470 Quotes by Dorothy L. Sayers

  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
  • Quote

    Not on the wealthy, who buy only what they want when they want it, was the vast superstructure of industry founded and built up, but on those who, aching for a luxury beyond their reach and for a leisure for ever denied them, could be bullied or wheedled into spending their few hardly won shillings on whatever might give them, if only for a moment, a leisured and luxurious illusion.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    Harriet was angry, and her face showed it. Men; when they got together they were all alike – even Peter. For a moment he and Kirk stood together on the far side of a chasm, and she hated them both.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    The sun is shining, and I am in the mood to make mistakes through over-confidence.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    But that’s men all over. They want the thing done and then, of course, they don’t like the consequences. Poor dears, they can’t help it. They haven’t got logical minds.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    It has been said, by myself and others, that a love-interest is only an intrusion upon a detective story. But to the characters involved, the detective-interest might well seem an irritating intrusion upon their love-story.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    I wanted it all to be wonderful for you.’ She waited for him to find his own answer to this, which he did with disarming swiftness. ‘That’s vanity, I suppose. Take pen and ink and write it down. His lordship is in the enjoyment of very low spirits, owing to his inexplicable inability to bend Providence to his own designs.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    Why doesn’t God smite this dictator dead?′ is a question a little remote from us,” says one of the characters in The Man Born to Be King. “Why, madam, did he not strike you dumb and imbecile before you uttered that baseless and unkind slander the day before yesterday? Or me, before I behaved with such cruel lack of consideration to that well-meaning friend? And why, sir, did he not cause your hand to rot off at the wrist before you signed your name to that dirty little bit of financial trickery?

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
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    Joyce has freed us from the superstition of syntax,” agreed the curly man.

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  • Author Dorothy L. Sayers
  • Quote

    There is something about wills which brings out the worst side of human nature. People who under ordinary circumstances are perfectly upright and amiable, go as curly as corkscrews and foam at the mouth, whenever they hear the words ‘I devise and bequeath.

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