Not only am I a horrible liar, but my inner soliloquist had also begun to chime in. ❋ Unknown (2009)
His larger concerns seem to be ethical, not oracular, and it would not be unfair to call him a soliloquist. ❋ Unknown (2007)
And finally, after an unbearable pause, bathos: "Oh," the soliloquist bellowed, "oh, if ever a body suffered ...!" ❋ Rushdie, Salman (1967)
My aunt felt the fatigue less, we thought, for she was a famous soliloquist, and often talked to herself as we rode, sometimes laughing aloud at her own good company. ❋ Unknown (1905)
Poor Lawrence drives our soliloquist mad with his deliberate table manners, with his deliberate method of speech, with his care about his own goblet and spoon. ❋ William Lyon Phelps (1904)
Their characters may be direct and plain as those of Lear and Kent, or they may be as subtly shaded as that of Hamlet or of the melancholy soliloquist of Arden. ❋ Unknown (1902)
But it would have been a much more difficult task to represent Carlyle's talk than it was to represent Johnson's, because Carlyle was an inspired soliloquist, and supplied both objection and repartee out of his own mind. ❋ Arthur Christopher Benson (1893)
The soliloquist thought it necessary to repeat his last words twice to convince himself and the atmosphere that his position was one of grievance. ❋ William Frend De Morgan (1878)
"Why, a soliloquist in a crowd can hardly but be overheard, and without much reproach to the hearer." ❋ Unknown (1857)
"What did you say, sir?" said young Arthur, addressing our soliloquist -- and evidently somewhat dubious that there was something offensive in what he had spoken; forming this conjecture rather from the expression of Millhouse's face than from any thing in his words. ❋ Unknown (1852)
The words were so scattered, that Walter did not trace their clue; but involuntarily he stopped short, within a few feet of the soliloquist: and Aram, suddenly turning round, beheld him. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
This thought plunged the soliloquist into a gloomy abstraction, which lasted several minutes, and from which he started, muttering aloud, -- ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
As he said this, the soliloquist sunk into a more absorbed and silent revery, from which he was disturbed by the entrance of his servant. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
He looks from side to side, with the rapid glance of an eye in which light seems all dance and sparkle: he sees the soliloquist under the meagre tree; the pace quickens, the lips part half laughing. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
Then that innocent careless talk -- part uttered to dog and child, part soliloquized, part thrown out to the ears of the lively teeming Nature -- had touched a somewhat kindred chord in the angler's soul; for he was somewhat of a poet and much of a soliloquist, and could confer with Nature, nor feel that impediment in speech which obstructed his intercourse with men. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
"You are a poet, Signor," said a soft clear voice beside the soliloquist; and Maltravers started to find that he had had unknowingly ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
Here the soliloquist came to a dead stop, and, leaning out of the window, contemplated the high road. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
While thus musing, the soliloquist came in direct personal contact with ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
And for several minutes the sole thought of the soliloquist was love. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)
You can often find a [soliloquist] dancing with headphones [plugged] into nothing, conversing sparatically with someone who isn't there, and screaming things like "I just don't know" or "why you gotta [do me like that]". ❋ Charick (2012)