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Quote by Molly Ringle

“The theme of the play,” I tried to explain, “is freedom, beauty, truth, and love. Right? Well, she has beauty, but she dies because she doesn’t have, or can’t learn to accept, enough of the other three." Leo blinked at me. “She dies of tuberculosis, Vai.”

Quote by Molly Ringle

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The Quicksand Theatre Company

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Molly Ringle

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“Peaches and feminine beauty have been conflated across cultures since the Taoist legend of Xiwangmu, Queen Mother of the West, who tended the Peaches of Immortality in her palace garden and decided which gods would be permitted a taste of the fruit that granted life everlasting; she hosted the chosen at an elaborate banquet known as the Feast of Peaches.”

“I’ve been told that you value delicacy and yearn for beauty,’ the old man went on. ‘So seek beauty, Miss Prim. Seek it in silence, in tranquillity; seek it in the middle of the night and at dawn. Pause to close doors while you seek it, and don’t be surprised if it doesn’t reside in museums or palaces. Don't be surprised if, in the end, you find beauty to be not Something but Someone.”

“So it is that the gods do not bestow graces in all ways on men, neither in stature nor yet in brains or eloquence; for there is a certain kind of man, less noted for beauty, but the god puts comeliness on his words, and they who look toward him are filled with joy at the sight, and he speaks to them without faltering in winning modesty, and shines among those who are gathered, and people look on him as on a god when he walks in the city. Another again in his appearance is like the immortals, but upon his words there is no grace distilled, as in your case the appearance is conspicuous, and not a god even would make it otherwise, and yet the mind there is worthless.”