
[The Quest for beauty, http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/10/01/quest/index.html, June 16 2006]
Volume 1 [Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1860] ( p. 336 https://books.google.com/books?id=rszxUvpszaMC&pg=PA336)
Also in The King of Inventors: A Life of Wilkie Collins by Catherine Peters ( p. 224 https://books.google.com/books?id=T0AABAAAQBAJ&pg=PA224)
Source: The Woman in White (1859)
[The Quest for beauty, http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/10/01/quest/index.html, June 16 2006]
“A man's fate is his own temper.”
Book VI, Chapter 7.
Books, Coningsby (1844), Vivian Grey (1826)
Travis McGee series, Dress Her in Indigo (1969)
Context: Any man who outgrows the myths of childhood is ninety-nine percent aware and convinced of his own mortality. But then comes the chilly breath on the nape of the neck, a stirring of the air by the wings of the bleak angel. When a man becomes one hundred percent certain of his inevitable death, he gets The Look.
An Ape About the House, p. 802
2000s and posthumous publications, The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke (2001)
Cassandra (1860)
Knowing Yourself: The True in the False (1996)
“It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is always dull.”
Prejudices, Second Series (1920) Ch. 1
1920s
Source: Caliban's War (2012), Chapter 47 (p. 510)
“It's a feeling which tells me that any woman can be beautiful in the eyes of a man who loves her.”
Source: Five Quarters of the Orange