Author: Jean Rhys
Cites
- Emily Dickinson (1)
- IN: Good morning, Midnight (1939) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Good morning, Midnight!
I'm coming home,
Day got tired of me -
How could I of him?
Sunshine was a sweet place,
I liked to stay --
But Morn didn't want me -- now --
So good night, Day!
FROM: "Good Morning, Midnight", (1929), Poem, US
- R. C. Dunning (1)
- IN: Quartet (1928) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: ...Beware
Of good Samaritans -- walk to the right
Or hide thee by the roadside out of sight
Or greet them with the smile that villains wear.
FROM: NULL, (None), NULL, NULL
Cited by
- Lily Brooks-Dalton (1)
- IN: Good Morning, Midnight (1939) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: I heave myself out of the darkness slowly, painfully. And there I am, and there he is..
FROM: Good Morning, Midnight, (1939), Novel, Dominica/England
- Rupert Thomson (1)
- IN: Divided Kingdom (2005) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: It was as if a curtain had fallen,
hiding everything I had ever known.
FROM: Voyage in the Dark, (1934), Book, Dominia/England
- Jane Mendelsohn (1)
- IN: Burning Down the House (2016) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: I will write my name in fine red.
FROM: Wide Sargasso Sea, (1966), Novel, UK
- Jessie Chaffee (1)
- IN: Florence in Ecstasy (2017) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: You imagine the carefully-pruned, shaped thing that is presented to you is truth. That is just what it isn't. The truth is improbable, the truth is fantastic; it's in what you think is a distorting mirror that you see the truth.
FROM: Good Morning, Midnight, (1939), Novel, UK