Contact
Privacy
Home
Latest
Oldest
Popular
Random
Home
»
tags
»
book-quote
»
The white men were silent. As if they'd given up or decided that a small freedom...
Author:
Colson Whitehead
Book:
The Underground Railroad
Viewed:
23 -
Published at:
7 years ago
The white men were silent. As if they'd given up or decided that a small freedom was the worst punishment of all, presenting the bounty of true freedom into painful relief. One
( Colson Whitehead )
[ The Underground Railroad ]
www.QuoteSweet.com
TAGS :
book-quote
Related Quotes:
- Não sei se interprete as suas palavras como um galanteio, se não - replicou...
If only religion an opiate. No known narcotic rots the brain so fast."
They all talked at once, their voices insistent and contradictory and impatient,...
Because here's the thing―we don't give a shit about fairness here. We're...
I sipped from my wine. "And if he had grabbed me?"There was nothing but...
Have we," he wondered, "conceived a merely human project and then imagined it to...
You may also like:
Camille said, "Your trouble is, you're backtracking. I heard you, saying the...
She would have come to me if she could, she would have blessed this baby as she...
Mum's suddenly become interested in LOC,
We call them the Five Deaths," he said. "Isla Muerte, Isla Matanceros, Isla...
There are all kinds of silences and each of them means a different thing.
You were born where you were born and faced the future that you faced because...
Categories
book-quote (0.5m)
love (43k)
life (41k)
inspirational (29k)
philosophy (15k)
humor (15k)
god (14k)
truth (13k)
wisdom (11k)
happiness (10k)
About
Contact
Privacy
Terms of service
Disclaimer