Quotes From "Where Angels Fear To Tread" By E.m. Forster

Miss Abbott, don't worry over me. Some people are born...
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Miss Abbott, don't worry over me. Some people are born not to do things. I'm one of them. E.m. Forster
The advance of regret can be so gradual that it...
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The advance of regret can be so gradual that it is impossible to say "yesterday I was happy, today I am not. E.m. Forster
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Mr. Herriton, don’t — please, Mr. Herriton — a dentist. His father’s a dentist.” Philip gave a cry of personal disgust and pain. He shuddered all over, and edged away from his companion. A dentist! A dentist at Monteriano. A dentist in fairyland! False teeth and laughing gas and the tilting chair at a place which knew the Etruscan League, and the Pax Romana, and Alaric himself, and the Countess Matilda, and the Middle Ages, all fighting and holiness, and the Renaissance, all fighting and beauty! He thought of Lilia no longer. He was anxious for himself: he feared that Romance might die. E.m. Forster
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He had known so much about her once -what she thought, how she felt, the reasons for her actions. And now he only knew that he loved her, and all the other knowledge seemed passing from him just as he needed it most. E.m. Forster
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All a child's life depends on the ideal it has of its parents. Destroy that and everything goes - morals, behavior, everything. Absolute trust in someone else is the essence of education. E.m. Forster
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For a wonderful physical tie binds the parents to the children; and–by some sad, strange irony–it does not bind us children to our parents. For if it did, if we could answer their love not with gratitude but with equal love, life would lose much of its pathos and much of its squalor, and we might be wonderfully happy. E.m. Forster
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For the dead, who seem to take away so much, really take with them nothing that is ours. E.m. Forster