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Lemony Snicket

A Series of Unfortunate Events 11 - The Grim Grotto

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  • juliasegura97has quoted5 years ago
    A successful villain should have all of these things at his or her villainous fingertips, or else give up villainy altogether and try to lead a life of decency, integrity, and kindness, which is much more challenging and noble, if not always quite as exciting.
  • juliasegura97has quoted5 years ago
    It is often difficult to admit that someone you love is not perfect, or to consider aspects of a person that are less than admirable.
  • juliasegura97has quoted5 years ago
    There are secrets in this world too terrible for young people to know!
  • Мария Лукьяноваhas quoted6 years ago
    Anyone can write up a citation for bravery, and I have even been known to write one for myself from time to time, in order to keep my spirits up in the middle of a treacherous journey
  • Kateryna Fidriahas quoted7 years ago
    Dead women tell no tales.
    Sad men write them down.
  • Анна П.has quoted7 years ago
    “People aren’t either wicked or noble,” the hook-handed man said. “They’re like chef’s salads, with good things and bad things chopped and mixed together in a vinaigrette of confusion and conflict.”
  • Анна П.has quoted7 years ago
    It appears that the tides and currents in this part of the ocean would take the sugar bowl past the Gulag Archipelago here, a
  • Humsterrhas quoted8 years ago
    “People aren’t either wicked or noble,” the hook-handed man said. “They’re like chef’s salads, with good things and bad things chopped and mixed together in a vinaigrette of confusion and conflict.”
  • Louveteauhas quoted10 years ago
    The Walrus and the Carpenter, and Other Poems, by Lewis Carroll, and The Waste Land, by T. S. Eliot. Perhaps
  • Louveteauhas quoted10 years ago
    Captain Widdershins was wrong about a great many things. He was wrong about his personal philosophy, because there are plenty of times when one should hesitate. He was wrong about his wife’s death, because as Fiona suspected, Mrs. Widdershins did not die in a manatee accident. He was wrong to call Phil “Cookie” when it is more polite to call someone by their proper name, and he was wrong to abandon the Queequeg, no matter what he heard from the woman who came to fetch him. Captain Widdershins was wrong to trust his stepson for so many years, and wrong to participate in the destruction of Anwhistle Aquatics, and he was wrong to insist, as he did so many years ago, that a story in The Daily Punctilio was completely true, and to show this article to so many volunteers, including the Baudelaire parents, the Snicket siblings, and the woman I happened to love.
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