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Author Message
25 new of 207 responses total.
sekari
response 52 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 05:00 UTC 1998

(sorry for the delay. I had to search for this book and eventually found
 it hiding in a box in my garage)

        This morning I was up early-indeed I slept poorly all night, 
doubtless from the weight of the guilt I feel about my errand yesterday,
though it does seem it isn't my own, but rather Master's, as doing his 
bidding is only my duty. Still it was my half-day and I'd a perfect right 
to refuse, though such a course never come to me for a moment until after 
the whole thing was concluded. I dressed now and went down to the kitchen, 
hoping to be at my work before Cook come in, but of course she was there
and would ask at once how my day had gone and if I'd found the cloth for 
my cloak, so I had to sit over my tea and lie about going to this store 
and that, but nothing would do. Lying does not come easy to me, nor do I
do it well. I thought Cook looked at me close, and felt myself blushing
with confusion. Then Mr. Poole come in and said that Master had been in his 
laboritory the entire night and had just come in and wanted his breakfast
and fire and then to be left alone, as he intended to sleep until noon, 
he was that done in. Cook turned to her pans and I put one my bonnet and 
apron feeling grateful to have the opportunity to deliver my message so 
early in the day. Mr. Bradshaw came in and he and Mr. Poole sat down at 
the table to wait on their own breakfast. "I'll do the fire now," I said
and went off feeling disapproval in the air, though this was likely my 
own imagining as there was nothing uncommon in my actions. 

other
response 53 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 05:21 UTC 1998

the unvanquished?  (faulkner)
sekari
response 54 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 06:18 UTC 1998

nope
omni
response 55 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 07:51 UTC 1998

  Could it be from Dracula by Bram Stoker?  

  It would be fitting for Halloween and all.
senna
response 56 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 11:45 UTC 1998

Reminds me of Stevenson, but I doubt it.  I might as well supply it as a
guess, though.
remmers
response 57 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 13:28 UTC 1998

Intriguing quote. Female narrator, obviously a servant. The "Master" is 
someone who spends time in a laboratory. Seems British, 19th century. 
I'd rule out Dracula because I don't think it had a female narrator. I'd 
probably have guessed R.L. Stevenson if senna hadn't beaten me to it.

As a backup, I'll guess William Wilkie Collins, although I think that's 
less likely than Stevenson.
rywfol
response 58 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 13:40 UTC 1998

Mary Shelley, perhaps?
remmers
response 59 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 13:42 UTC 1998

Hm, could be Shelley, but she was early 19th century, and the passage 
has a later feel to it.

Actually, now that I think about it, this may be from Stevenson's _Dr 
Jekyll and Mr Hyde_. There *was* a film a couple of years ago based on 
that, told from a servant woman's point of view (she was played by Julia 
Roberts). Haven't read the book though.
mcnally
response 60 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 16:58 UTC 1998

  The film was called "Mary Reilly".
punky
response 61 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 27 19:26 UTC 1998

is it frankenstein by any chance ? I guess, as always, I am wrong!!!
orinoco
response 62 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 28 20:53 UTC 1998

I think the book _Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde_ is narrated by a friend of Jekyll's,
but it's been awhile since I've read it.
sekari
response 63 of 207: Mark Unseen   Oct 29 20:37 UTC 1998

A segment of Dracula was narrated by mina. 
Frankenstein was Narrated by the Sea Captain, Frankenstien, and the Monster.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was written from the point 
of view of Mr. Utterson, the lawyer. With two post mortum narrations by
Dr. Lanyon and Dr. Jekyll. 
The piece that my quote comes from has been mentioned, but not in it's literary
form, and I don't think it was mentioned as an actual guess. I thought if 
I waited a day or two someone would guess it officially or something. 
The quote is from 'Mary Reilly', written by Valerie Martin in 1990. 
I am not sure who won this one. remmers made the first reference to it, 
and mcnally named it. I'll let someone else sort it out. 
kaifiyat
response 64 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 1 05:03 UTC 1998

Ok! this is my first stint, and i haven't read the rules quite thoroughly ..
so please do NOT accuse me of cheating .. here's a sitter ...the opening lines
of which book are 
        'Last night I dreamt of Manderley again.'
mcnally
response 65 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 1 07:16 UTC 1998

  That's from "Rebecca" by Daphne du Maurier..
mcnally
response 66 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 1 07:21 UTC 1998

 re #64:  but the rules of the game are that you have to correctly
          enter the last person's question before you get a turn to
          post your own quote.  

 re #63:  hmmm..  since you haven't seen fit to decide I'll cede 
          to remmers if he wants it.  if he doesn't, I've got an
          amusing book handy which should be quote-worthy..
sjones
response 67 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 1 12:50 UTC 1998

oh, terrific; i finally find out where everyone is (isn't blundering 
around enjoyable?) and you're politely holding the door open for each 
other - i think mcnally should go ahead, and consider the du maurier 
quote as an accidental tie-breaker...
remmers
response 68 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 04:52 UTC 1998

That viewpoint is quite okay with me. I cede to McNally and look
forward to his quite.
remmers
response 69 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 04:56 UTC 1998

(However, I should point out that the goal is always to identify
the *author*, and neither McNally nor I did that. Identifying the
work is neither necessary nor sufficient.)
sjones
response 70 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 10:13 UTC 1998

sorry if i'm just blundering around and getting in the way here (while 
everybody waits patiently for a quote) but i don't suppose any of you 
know if there was ever an answer to maeve's quote at the end of the 
summer?  i've only just stumbled across it, and i've chewed my 
fingernails down to about mid-forearm by now being frustrated by it...
remmers
response 71 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 13:18 UTC 1998

Sorry, dunno. (And I should have typed "quote" not "quite" in resp:68)
sjones
response 72 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 15:31 UTC 1998

well, i did wonder about asking if you'd meant to say 'that viewpoint is 
quote okay with me' but it seemed dangerously close to being facetious, 
especially since i've only just stuck my head above the water around 
here... oh well, with a little luck maeve'll be in here at some point, 
and might be kind enough to put me out of my misery...
sekari
response 73 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 2 21:05 UTC 1998

I was aware that the author had not been named, and I am awre that I jumped the
gun a bit. My reasoning was that if I mentioned or alluded that it was  Mary
Reilly, then it would have just been a race to look it up. If I  didn't mention
it, then people would have kept on guessing and it would  have moved away from
Mary Reilly. I did wait a few days. If I made a  mistake, I apologise. 
remmers
response 74 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 3 02:18 UTC 1998

Nah, what you did was reasonable. I just wanted to remind folks that
this is an author-guessing game primarily.
maeve
response 75 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 3 16:21 UTC 1998

er which quote of mine was that? I think I had two or possably three, 
they were, 'The Worm Orouboros', 'Rebecca' and 'Gaudy Night' does that 
help any?
sjones
response 76 of 207: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 13:00 UTC 1998

brilliant!  you've no idea how pleased i am to see you! it was: When
I opened my eyes we were by a bend in the road, and a peasant girl in a 
black shawl waved to us; I can see her now, her dusty skirt, her 
gleaming, friendly smile, and in a second we had passed the bend and 
could see her no more. Already she belonged to the past, she was only a 
memory.
or at least that was the end of it - and ye gods, i don't know either of 
those (rebecca being the exception)!  hey ho; here was me thinking it 
sounded familiar...<hollow laugh>...
so which, please please, and authors?...)
                                         ...thank-you!
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