Roosevelt

To stand upon ramparts and die for our principles is heroic, but to sally forth to battle and win for our principles is something more than heroic. — Franklin D. Roosevelt

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Melissa Schroeder

Take some more advice from Dr. Micah. Don't give women too much time to think. It never ends up good for either of you. — Melissa Schroeder

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Ovid

That pleasure which can be safely indulged in is the least inviting. — Ovid

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Marjane Satrapi

I think the only universal thing is one individual. If you talk about a country or a nation or a culture, it's so vague. I mean what is a nation? A nation is full of nice and bad and long and tall and short and thin people. It's not like everybody is the same. — Marjane Satrapi

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Annette Bening

In a film, if you can capture what's going on underneath, you can begin to make a connection between the character and the people watching it. — Annette Bening

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Dennis Frederiksen

Walk through the storm fearless and strong. Follow your heart, it's all about to you. — Dennis Frederiksen

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Tamara Geraeds

All these bumps in the road are just there to make you fly. So let's do this, I'm ready to soar! — Tamara Geraeds

Mysteries Of Udolpho Quotes By Tom Stoppard

LADY CROOM: You have been reading too many novels by Mrs Radcliffe, that is my opinion. This is a garden for The Castle of Otranto or The Mysteries of Udolpho
CHATER: The Castle of Otranto, my lady, is by Horace Walpole.
NOAKES: (Thrilled) Mr Walpole the gardener?!
LADY CROOM: Mr Chater, you are a welcome guest at Sidley Park but while you are one, The Castle of Otranto was written by whomsoever I say it was, otherwise what is the point of being a guest or having one? — Tom Stoppard