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Donna Tartt

"It's a very Greek idea, and a very profound one. Whatever we call beautiful, we quiver before it. And what could be more terrifying and beautiful, to lose control completely? To throw off all the chains of being for an instant, to shatter the accident of our mortal selves?"

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"It's a very Greek idea, and a very profound one. Whatever we call beautiful, we quiver before it. And what could be more terrifying and beautiful, to lose control completely? To throw off all the chains of being for an instant, to shatter the accident of our mortal selves?"

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Donna Grant

"Stars earn their brightest colors in the dark."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Each moment has an unrealized dimension of beauty that only your perspective can liberate."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Beauty without grace is the hook without the bait."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"True fashion should reflect deeper feelings of inner passion for life."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"If the path is beautiful, all you have to do when walking in that path is to be beautiful so as to not ruin the beauty of the path!"

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Beauty is the sole ambition, the exclusive goal of Taste."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"The beauty of a woman is not in her facial makeup but in the kindness of her soul."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"You always were beautiful, and you always will be beautiful."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Beauty is an outward gift, which is seldom despised, except by those to whom it has been refused."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Do what is beautiful to make yourself beautiful."

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Personal Development

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Donna Tartt
"I believe, in a funny way, the job of the novelist is to be out there on the fringes and speaking for an experience that has not really been spoken for."

Experience

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Donna Tartt
"So I'm not a Southern writer in the commonly held sense of the term, like Faulkner or Eudora Welty, who took the South for their entire literary environment and subject matter."

Environment

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Donna Tartt
"What's worth living for? what's worth dying for? what's completely foolish to pursue?"

Meaning

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Donna Tartt
"The novel is about five students of classics who are studying with a classics professor, and they take the ideas of the things that they're learning from him a bit too seriously, with terrible consequences."

Creativity

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Donna Tartt
"A different and much deeper sort of beauty altogether. The thing and yet not the thing."

Mystery

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Donna Tartt
"You'd be surprised, Theo." she said, leaning back in her shawl-shaped chair, "what small, everyday things can lift us out of despair. But nobody can do it for you. You're the one who has to watch for the open door."

Hope

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Donna Tartt
"Why does that obstinate little voice in our heads torment us so?' he said, looking round the table. 'Could it be because it reminds us that we are alive, of our mortality, of our individual souls - which, after all, we are too afraid to surrender but yet make us feel more miserable than any other thing? But isn't it also pain that often makes us most aware of self?"

Mortality

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Donna Tartt
"I like the idea of living in a city - any city, especially a strange one - like the thought of traffic and crowds, of working in a bookstore, waiting tables in a coffee shop, who knew what kind of odd, solitary life I might slip into? Meals alone, waling the dogs in the evenings; and nobody knowing who I was."

Solitude

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Donna Tartt
"I think this goes more to the idea of 'relentless irony' than 'divine providence."

Irony

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Donna Tartt
"Richard Papen: As it happened, I knew Gartrell. He was a bad painter and a vicious gossip, with a vocabulary composed almost entirely of obscenities, gutteral verbs, and the world "postmodernist."

Criticism

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