If We Were Villains

If We Were Villains

by

M. L. Rio

Joseph Colborne Character Analysis

Colborne is a detective who works on the case of Richard’s death. When Oliver and the other fourth-years first meet him in 1997, he’s a young man. He hides his feelings and suspicions well, but it becomes clear to Oliver when he overhears Colborne talking to Walton that Colborne isn’t quite fooled by the fourth-years’ innocent act. By 2007, the novel’s present, Colborne and Oliver have formed a rapport from Colborne’s regular visits, and Oliver ultimately decides tell Colborne the truth about what happened at Dellecher in 1997. Colborne sometimes reacts to parts of Oliver’s story with skepticism, but he thanks him when it’s over, and Oliver can tell that Colborne likes and respects him more once he knows the truth.

Joseph Colborne Quotes in If We Were Villains

The If We Were Villains quotes below are all either spoken by Joseph Colborne or refer to Joseph Colborne. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Fate vs. Free Will Theme Icon
).
Act 4, Prologue Quotes

“A good Shakespearean actor—a good actor of any stripe, really—doesn’t just say words, he feels them. We felt all the passions of the characters we played as if they were our own. But a character’s emotions don’t cancel out the actor’s—instead you feel both at once. Imagine having all your own thoughts and feelings tangled up with all the thoughts and feelings of a whole other person. It can be hard, sometimes, to sort out which is which.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Frederick Teasdale, Gwendolyn, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 248-249
Explanation and Analysis:

The thing about Shakespeare is, he’s so eloquent … He speaks the unspeakable. He turns grief and triumph and rapture and rage into words, into something we can understand. He renders the whole mystery of humanity comprehensible.” I stop. Shrug. “You can justify anything if you do it poetically enough.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Joseph Colborne (speaker)
Page Number: 249
Explanation and Analysis:
Act 5, Prologue Quotes

My infatuation with James (there’s the word, never mind “enamored”) transcended any notion of gender. Colborne—regular Joe, happily married, father of two, not unlike my own father in some respects—does not strike me as the sort of man who would understand this. No man is, perhaps, until he experiences it himself and deniability is no longer plausible. What were we, then? In ten years I have not found an adequate word to describe us.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 301
Explanation and Analysis:
Act 5, Scene 6 Quotes

He stared up at me for a moment, then lifted his head and pulled me down to meet him. It was almost a brotherly kiss, but not quite. Too fragile, too painful. Soft whispers of surprise and confusion swept through the audience. My heart throbbed, and it hurt so badly that I bit his lip.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 337-338
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

Suddenly it seems there is a fourth person in the room. For the first time in ten years, I look at the chair that had always been Richard’s and find it isn’t empty. There he sits, in lounging, leonine arrogance. He watches me with a razor-thin smile and I realize that this is it—the dénouement, the counterstroke, the end-all he was waiting for. He lingers only long enough for me to see the gleam of triumph in his half-lidded eyes; then he, too, is gone.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Richard Stirling, Filippa Kosta, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 346
Explanation and Analysis:

“Us. All that time. Was any of it real, or did you know all along, and we were just a get-out-of-jail-free card for James?” She glares at me with those dark green eyes, and I feel sick.

“God, Meredith, no. I had no idea,” I tell her. “You were real to me. Sometimes I thought you were the only real thing.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Meredith Dardenne (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 351
Explanation and Analysis:
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If We Were Villains PDF

Joseph Colborne Quotes in If We Were Villains

The If We Were Villains quotes below are all either spoken by Joseph Colborne or refer to Joseph Colborne. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Fate vs. Free Will Theme Icon
).
Act 4, Prologue Quotes

“A good Shakespearean actor—a good actor of any stripe, really—doesn’t just say words, he feels them. We felt all the passions of the characters we played as if they were our own. But a character’s emotions don’t cancel out the actor’s—instead you feel both at once. Imagine having all your own thoughts and feelings tangled up with all the thoughts and feelings of a whole other person. It can be hard, sometimes, to sort out which is which.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Frederick Teasdale, Gwendolyn, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 248-249
Explanation and Analysis:

The thing about Shakespeare is, he’s so eloquent … He speaks the unspeakable. He turns grief and triumph and rapture and rage into words, into something we can understand. He renders the whole mystery of humanity comprehensible.” I stop. Shrug. “You can justify anything if you do it poetically enough.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Joseph Colborne (speaker)
Page Number: 249
Explanation and Analysis:
Act 5, Prologue Quotes

My infatuation with James (there’s the word, never mind “enamored”) transcended any notion of gender. Colborne—regular Joe, happily married, father of two, not unlike my own father in some respects—does not strike me as the sort of man who would understand this. No man is, perhaps, until he experiences it himself and deniability is no longer plausible. What were we, then? In ten years I have not found an adequate word to describe us.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 301
Explanation and Analysis:
Act 5, Scene 6 Quotes

He stared up at me for a moment, then lifted his head and pulled me down to meet him. It was almost a brotherly kiss, but not quite. Too fragile, too painful. Soft whispers of surprise and confusion swept through the audience. My heart throbbed, and it hurt so badly that I bit his lip.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 337-338
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

Suddenly it seems there is a fourth person in the room. For the first time in ten years, I look at the chair that had always been Richard’s and find it isn’t empty. There he sits, in lounging, leonine arrogance. He watches me with a razor-thin smile and I realize that this is it—the dénouement, the counterstroke, the end-all he was waiting for. He lingers only long enough for me to see the gleam of triumph in his half-lidded eyes; then he, too, is gone.

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), James Farrow, Richard Stirling, Filippa Kosta, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 346
Explanation and Analysis:

“Us. All that time. Was any of it real, or did you know all along, and we were just a get-out-of-jail-free card for James?” She glares at me with those dark green eyes, and I feel sick.

“God, Meredith, no. I had no idea,” I tell her. “You were real to me. Sometimes I thought you were the only real thing.”

Related Characters: Oliver Marks (speaker), Meredith Dardenne (speaker), James Farrow, Joseph Colborne
Page Number: 351
Explanation and Analysis: