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1 " And here am I, she thought, fixed in the religious life like a candle on a spike. I consume, I burn away, always lighting the same corner, always beleaguered by the same shadows; and in the end I shall burn out and another candle will be fixed in my stead. "
― Sylvia Townsend Warner , The Corner That Held Them
2 " It is not hunger and nakedness that worst afflict the poor, for a very little thieving or a small alms can remedy that. No, the wretchedness of the poor lies below hunger and nakedness. It consists in their incessant incertitude and fear, the drudging succession of shift and scheme and subterfuge, the labouring in the quicksand where every step that takes hold of the firm ground is also a step into the danger of condemnation. Not cold and hunger but Law and Justice are the bitterest affliction of the poor. Entering "
3 " He had no wish to obtrude himself on bishops. "
4 " No Jews now,’ she chirruped, ‘to waylay poor little lads and hang them up in cellars. It was a good day for England when they were packed off. "
5 " She looked; and it was as if new eyes had been put into her head. "
6 " There is pleasure in watching the sophistries of mankind, his decisions made and unmade like the swirl of a mill-race, causation sweeping him forward from act to act while his reason dances on the surface of action like a pattern of foam. Yes, and the accumulations of human reason, she thought, the proofs we all assent to, the truths established beyond shadow of doubt, these are like the stale crusts of foam that lie along the river-bank and look solid enough, till a cloudburst further up the valley sends down a force of water that breaks them up and sweeps them away. "
7 " After all, every man will climb if he can, and not many of them continue so kind to old acquaintances. "
8 " Here lay she, still reverberating the pleasure long laid aside and never forgotten. "
9 " Dame Salome, with one of those flashes of worldly wisdom which at times emerge from very stupid well-meaning people, "
10 " Squeezed uncomfortably into a corner the chaplain looked at him with a malevolence so habitual that it was almost indifference. "
11 " It is not hunger and nakedness that worst afflict the poor, for a very little thieving or a small alms can remedy that. No, the wretchedness of the poor lies below hunger and nakedness. It consists in their incessant incertitude and fear, the drudging succession of shift and scheme and subterfuge, the labouring in the quicksand where every step that takes hold of the firm ground is also a step into the danger of condemnation. Not cold and hunger but Law and Justice are the bitterest affliction of the poor. "
12 " There is pleasure in watching the sophistries of mankind, his decisions made and unmade like the swirl of a mill-race, causation sweeping him forward from act to act while his reason dances on the surface of action like a pattern of foam. "
13 " It was through him that the novices began to practise levitation. "
14 " His spirits, sharpened by disliking the bishop as an appetite is sharpened by pickles, took an upward turn. "
15 " his adventure had mastered him, and till it released him there was nothing for it but to submit. "
16 " Of all menaces to peace and quiet a visionary nun is the worst, "
17 " But then, what is belief? A thought lodges in the mind, will not out, preserves its freshness and colour and flexibility like the corpse of a saint: is this belief, or is it heresy? "
18 " But the prioress continued to express pleasure in Dame Alice’s common sense, candour, and lack of imagination, so Dame Alice continued to manifest common sense and lack of imagination. "
19 " Dame Helen agreed that cleverness was not everything. Many saints were simple enough. The prioress remarked that it was not till christian times that simplicity became a virtue; the good characters of the Old Testament were ingenious as well as virtuous. ‘That was because they were Jews,’ said Dame Beatrix. "
20 " But we cannot all be saints. Some of us have to be stewards. "