Susanna Clarke

The Ladies of Grace Adieu

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  • prozachas quoted7 years ago
    Above all remember this: that magic belongs as much to the heart as to the head and everything which is done, should be done from love or joy or righteous anger.
  • prozachas quoted7 years ago
    Now toasted cheese is a temptation few men can resist, be they charcoal burners or kings.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    Cassandra Parbringer at twenty was considered an ideal of a certain type of beauty to which some gentlemen are particularly partial. A white skin was agreeably tinged with pink.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    Mr Field, a gentleman not remarkable for his powers of observation, confidently supposed her to have a character childishly naive and full of pleasant, feminine submission in keeping with her face.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    "John Uskglass and the Cumbrian Charcoal Burner" is an example of that genre of stories (much loved by the medievals) in which the rich and powerful are confounded by their social inferiors.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    It further occurred to him that he was just as rich as ever and that, though his home already contained one pretty, young woman (his niece and ward, Cassandra Parbringer), he did not believe that another would go amiss.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    "On Lickerish Hill" and "Antickes and Frets" both describe the somewhat easier, less fraught relationship with fairies and magic which our English and Scottish ancestors once enjoyed.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    Women do seem to have fared somewhat better in these perplexing circumstances; the heroine of "Mrs Mabb", Venetia Moore, consistently demonstrates an ability to intuit the rules of Faerie, which the older and more experienced Duke is quite without.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    "Tom Brightwind or How the Fairy Bridge Was Built at Thoresby" remains a tale replete with interest for the student of Faerie.
  • Arsen Avchikhanovhas quoted2 years ago
    The first is to throw some sort of light on the development of magic in the British Isles at different periods; the second is to introduce the reader to some of the ways in which Faerie can impinge upon our own quotidian world, in other words to create a sort of primer to Faerie and fairies.
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