Oporto Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Oporto. Here they are! All 6 of them:

From black-rimmed plates they ate turtle soup and eaten Russian rye bread, ripe Turkish olives, caviar, salted mullet-roe, smoked Frankfurt black puddings, game in gravies the colour of liquorice and boot-blacking truffled sauces, chocolate caramel creams, plum puddings, nectarines, preserved fruits, mulberries and heart-cherries; from dark coloured glasses they drank the wines of Limagne and Rousillon, of Tenedoes, Val de Peñas and Oporto, and, after the coffee and the walnut cordial they enjoyed kvass, porters and stouts.
Joris-Karl Huysmans (Against Nature)
I'd rather have a life of chaos beside you than a life of quietude and stability without you...
Catia M Rodrigues (Dubhán Reborn (The Oporto Series, #1))
When I read, my mind had the tendency to wander around, embroiling itself in the common points between the plots and my life, feeling empathy for the characters' inner struggles, almost as if they were merging with my personal conflicts.
Catia M Rodrigues (Dubhán Reborn (The Oporto Series, #1))
Dear Mister Germ’s Choice, in gutter dispear I am taking my pen toilet you know that, being Leyde up in bad with the prewailent distemper (I opened the window and in flew Enza), I have been reeding one half ter one other the numboars of “transition” in witch are printed the severeall instorments of your “Work in Progress”. You must not stink I am attempting to ridicul (de sac!) you or to be smart, but I am so disturd by my inhumility to onthorstand most of the impslocations constrained in your work that (although I am by nominals dump and in fact I consider myself not brilliantly ejewcatered but still of above Averroëge men’s tality and having maid the most of the oporto unities I kismet) I am writing you, dear mysterre Shame’s Voice, to let you no how bed I feeloxerab out it all. I am überzeugt that the labour involved in the compostition of your work must be almost supper humane and that so much travail from a man of your intellacked must ryeseult in somethink very signicophant. I would only like to know have I been so strichnine by my illnest white wresting under my warm Coverlyette that I am as they say in my neightive land “out of the mind gone out” and unable to combprehen that which is clear or is there really in your work some ass pecked which is Uncle Lear? Please froggive my t’Emeritus and any inconvince that may have been caused by this litter. Yours veri tass Vladimir Dixon
James Joyce
Qué hubiese pensado de esa cara el abstemio poeta de diecisiete años que veinte años atrás leyendo The lost week-end, de Charles Jackson, y leyendo una escena idéntica a ésta, bebió un traguito de oporto y se miró en este mismo espejo para ver si él también, con el tiempo, llegaría a ser bello y atormentado y maldito.
Abelardo Castillo (El que tiene sed (Spanish Edition))
Atop Oporto's high cliffs, the houses stacked one atop the other like toy blocks—their colors reflected in the mirror-like water, blurry yellows, reds, and
Giovanna Siniscalchi (The Taste of Light (The Winemakers, #2))