Author: Philip Schultz
Cites
- Charles Darwin (1)
- IN: The Wherewithal (2001) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: When finding, as in this case, animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were created. But it should always be recollected, that in some other country perhaps they are essential members of society, or at some former period may have been so.
FROM: The Voyage of the Beagle, (1839), Book, UK
- Jan T. Gross (1)
- IN: The Wherewithal (2001) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Jews who found themselves in Dp camps in Germany after the war -- as we know, some 200,000 Jews fled from Poland after 1945, mostly to these camps -- used to say that Germans would never forgive the Jews for what they had done to them.
FROM: Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community
in Jedwabne, Poland, (2000), Book, US/Poland
- Robert Louis Stevenson (1)
- IN: The Wherewithal (2001) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Henry Jekyll stood at times aghast before the acts of Edward Hyde; but the situation was apart from ordinary laws, and insidiously relaxed the grasp of conscience. It was Hyde, after all, that was guilty.
FROM: The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, (1886), Novella, UK
- Knut Hamsun (1)
- IN: The Wherewithal (2001) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Despite my alienation from myself at that moment, and though I was nothing but a battleground for invisible forces, I was aware of every detail of what was going on around me.
FROM: Hunger, (1890), Novel, Norway