“Sassenach." He had called me that from the first; the Gaelic word for outlander, a stranger. An Englishman. First in jest, then in affection.”
Source: Dragonfly in Amber
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Diana Gabaldon158
American author 1952Related quotes
Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) English novelist and poet
Source: " The Voice http://www.portablepoetry.com/poems/thomas_hardy/the_voice.html" (1912), lines 1-4, from Satires of Circumstance (1914)
“You ask why I call Him the first Word.”
Khalil Gibran book Jesus, The Son of Man
John The Beloved Disciple In His Old Age: On Jesus The Word
Jesus, The Son of Man (1928)
Context: You ask why I call Him the first Word.
Listen, and I will answer:
In the beginning God moved in space, and out of His measureless stirring the earth was born and the seasons thereof.
Then God moved again, and life streamed forth, and the longing of life sought the height and the depth and would have more of itself.
Then God spoke thus, and His words were man, and man was a spirit begotten by God's Spirit.
And when God spoke thus, the Christ was His first Word and that Word was perfect; and when Jesus of Nazareth came to the world the first Word was uttered unto us and the sound was made flesh and blood.
Melina Marchetta (1965) Australian teen writer
Source: Quintana of Charyn
Charles Dodgson (archdeacon) (1800–1868) Anglican clergyman, scholar
Stuart Dodgson Collingwood, The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (1898) p. 8
About
Claude Monet (1840–1926) French impressionist painter
Quote in a letter to Boudin, 1892; as cited in Monet and His Muse: Camille Monet in the Artist's Life, Mary Mathews Gedo; University of Chicago Press, Sept. 2010, p. 10
1890 - 1900
“Feel free to call me by my first name: Master.”
Patrick Rothfuss book The Name of the Wind
Source: The Name of the Wind