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      • “They subordinate the whole to the part. It is no longer life they are celebrating, nor nature, but some crude, fanatical party creed. I am afraid that doing things for their own sake will soon be a luxury for children and perhaps for freaks like you and me.” ― Dorothy Macardle, The Uninvited
      www.goodreads.com/quotes/7076640-they-subordinate-the-whole-to-the-part-it-is-no
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  2. 12 quotes from Dorothy Macardle: 'They subordinate the whole to the part. It is no longer life they are celebrating, nor nature, but some crude, fanatical party creed.

  3. Dorothy Macardle (2 February 1889 in Dundalk – 23 December 1958 in Drogheda) [1] was an Irish writer, novelist, playwright, journalist and non-academic historian.

  4. Dec 14, 2019 · A great irony lies at the heart of the life and legacy of Dorothy Macardle. A fiercely independent and talented woman, who decried inequality between the sexes, she is chiefly remembered as the...

    • Leeann Lane
  5. They subordinate the whole to the part. It is no longer life they are celebrating, nor nature, but some crude, fanatical party creed. I am afraid that doing things for their own sake will soon be a luxury for children and perhaps for freaks like you and me.” ― Dorothy Macardle, The Uninvited. 3 likes. Like.

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    • December 23, 1958
    • February 2, 1889
  6. Nov 24, 2021 · That is a roundabout, even misguided, approach to the make-believe of The Uninvited (1944), a Paramount picture based on the novel Uneasy Freehold (1941) by the Irish writer and Republican activist Dorothy Macardle (1889–1958).

  7. Feb 10, 2016 · This is the premise of Dorothy Macardles intriguing 1941 ghost story, The Uninvited, in which the only hope for reprieve from the stifling hauntings of our forbearers is to recover voices that have been written-over, airbrushed and silenced.

  8. ‘I am a propagandist, unrepentant and unashamed’, Dorothy Macardle, author of The Irish Republic, announced in June 1939. Many readers familiar with her classic history of the Irish revolution, commissioned by her political hero Éamon de Valera, might be only too ready to concur with Macardle’s candid self-assessment.

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