Edith Templeton (7 April 1916 – 12 June 2006) was a Bohemian novelist, who also wrote under the pseudonym Louise Walbrook.
5 quotes found
"Women are like teeth. Some tremble and never fall and some fall and never tremble."
"My mind sometimes wanders. Do unto others and so on. Very nice again, but what if others have a different taste from yours? I don't remember who said it."
"It was though I had been in possession of one of those small shells with Japanese flowers which are sold at street corners. When plunged into a bowl of water, the tightly sealed shell opens and the flat, dry, coiled-up, insignificant shreds of paper contained within float out and unfold their variegated and unsuspected splendour; with Gordon I had found my bowl of water."
"Beyond my upset I was flooded by a deep happiness, similar to the one he made me feel when forcing me to surrender to his virility. No one else before him had given me this gratification, but I realised now that the longing to be violated, body and soul, must have always been inside me."
"You are like a child who whistles in the dark. As though the dark cared, my poor child, as though the dark cared."