looking for a Thomas Hardy quote
I've been trying to track down a quote from a Thomas Hardy novel that's running around in my head. Although I've got all of his books I haven't been able to find it in any of those in which I thought it might be found, and I've spent half an hour on Google to no avail as well. So as a last and most ridiculously desperate effort I've decided to ask about it here.
The general gist of it is: "Thus she resolved to be charitable, and soon found her doorstep to be frequented by an assortment of rogues, vagabonds and scoundrels.". The actual sentence is longer than that, and the only words from my illustration which I'm sure do actually occur in the quote are "she" & "and" and some type of reference to charity.
The general gist of it is: "Thus she resolved to be charitable, and soon found her doorstep to be frequented by an assortment of rogues, vagabonds and scoundrels.". The actual sentence is longer than that, and the only words from my illustration which I'm sure do actually occur in the quote are "she" & "and" and some type of reference to charity.
Post edited by Battle Bunny on
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I was going to ask which character the sentence referred to, but presumably if you knew that, you'd know where the quote came from!
"As the poor lady could not ease her conscience this way, she determined at least to be charitable, and soon had the satisfaction of finding her porch thronged every morning by the raggedest, idlest, most drunken, hypocritical, and worthless tramps in Christendom."
you shatter the illusion of fine dining, since a notable lack of saucer entries :)
damnit! that's what I was going to post :lol:
He often was heard to say:
"F*ck off! I've never even met Stan Laurel"
:lol: