Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile Quotes

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Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile by Françoise Sagan
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Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“You prefer people whom you are treating badly to be cheerful. It's less disturbing.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“It is always through the bodies of other people that you discover your own body, the length of it and the smell of it, distrustfully at first, and then with recognition.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“I would have liked to ask people: 'Are you in love?' or 'What are you reading?' but I never wondered what their job was, although to them it was often of prime importance.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“Perhaps I should give up books and conversation and walks, and head for a place where the pleasures of money and frivolity and other absorbing distractions could be enjoyed. Perhaps I should acquire the means to do so and myself become a thing of beauty.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“And yet there were things that I loved greatly: Paris, certain smells, books, love and my present life.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“And yet it's probably this moment that I will have loved the most, the one when I accepted the fact that life is just as it appears to me now, quietly heart-breaking.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse / A Certain Smile
“My father was already growing away from me. I was obsessed, tortured, by the embarrassed expression he had had at table and by how he had turned his face away.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse and A Certain Smile
“Now he himself was abandoning me and rendering me defenceless. I looked at him and thought: ‘You don’t love me as you used to. You are betraying me,’ and I tried to make him understand this without actually speaking.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse and A Certain Smile
“She seemed, that evening, to combine together everything that was attractive about maturity.”
Françoise Sagan, Bonjour Tristesse and A Certain Smile