571 Quotes by Hilary Mantel

  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    He would have thought God could make his own decisions, but Weston believes the creator may be pushed and coaxed and maybe bribed a little.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    He had meant to write to Gregory and say, I have seen such a sweet girl, I will find out who she is and, if I steer our family adroitly in the next few years, perhaps you can marry her. He has not written this. In his present precarious situation, it would be about as useful as the letters Gregory used to write to him: Dear father, I hope you are well. I hope your dog is well. And now no more for lack of time.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    His councillors caution, ‘No haste, Majesty. As soon as you choose, you forfeit advantage. You can marry only once.’ ‘Can he?’ Fitwilliam mutters. ‘This is Henry we’re talking about.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    Cardinal Campeggio has implored Katherine to bow to the king’s will, accept that her marriage is invalid and retire to a convent. Certainly, she says sweetly, she will become a nun: if the king will become a monk.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    Audley pats his arm. He wants to console him. But who can begin to do it? He si the inconsolable Master Cromwell: the unknowable, the inconstruable, the probably indefeasible Master Cromwell.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    And the more the king snips and carps, the more do his petitioners seek out the company of Cromwell, so unfailing in his amiable courtesy. At home, Jo comes to him looking perplexed. She.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    He thinks, I remembered you, Thomas More, but you didn’t remember me. You never even saw me coming.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    I didn’t cry much after I was 35, but staggered stony-faced into middle age, a handkerchief still in my bag just in case.

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  • Author Hilary Mantel
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    In Italy you learned cunning, but in Antwerp, flexibility. And besides, the shopping! Just step out of your door and you can get a diamond or a broom, you can get knives, candlesticks and keys, ironwork to suit the expert eye. They make soap and glass, they cure fish and they deal in alum and promissory notes. You can buy pepper and ginger, aniseed and cumin, saffron and rice, almonds and figs; you can buy vats and pots, combs and mirrors, cotton and silk, aloes and myrrh.

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