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Random Harvest

Random Harvest

Paula: Smithy, do I always have to take the initiative? You're supposed to kiss me.


--Greer Garson (as Paula) in Random Harvest

Random Harvest

Random Harvest

Paula: You are from the asylum, aren't you? Aren't you?


--Greer Garson (as Paula) in Random Harvest

Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Elizabeth Bennet: I tremble and obey.


--Greer Garson (as Elizabeth Bennet) in Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Elizabeth Bennet: Oh Mr. Darcy, Miss Bingley here is eager for her lesson. I hope you will enjoy it, Miss Bingley, and that you will learn to direct your darts with greater accuracy.


--Greer Garson (as Elizabeth Bennet) in Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Elizabeth Bennett: How clever of you, Miss Bingley, to know something of which you are ignorant.


--Greer Garson (as Elizabeth Bennet) in Pride and Prejudice


Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Elizabeth Bennett: Oh, if you want to be really refined, you have to be dead. There's no one as dignified as a mummy


--Greer Garson (as Elizabeth Bennet) in Pride and Prejudice

Madame Curie

Madame Curie

Marie Curie: To catch a star on your fingertips.


--Greer Garson (as Marie Curie) in Madame Curie

Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Mr. Darcy: I have made the mistake of being honest with you.
Elizabeth Bennet: Honesty is a greatly overrated virtue. Silence in this case would have been more agreeable.


--Greer Garson (as Elizabeth Bennet) in Pride and Prejudice

Madame Curie

Madame Curie

[last lines]
[Madame Curie addresses a large gathering of scientists]
Marie Curie: Even now, after twenty-five years of intensive research, we feel there is a great deal still to be done. We have made many discoveries. Pierre Curie and the suggestions we have found in his notes, and his thoughts he expressed to me have helped to guide us to them. But no one of us can do much. Yet, each of us, perhaps, can catch some gleam of knowledge which, modest and insufficient of itself, may add to man's dream of truth. It is by these small candles in our darkness that we see before us, little by little, the dim outline of that great plan that shapes the universe. And I am among those who think that for this reason, science has great beauty and, with its great spiritual strength, will in time cleanse this world of its evils, its ignorance, its poverty, diseases, wars, and heartaches. Look for the clear light of truth. Look for unknown, new roads. Even when man's sight is keener far than now, divine wonder will never fail him. Every age has its own dreams. Leave, then, the dreams of yesterday. Youth, take the torch of knowledge and build the palace of the future.


--Greer Garson (as Marie Curie) in Madame Curie

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