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Quotes About October

There was such a nice frosty, Octobery smell in the air, blent with the delightful odor of newly plowed fields. I walked on and on until twilight had deepened into a moonlit autumn night. I was alone but not lonely.
~ L.M. Montgomery
I'm so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn't it?
~ L.M. Montgomery
Larry is back in town...The wedding is set for October. Tammy is threatening to have me in the wedding. Some friends they are.
~ Laurell K. Hamilton
Nació una tarde lluviosa de octubre, a comienzos del nuevo siglo en la fría Bogotá.
~ Jesús Rodríguez
He fell in October 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still on the whole front, that the army report confined itself to the single sentence: All quiet on the Western Front.
~ Erich Maria Remarque
October, crisp, misty, golden October, when the light is sweet and heavy.
~ Angela Carter
I take pride in knowing the NFL is pink in October, sparking conversations everywhere about breast cancer and prevention, all in the spirit of my mom.
~ DeAngelo Williams
My first film goes into production in October. It's called White Boy Shuffle and it's based on a novel about a young black kid and it's sort of reminiscent of Catcher in the Rye.
~ Ryan Phillippe
O hushed October morning mild, Begin the hours of this day slow, Make the day seem to us less brief... Retard the sun with gentle mist; Enchant the land with amethyst...
~ Robert Frost
sometime in October 1916, Haig abandoned the notion of a breakthrough on the Somme and joined his peers in France and Germany in committing his soldiers to a battle of attrition.
~ Robin Neillands
I remember it as October days are always remembered, cloudless, maple-flavored, golden and so clean it quivers.
~ Leif Enger
On the desert, there was no October; there was only summer and hell. "Where
~ Douglas Clegg
October is a month of introspection and retrospection, of taking stock.
~ JOAN BORYSENKO
Philly would claim the greatest number of flu deaths of any city in the nation, 13,000 in all. Nor could we have imagined as we bumped along those Pennsylvania roads that this month of October 1918 would be the deadliest month in the history of the United States, with 195,000 people dying of flu.
~ Ann Tatlock
Je fais du jardinage, je sarcle la pente et je me souviens d'octobre dernier où, dans la douleur, parce qu'il ne m'avait pas appelée, je travaillais là, de la même manière.
~ Annie Ernaux
sunglasses and rubbed his right eye with his index finger.  Let's see...it was the October 15th issue, page 12, lower right-hand corner. Quinn
~ F. Paul Wilson
It was October in 1913, midway in a week of pleasant days, with the sunshine loitering in the cross-streets and the atmosphere so languid as to seem weighted with ghostly falling leaves.
~ F. Scott Fitzgerald
The events of October 1962 are widely hailed as Kennedy's finest hour.
~ Noam Chomsky
It was the tradition to sacrifice to the Uenius publicus on 9 October, at the same time as to Fausta Felicitas and 'Victorious' Venus, two deities who had a vital and historic link with Rome.
~ Robert Turcan
En las gloriosas mañanas de octubre me he sentido poderoso, me he sentido comprensivo como un dios.
~ Roberto Arlt
and so many orchards circled the village that on some crisp October afternoons the whole wold smelled like pie.
~ Alice Hoffman
The most glorious hour in Manhattan was when twilight fell in sheets across the Great Lawn. Bands of blue turned darker by the moment as the last of the pale light filtered through the boughs of cherry trees and black locusts. In October, the meadows turned gold; the vines were twists of yellow and red.
~ Alice Hoffman
October began as a golden hour and ended with Samhain, the day when the worlds of the living and the dead opened to each other. There was no choice but to walk through the gate of time.
~ Alice Hoffman
Men, she thought, were one of the world's few sure comforts, like a fire on a cold October night, like cocoa, like broken-in-slippers. Their clumsy affections, their bristly faces, and their willingness to do what needed to be done - cook an omelette, change lightbulbs, make with hugging - sometimes almost made being a woman fun.
~ Joe Hill