“He inched his way up the corridor as if he would rather be yarding his way down it...”
Douglas Adams
“You walk through a series of arches, so to speak, and then, presently, at the end of a corridor, a door opens and you see backward through time, and you feel the flow of time, and realize you are only part of a great nameless procession.”
John Huston
“One need not be a chamber to be haunted; / One need not be a house; /The brain has corridors surpassing / Material place.”
Emily Dickinson
“(It's) sort of long corridor that you walk and suddenly you are green,”
Philippe Starck
“But, after all, one cannot, at sixty-two, look back down the corridor of one's life and not have some doubts about the journey one has made. The doors which one opened are now all closed. The doors one did not dare open remain shut. The corridor is dark; only ahead is lighter. So one turns and proceeds in that direction. To go back is madness. To turn left or right, at this stage, is both exhausting and dangerous.”
Dirk Bogarde
“I went to the audition for a laugh and got the part for the way I walked down the corridor. There's no justice is there?”
Ray Winstone
“We pulled toilet rooms out towards the hallway. That puts the patient zone further away from the corridor to cut down on noise, and then when janitors come to clean the rest rooms they don't have to come all the way into the room and it's less disturbing to patients.”
Ed Anderson