Quotes About City
High above the city, on a tall column, stood the statue of the Happy Prince. He was gilded all over with thin leaves of fine gold, for eyes he had two bright sapphires, and a large red ruby glowed on his sword-hilt.
~ Oscar Wilde
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London late at night -- or even in the daytime, for that matter -- is no place for a man in scarlet tights.
~ p g wodehouse
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I can't help your troubles," said Motty firmly. "Listen to me, old thing: this is the first time in my life that I've had a real chance to yield to the temptations of a great city. What's the use of a great city having temptations if fellows don't yield to them?
~ P. G. Wodehouse
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That is the peculiarity of London. There is a sort of cold unfriendliness about it. A city like New York makes the new arrival feel at home in half an hour; but London is a specialist in what Psmith called in his letter the Distant Stare. You have to buy London's good will.
~ P. G. Wodehouse
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What's the use of a great city having temptations if fellows don't yield to them?
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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London was too big to be angry with. It took no notice of him. It did not care whether he was glad to be there or sorry, and there was no means of making it care. That is the peculiarity of London. There is a sort of cold unfriendliness about it. A city like New York makes the new arrival feel at home in half an hour; but London is a specialist in what Psmith in his letter had called the Distant Stare. You have to buy London's good-will.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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The metropolitan touch sometimes proves a trifle too exotic for the provinces.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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New York is an egotist. It will suffer no divided attention. Look at me! says the voice of the city imperiously, and its children obey. It snatches their thoughts from their inner griefs, and concentrates them on the pageant that rolls unceasingly from one end of the island to the other. One may despair in New York, but it is difficult to brood on the past; for New York is the City of the Present, the City of Things that are Going On.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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There was nothing of the flaneur about the Bowery boy.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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To have to come and live in New York! To have to leave my little cottage and take a stuffy, smelly, over-heated hole of an apartment in this Heaven-forsaken, festering Gehenna. To have to mix night after night with a mob who think that life is a sort of St. Vitus's dance, and imagine that they're having a good time because they're making enough noise for six and drinking too much for ten.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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What on earth did he do after that? London late at night—or even in the daytime, for that matter—is no place for a man in scarlet tights.
~ P.G. Wodehouse
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Quién soy en esta ciudad muerta?...No entiendo sino las cenizas.
~ Pablo Neruda
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Sólo con una ardiente paciencia conquistaremos la espléndida ciudad que dará luz, justicia y dignidad a todos los hombres. Así la poesía no habrá cantado en vano.
~ Pablo Neruda
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I went up to the terrace again and looked out on the tawny, many-alleyed city. At night it looked carved from brown sugar.
~ Pat Conroy
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I have built a city from the books I've read. A good book sings a a timeless music that is heard in the choir lofts, and balconies, and theaters that thrived within that secret city inside me.
~ Pat Conroy
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San Francisco is a city that requires a fine pair of legs, a city of cliffs misnamed as hills, honeycombed with a fine webbing of showy houses that cling to the slanted streets with the fierceness of abalones.
~ Pat Conroy
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No city could be more beautiful than Charleston during the brief reign of azaleas, no city on earth.
~ Pat Conroy
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knew how to walk in a great city and I did not. Outlander, visitor, I could smell the sea as I entered the lobby of Savannah's apartment, the old familiar scent of the Eastern seaboard roaring up the Avenues. The antique elevator, the size and shape of a coffin, wheezed and groaned its way to the sixth floor. I set my luggage on the marble floor and tried twelve keys before I discovered the four
~ Pat Conroy
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It [my sister's voice] is clear and light, a voice without seasons, like bells over a green city or snowfall on the roots of orchids.
~ Pat Conroy
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Though I will always be a visitor to Charleston, I will always remain one with a passionate belief that it is the most beautiful city in America and that to walk the old section of the city at night is to step into the bloodstream of a history extravagantly lived by a people born to a fierce and unshakable advocacy of their past.
~ Pat Conroy
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Faey lived, for those who knew how to find her, within Ombria's past. Parts of the city's past lay within time's reach, beneath the streets in great old limestone tunnels: the hovels and mansions and sunken river that Ombria shrugged off like a forgotten skin, and buried beneath itself through the centuries.
~ Patricia A. McKillip
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Lydea was a blown flame; Lydea was yesterday; Lydea, alone on the streets of Ombria, was already changing into something neither of them would recognize, if she survived to see them again.
~ Patricia A. McKillip
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This palace,' he had said, 'is a small city, past lying close to present like one shoe next to another. If you look at them in a mirror, left becomes right, present becomes past...
~ Patricia A. McKillip
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He had made tiny pipes of feathers he had found along the streets; birds answered him here as they had in the hinterlands. A night-bird, singing back to his playing, showed him the loose bar in the iron fence, the furrowed earth along which the bar swung sideways, that told him, as the bird did, that others came here secretly. Around him, the sleeping city dreamed, tossed fretfully, muttered, dreamed again.
~ Patricia A. McKillip
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