Virgil > Virgil's Quotes

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  • #1
    Oscar Wilde
    “I am so clever that sometimes I don't understand a single word of what I am saying.”
    Oscar Wilde, The Happy Prince and Other Stories

  • #2
    Oscar Wilde
    “The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”
    Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest

  • #3
    Oscar Wilde
    “I don't want to go to heaven. None of my friends are there.”
    Oscar Wilde

  • #4
    Rick Riordan
    “She decided she'd rather die in some less memorable way- maybe falling down the stairs, or going peacefully in her sleep at the age eighty, after a nice quiet life with Percy.Yes, that sounded good.”
    Rick Riordan, The House of Hades

  • #5
    Rick Riordan
    “Behold!" Percy shouted. "The god's chosen beverage. Tremble before the horror of Diet Coke!”
    Rick Riordan, The Mark of Athena

  • #6
    Rick Riordan
    “And it was pretty much the best underwater kiss of all time.”
    Rick Riordan, The Last Olympian

  • #7
    Rick Riordan
    “I learned a long time ago: Never bet against Annabeth.”
    Rick Riordan, The Mark of Athena

  • #8
    Rick Riordan
    “Save yourselves!” Percy warned. “It is too late for us!”
    Then he gasped and pointed to the spot where Frank was hiding. “Oh, no! Frank is turning into a crazy dolphin!”
    Nothing happened.
    “I said,” Percy repeated, “Frank is turning into a crazy dolphin!”
    Frank stumbled out of nowhere, making a big show of grabbing his throat. “Oh, no,” he said, like he was reading from a teleprompter. “I am turning into a crazy dolphin.”
    He began to change, his nose elongating into a snout, his skin becoming sleek and gray. He fell to the deck as a dolphin, his tail thumping against the boards.
    The pirate crew disbanded in terror.”
    Rick Riordan, The Mark of Athena

  • #9
    Rick Riordan
    “Annabeth pressed her lips to Percy’s ear. “I love you.”
    She wasn’t sure he could hear her—but if they died, she wanted those to be her last words.”
    Rick Riordan, The House of Hades

  • #10
    Rick Riordan
    “Annabeth gripped the hilt of her dagger. “A bounty on our heads . . . as if we didn’t attract enough monsters already.”
    “Do we get WANTED posters?” Leo asked. “And do they have our bounties, like, broken down on a price list?”
    Hazel wrinkled her nose. “What are you talking about?”
    “Just wondering how much I’m going for these days,” Leo said. “I mean, I can understand not being as pricey as Percy or Jason, maybe . . . but am I worth, like, two Franks, or three Franks?”
    Rick Riordan, The Mark of Athena

  • #11
    Rick Riordan
    “The older lady harrumphed. "I warned you, daughter. This scoundrel Hades is no good. You could've married the god of doctors or the god of lawyers, but noooo. You had to eat the pomegranate."
    "Mother-"
    "And get stuck in the Underworld!"
    "Mother, please-"
    "And here it is August, and do you come home like you're supposed to? Do you ever think about your poor lonely mother?"
    "DEMETER!" Hades shouted. "That is enough. You are a guest in my house."
    "Oh, a house is it?" she said. "You call this dump a house? Make my daughter live in this dark, damp-"
    "I told you," Hades said, grinding his teeth, "there's a war in the world above. You and Persephone are better off here with me."
    "Excuse me," I broke in. "But if you're going to kill me, could you just get on with it?”
    Rick Riordan, The Last Olympian

  • #12
    Rick Riordan
    “Lots of death, huh? Personally, I'm trying to avoid lots of death, but you guys have fun!”
    Rick Riordan, The House of Hades

  • #13
    Rick Riordan
    “Not knowing is half the fun," Aphrodite said, "Exquisitely painful isn't it? Not being sure who you love and who loves you? Oh, you kids! It's so cute I'm going to cry!”
    Rick Riordan, The Titan’s Curse

  • #14
    Neil Gaiman
    “Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.”
    Neil Gaiman, Coraline

  • #15
    Amal El-Mohtar
    “I love you. I love you. I love you. I'll write it in waves. In skies. In my heart. You'll never see, but you will know. I'll be all the poets, I'll kill them all and take each one's place in turn, and every time love's written in all the strands it will be to you.”
    Amal El-Mohtar, This Is How You Lose the Time War

  • #16
    Amal El-Mohtar
    “I want to be a body for you. I want to chase you, find you, I want to be eluded and teased and adored; I want to be defeated and victorious—I want you to cut me, sharpen me. I want to drink tea beside you in ten years or a thousand. Flowers grow far away on a planet they’ll call Cephalus, and these flowers bloom once a century, when the living star and its black-hole binary enter conjunction.I want to fix you a bouquet of them, gathered across eight hundred thousand years, so you can draw our whole engagement in a single breath, all the ages we’ve shaped together.”
    Amal El-Mohtar, This Is How You Lose the Time War

  • #17
    Amal El-Mohtar
    “I want to meet you in every place I ever loved. Listen to me. I am your echo. I would rather break the world than lose you.”
    Amal El-Mohtar, This Is How You Lose the Time War

  • #18
    Amal El-Mohtar
    “You have me watching birds, and though I don’t know their names like you know them, I have seen small bright singers puff before they trill. That’s how I feel. I sing myself out to you, and my talons clutch the branch, and I am wrung out until your next letter gives me breath, fills me to bursting.”
    Amal El-Mohtar, This Is How You Lose the Time War

  • #19
    Thomas   Morris
    “The human capacity for mischief, misadventure and downright idiocy is apparently a trait that progress cannot eradicate.”
    Thomas Morris, The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth: And Other Curiosities from the History of Medicine

  • #20
    Kate DiCamillo
    “Open your heart. Someone will come. Someone will come for you. But first you must open your heart.”
    Kate DiCamillo, The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

  • #21
    Kate DiCamillo
    “You must be filled with expectancy. You must be awash in hope. You must wonder who will love you, whom you will love next.”
    Kate DiCamillo, The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

  • #22
    Kate DiCamillo
    “Edward knew what it was like to say over and over again the names of those you had left behind. He knew what it was like to miss someone. And so he listened. And in his listening, his heart opened wide and then wider still. (page 103)”
    Kate DiCamillo, The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

  • #23
    Jack D. Zipes
    “Alas for those girls who've refused the truth: The sweetest tongue has the sharpest tooth.”
    Jack Zipes, Little Red Riding Hood and Other Classic French Fairy Tales

  • #24
    Julia Armfield
    “I used to think there was such a thing as emptiness, that there were places in the world one could go and be alone. This, I think, is still true, but the error in my reasoning was to assume that alone was somewhere you could go, rather than somewhere you had to be left.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #25
    Julia Armfield
    “I want to explain her in a way that would make you love her, but the problem with this is that loving is something we all do alone and through different sets of eyes.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #26
    Julia Armfield
    “I think,” Juna says after a pause, “that the thing about losing someone isn’t the loss but the absence of afterwards. D’you know what I mean? The endlessness of that.” She looks sideways at me and sniffs. “My friends were sad, people who knew my sister were sad, but everyone moves on after a month. It’s all they can manage. It doesn’t mean they weren’t sad, just that things keep going or something, I don’t know.” She rolls her shoulder, shakes her head. “It’s hard when you look up and realise that everyone’s moved off and left you in that place by yourself. Like they’ve all gone on and you’re there still, holding on to this person you’re supposed to let go of.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #27
    Julia Armfield
    “She refused almost every aspect of my help, the way women will when they've been bred to accept little more than the baset civility.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #28
    Julia Armfield
    “In my head, I think I’m often telling Miri stories, logging away information or things I’ve seen in order to tell her about them later.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #29
    Julia Armfield
    “It is easier, I think, to consider the fact of us in its many disparate pieces, as opposed to one vast and intractable thing. Easier, I think, to claw through the scatter of us in the hopes of retrieving something, of pulling some singular thing from the debris and holding it up to the light.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #30
    Julia Armfield
    “I used to hope, I typed once, that I’d die before my partner, even though I knew that was selfish. I used to think that I hoped I’d die before she died and before the planet died and really just generally before things got any worse.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea



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