How we cite our quotes: Citations follow this format: (Book.Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #1
"I fell in love on the beach," said Rosemary.
"Who with?"
"First with a whole lot of people who looked nice. Then with one man"(1.3.2-4).
In this conversation with her mother, Elsie, Rosemary expresses the movement of her love, which she’s got on the brain. She seems eager to embrace everything and everyone is pleasing to her. That she moves so quickly from loving many to loving Dick Diver raises the possibility that she wants a special love most of all. Or does it? This is the beginning of the novel, for one thing, and the beginning of Rosemary’s jump into the world of sexual affairs. It’s probably safe to say she’s not sure what she wants. And Rosemary doesn’t really say she stops loving the group when she says she loves Dick, now does she? What do you think? How does she feel about the group and Dick by the end of the novel? How does she feel about love?
Quote #2
"When you’re older you’ll know what people who love suffer. The agony. It’s better to be cold and young than to love" (1.9.12).
This is from Campion, one of the novel’s gay characters. What do we make of the way his sexuality is handled in the novel? Dick certainly has some interesting opinions, as we see in his interactions with Francisco Pardo y Ciudad Real. What do you think though? Is Campion right? Is the possibility of a deep love worth the risk of pain?
Quote #3
" – So you love me?"
"Oh, do I!"
It Was Nicole – Rosemary hesitated in the door of the booth – then she heard Dick say:
"I want you terribly – let’s go to the hotel now.’ Nicole gave a little gasping sigh. For a moment the words conveyed nothing at all to Rosemary – but the tone did. The vast secretiveness of it vibrated to herself."
"I want you."
"I’ll be at the hotel at four" (1.12.15-20).
We never see this kind of excited intimacy when Dick and Nicole are presented directly. This side of them remains mysterious throughout the novel. It’s a mystery to Rosemary, too. She goes shopping with Nicole after this and when 4pm rolls around and Nicole isn’t rushing to meet Dick, Rosemary wants to remind her, or offer to go in her place. Was it all an act (possibly for Rosemary’s benefit)? Is Dick waiting impatiently for Nicole in some hotel room? Is the answer buried somewhere in the text? This passage resonates even more when we find out Dick and Nicole’s history in Book Two.
Quote #4
"Then there’s the fact that I love Nicole."
"But you can love more than just one person, can’t you? Like I love Mother and I love you – more. I love you more now.’"
" – the fourth place you’re not in love with me but you might be afterwards, and that would begin your life with a terrible mess" (1.15.33-35).
Here Dick seems utterly sincere. He really is trying to do the right thing. He takes his love for Nicole seriously, and he takes Rosemary’s well-being seriously, too. And did you ever get the feeling when reading this book that Rosemary loves her mother a little too much? Who uses pickup lines like that? Oh darling, I love you even more than I do my mother. So let’s get a room. Not the most dignified approach. But Rosemary is barely 18 and her mother has told her to do this, regardless of who gets hurt. And, her love for Dick never wavers, even though it doesn’t seem to work out. So who needs dignity?
Quote #5
"I’m afraid I’m in love with you,’ said Dick, ‘and that’s not the best thing that could happen" (1.17.22).
Man, Rosemary’s techniques worked. By this time, Dick’s feelings for her are getting stronger and stronger. However, as the novel makes clear, they are not as strong as his feelings for Nicole. From here on out he’s in deep conflict because he is trying to love both women without hurting either of them.
Quote #6
[Dick] left a note for Maria Wallis signed "Dicole," the word with which he and Nicole had signed communications in the first days of love (2.24.1).
Now that’s some heavy-duty love. Maybe too heavy-duty, as the novel seems to suggest. Nicole spends Book Three of the novel figuring out how to disentangle her own personality from Dick’s. This passage demonstrates also how deeply they are connected. The novel questions whether people so wrapped up in each other can live together happily in the long run.
Quote #7
"I never expected you to love me – it was too late – only don’t come in the bathroom, the only place I can go for privacy, dragging spreads with red blood on them and asking me to fix them."
When we read this, we don’t know about Dick and Nicole’s history at all. We’ve had an inkling or two that Nicole might have some issues, but we have no idea what they are. When we do find out about her past? At this moment, she really does believe she’s spoiled goods, and that Dick’s must be motivated by something other than love – money, pity, duty, etc. She doesn’t get specific. Nicole is also clearly threatened by Rosemary’s appearance on their scene. Having to help Dick tamper with a crime scene to save Rosemary’s reputation, really hits her hard.
Quote #8
"You told me that night you’d teach me to play. Well, I think love is all there is or should be" (2.2.53-55).
This is a line from one of Nicole’s letters to Dick. The "that night" she’s talking about must mean the first and only time she met Dick before initiating correspondence with him. It’s not clear what he said he’d teach her to play. What is love to Nicole though? She says she loves her father, but he raped her. She has a very serious view of love, whatever she thinks it is. Does she maintain this serious view throughout the novel or does her position change?
Quote #9
He supposed many men meant no more than that when they said they were in love – not a wild submergence of soul, a dipping of all colors into an obscuring dye, such as his love for Nicole had been. Certain thoughts about Nicole, that she should die, sink into mental darkness, love another man, made him physically sick.
Ah, such pretty lines. More proof of just how deeply Dick loves Nicole. When he leaves without a fight, and doesn’t try to stop her relationship with Tommy, has his love for her lessened? Does he, by not trying to stop her from finding love with Tommy, demonstrate a deeper love?
Quote #10
Nicole kept in touch with Dick after her new marriage; there were letters on business matters, and about the children. When she said, as she often did, "I loved Dick and I’ll never forget him," Tommy answered, ‘Of course not – why should you?’
Interesting that Nicole uses loved here, the past tense of the world. This could mean a variety of things. She could be saying that she used to, but no longer loves Dick. Or she could simply be stating that she really did love him before, without commenting on her present feelings for him. Do we have other evidence in the text that might help us sort out what she means?