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- 7 quotes from Clare Boylan: 'Please forgive my appearance. I am lately come from setting a house on fire.', 'She is insolently grown-up for her size. I suspect the influence of unsupervised reading.', and 'I see something of a comrade in you. You like a book.
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7 quotes from Clare Boylan: 'Please forgive my appearance. I am lately come from setting a house on fire.', 'She is insolently grown-up for her size. I suspect the influence of unsupervised reading.', and 'I see something of a comrade in you.
- Emma Brown Quotes by Clare Boylan
Emma Brown Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4. “Please forgive my...
- Clare Boylan (Author of Emma Brown)
“I see something of a comrade in you. You like a book....
- Emma Brown Quotes by Clare Boylan
Freedom. Knowledge. Happiness. Discover Clare Boylan famous and rare quotes. "Psychiatry's a young science. Yesterday's madman may be..."
Emma Brown Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4. “Please forgive my appearance. I am lately come from setting a house on fire.”. ― Clare Boylan, Emma Brown. 6 likes. Like. “She is insolently grown-up for her size. I suspect the influence of unsupervised reading.”. ― Clare Boylan, Emma Brown.
Clare Boylan (21 April 1948 – 16 May 2006) was an Irish author, journalist and critic for newspapers, magazines and many international broadcast media.
May 16, 2006 · “I see something of a comrade in you. You like a book. Silent revelation on a page pleases you better than a self-bolstering display of verbal spillage. What do you see in me?” ― Clare Boylan, Emma Brown. tags: books, reading. 3 likes. Like. See all Clare Boylan's quotes » Polls. Please vote for the book you'd like to read as a group in April 2010.
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- May 16, 2006
- April 12, 1948
Heather Ingman suggests that The Visitor is “on the question of home” (Ingman, Women 140) and in her “Foreword” Boylan quotes in full a brief extract from the novella beginning with: “Home is a place in the mind. When it is empty, it frets” (Brennan, Visitor 8).
Last year during ISSM3 I posted on a very good short story by Clare Boylan, "The Little Madonnas". I was happy to see Anne Enright had included another of her stories, "Villa Marta" in her anthology The Granta Book of the Irish Short Story.