Sunday, January 24, 2010

War, Effects of

Subject: Patriotism
Quote: “I hate the War…. I hate the cant about it, the smugness—the horrible, horrible patriotism…. All this country, country, country! Betraying your country—dying for your country—serving your country. Why should one’s country mean anything at all?”
            Tommy said simply: “I don’t know. It just does.”
           "You believe in the British Empire—and—and the stupidity of dying for one’s country…. Nothing’s worth dying for. It’s all an idea—talk—froth—high-flown idiocy. My country doesn’t mean anything to me at all.”
          “Some day,” said Tommy, “you’ll be surprised to find that it does.”
Character: Sheila Perenna and Tommy Beresford
Chapter/Story: 4
Book Title/Copyright: N or M?, 1941


Subject:  Effects of War
Quote:  Always, all her life, she had been a resolute clearheaded person.  She had known what she wanted and what she didn’t want.  Never, until now, had she been content just to drift along.
            Yes, that was just what it was!  Drifting along!  An aimless formless method of living.  Ever since she had come out of the service.  A wave of nostalgia swept over her for those war days.  Days when duties were clearly defined, when life was planned and orderly—when the weight of individual decisions had been lifted from her.  But even as she formulated the idea, she was horrified at herself.  Was that really and truly what people were secretly feeling everywhere?  Was that what, ultimately, war did to you?  It was not the physical dangers…. No, it was the spiritual danger of learning how much easier life was if you ceased to think.  She…was no longer the clearheaded, resolute, intelligent girl who had joined up.  Her intelligence had been specialized, directed in well-defined channels.  Now, mistress of herself and her life once more, she was appalled at the disinclination of her mind to seize and grapple with her own personal problems.
Character:  Omniscient Narrator
Chapter/Story:  Book One—13
Book Title/Copyright:  There is a Tide, 1948

Wages of Sin

Subject:  Wages of Sin
Quote:  “The wages of sin, mademoiselle, are said to be death.  But sometimes the wages of sin seem to be luxury.  Is that any more endurable, I wonder?  To be cut off from one’s own home life.  To catch, perhaps, a single glimpse of it when the way back to it is barred—“
Character:  M. Hercule Poirot
Chapter/Story:  Book Two—13
Book Title/Copyright:  There is a Tide, 1948

Voice

Subject: Annoying Voices
Quote: Her voice had that faintly complaining note in it which is about the most annoying sound a human voice can contain.
Character: Omniscient Narrator
Chapter/Story: 10—The Pearson Family
Book Title/Copyright: Murder at Hazelmoor, 1931

Vanity

Subject: Vanity
Quote: “It [agreeing to marry her husband] made me feel so powerful…. The others thought me simply wonderful, and of course, it would have been very nice for them to have me. But I’m everything you most dislike and disapprove of, and yet you couldn’t withstand me! My vanity couldn’t hold out against that. It’s so much nicer to be a secret and delightful sin to anybody than to be a feather in his cap. I make you frightfully uncomfortable and stir you up the wrong way the whole time, and yet you adore me madly. You do adore me madly, don’t you?”
Character: Griselda, the vicar’s wife
Chapter/Story: 1
Book Title/Copyright: Murder at the Vicarage, 1930


Subject:  Murderer’s Vanity
Quote:  “I’ve never met a murderer who wasn’t vain…. It’s their vanity that leads to their undoing, nine times out of ten.  They may be frightened of being caught, but they can’t help strutting and boasting and usually they’re sure they’ve been far too clever to be caught.”
Character:  Sir Arthur Hayward
Chapter/Story:  12
Book Title/Copyright:  Crooked House, 1949


Subject:  Vanity
Quote:  “Why do people keep, in particular, photographs?… It reminds them…. Why does a woman keep a photograph of herself when young?  And I say that the first reason is, essentially, vanity.  She has been a pretty girl and she keeps a photograph of herself to remind her of what a pretty girl she was.  It encourages her when her mirror tells her unpalatable things.”
Character:  M. Hercule Poirot
Chapter/Story:  20 
Book Title/Copyright:  Mrs. McGinty’s Dead, 1952