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Once Upon a River Once Upon a River by Diane Setterfield
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Once Upon a River Quotes Showing 1-30 of 112
“And now, dear reader, the story is over. It is time for you to cross the bridge once more and return to the world you came from. This river, which is and is not the Thames, must continue flowing without you. You have haunted here long enough, and besides, you surely have rivers of your own to attend to?”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“There are stories that may be told aloud, and stories that must be told in whispers, and there are stories that are never told at all.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“It was better to tell such stories close to the river than in a drawing room. Words accumulate indoors, trapped by walls and ceilings. The weight of what has been said can lie heavily on what might yet be said and suffocate it. By the river the air carries the story on a journey: one sentence drifts away and makes way for the next.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“There is something about words. In expert hands, manipulated deftly, they take you prisoner.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“As is well-known, when the moon hours lengthen, human beings come adrift from the regularity of their mechanical clocks. They nod at noon, dream in waking hours, open their eyes wide to the pitch-black night. It is a time of magic. And as the borders between night and day stretch to their thinnest, so too do the borders between worlds. Dreams and stories merge with lived experience, the dead and the living brush against each other in their comings and goings, and the past and the present touch and overlap. Unexpected things can happen.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Then he looked beyond the ever-shifting alteration to study the stillness of her expression. He knew his camera could not capture this - that some things were only truly seen by the human eye. This was one of the images of his lifetime. He simply exposed his retina and let love burn her flickering, shimmering, absorbed face onto his soul.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“A river no more begins at its source than a story begins with the first page.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“They were collectors of words the same way so many of the gravel diggers were collectors of fossils. They kept an ear constantly alert for them, the rare, the unusual, the unique.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“There must be more to stories than you think.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
tags: magic
“Along the borders of this world lie others. There are places you can cross. This is one such place.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Well, then,” the cressman concluded sagely, “just ’cause a thing’s impossible don’t mean it can’t happen.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“There are few things that cannot be put right by love, and there is no shortage of that here.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“on a summer day winter always seems like something you have dreamt or heard spoken of and not a thing you have lived.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“A child is not an empty vessel.... to be formed in whatever way the parent thinks fit. They are born with their own hearts and they cannot be made otherwise, no matter what love a man lavishes on them.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Joe the storyteller was remembered at the Swan for a long, long time. And though eventually there came a day when the man himself was forgotten, his stories lived on.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“For one thing, the river that flows ever onwards is also seeping sideways, irrigating the fields and land to one side and the other. It finds its way into wells and is drawn up to launder petticoats and be boiled for tea. It is sucked into root membranes, travels up cell by cell to the surface, is held in the leaves of watercress”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“It was sublime—and the sublime is not to be trusted.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“He couldn’t go on. He went on.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“A curtain was drawn back in every man's inner theater and their storytelling minds got to work.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Tributaries A river on a map is a simple thing. Our river starts at Trewsbury Mead, and follows a course of some two hundred and thirty-six miles to reach the sea at Shoeburyness. But anyone who takes the trouble to follow its route, whether by boat or on foot, cannot help being aware that, furlong by furlong, singleness of direction is not its most obvious feature. En route the river does not seem particularly intent on reaching its destination. Instead it winds its way”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Something happens and then something else happens and then all sorts of other things happen, expected and unexpected, unusual and ordinary.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“They think I am concealing my ugliness from them, when in truth it is their ugliness I am hiding.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Miracle” was the word Jonathan had pronounced, and they tested it on their own tongues. They were used to it in the Bible, where it meant impossible things that happened an impossibly long time ago in places so far away from here that they might as well not exist. Here in the inn it applied to the laughably improbable chance that the boat mender would ever pay his slate in full: now that would be a miracle all right. But tonight, at winter solstice in the Swan at Radcot, the word had a different weight.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Her quiet and kind listening had made it possible to speak his thoughts aloud, and sometimes it was only when he spoke his thoughts that he knew he had them. It was surprising how a man’s mind might remain half in shadow until the right confidant appeared, and Maud had been that confidant.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“The laws of life and death, as she had learned them, were incomplete. There was more to life, more to death, than medical science had known.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“She was a woman who let life happen to her without troubling her mind about things more than was necessary.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“There were some for whom the world was such a tricky thing that they marvelled at it without feeling any need to puzzle it out.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“One of the best ways of avoiding his torments was to be ignorant about something and let him put you straight.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“Again she missed God. She had shared everything with him. From childhood she had gone to him with every question, doubt, delight, and triumph. He had accompanied every advance in her thinking; in action he had been her daily collaborator. But God was gone. This was something she was going to have to work out by herself.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River
“The events of six months ago seemed very distant now, for on a summer day winter always seems like something you have dreamt or heard spoken of and not a thing you have lived.”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River

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