“The motives of mankind are plainer than the motions they produce.”
R.D. Blackmore“I wandered in the streets, what with the noise the people made, the number of the coaches, the running of the footmen, the swaggering of great courtiers, and the thrusting aside of everybody, many a time I longed to be back among the sheep again, for fear of losing my peacefulness of spirit.”
R.D. Blackmore, Complete Collection of R. D. Blackmore“Either love me not at all, or as I love you, for ever.”
R.D. Blackmore, Complete Collection of R. D. Blackmore“It seemed to me that if the lawyers failed to do their duty, they ought to pay people for waiting upon them, instead of making them pay for it.”
R.D. Blackmore, Lorna Doone“But during those two months of fog . . . the saddest and the heaviest thing was to stand beside the sea. To be upon the beach yourself, and see the long waves coming in; to know that they are long waves, but only see a piece of them. And to hear them lifting roundly, swelling over smooth green rocks, plashing down in the hollow corners, but bearing on all the same as ever, soft and sleek and sorrowful, till their little noise is over.”
R.D. Blackmore, Lorna Doone“There was power all around, that power and that goodness, which make us come, as it were, outside our bodily selves, to share them. Over and beside us breathes the joy of hope and promise; under foot are troubles past; in the distance bowering newness tempts us ever forward. We quicken with largesse of life, and spring with vivid mystery.”
R.D. Blackmore, Lorna Doone“The motives of mankind are plainer than the motions they produce.”
R.D. Blackmore, Lorna Doone“All the beauty of the spring went for happy men to think of all the increase of the year was for other eyes to mark. Not a sign of any sunrise for me from my fount of life”
not a breath to stir the dead leaves fallen on my heart’s Spring.