Lauren Willig Quote
Amy read Ovid and Virgil and Aristophanes and Homer. She read dry histories and scandalous love poetry (her governesses, who had little Latin and less Greek, naïvely assumed that anything in a classical tongue must be respectable), but mostly she returned again and again to The Odyssey.Odysseus had fought to go home, and so would Amy.
Lauren Willig
Amy read Ovid and Virgil and Aristophanes and Homer. She read dry histories and scandalous love poetry (her governesses, who had little Latin and less Greek, naïvely assumed that anything in a classical tongue must be respectable), but mostly she returned again and again to The Odyssey.Odysseus had fought to go home, and so would Amy.
Tags:
homecoming
Related Quotes
If ever you do go back, what is it you want of Evesham?Do I know? [...] The silence, it might be ... or the stillness. To have no more running to do ... to have arrived, and have no more need to run....
Ellis Peters
Tags:
arrival, attachment, belonging, completion, fullfilment, home, homecoming, homelessness, journey s end, roots
We wander in our thousands over theface of the earth, the illustrious and the obscure, earning beyond theseas our fame, our money, or only a crust of bread; but it seems to methat for each of us going...
Joseph Conrad
Tags:
family, ghosts, home, home town, homecoming, humanity, mankind, old friends, prodigal daughters, prodigal sons
About Lauren Willig
Lauren Willig is a New York Times bestselling author of historical novels. She is best known for her "Pink Carnation" series, which follows a collection of Napoleonic-Era British spies, similar to the Scarlet Pimpernel, as they fight for Britain and fall in love.