Books
Agatha Christie

The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd

  • calmehas quoted2 months ago
    Life is very trying.
  • calmehas quoted2 months ago
    Mrs. Ferrars’ husband died just over a year ago, and Caroline has constantly asserted, without the least foundation for the assertion, that his wife poisoned him.
  • Sumi Ghas quoted4 months ago
    I have no pity for myself either.

    So let it be Veronal.

    But I wish Hercule Poirot had never retired from work and come here to grow vegetable marrows.
  • Sumi Ghas quoted4 months ago
    it says that some of the worst women criminals are young girls with the faces of angels
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    “What is it?” I asked.

    “It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth unawares—without noticing it himself, bien entendu. At times, he has said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark has revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to keep a written record of the cases that proved interesting.”
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    “What is it?” I asked.

    “It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth unawares—without noticing it himself, bien entendu. At times, he has said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark has revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to keep a written record of the cases that proved interesting.”
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    All my excuses for having deranged you.”

    “Not at all, not at all.”

    “The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is applicable to mental disorder only.”

    “Ah!” cried Poirot. “Never will my English be quite perfect. A curious language. I should then have said disarranged, n’est-ce pas?”

    “Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”

    “I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you ar
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    English people, they have a mania for the fresh air,” declared Poirot. “The big air, it is all very well outside, where it belongs. Why admit it to the house? But let us not discuss
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    “Les femmes,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvellous! They invent haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that, really. Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without knowing that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am very skilled in psychology. I know these things.”
  • zz2403has quoted7 months ago
    “Les femmes,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvellous! They invent haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that, really. Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without knowing that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am very skilled in psychology. I know these things.”
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